Moore v. Superior Court

263 P. 1009, 203 Cal. 238, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 778
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1928
DocketDocket No. S.F. 12543.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 263 P. 1009 (Moore v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Superior Court, 263 P. 1009, 203 Cal. 238, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 778 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

The petitioner herein seeks, by a writ of review, to have reviewed a certain proceeding and annulled a certain order of the Superior Court in and for the City and County of San Francisco, made and entered in an action for divorce, entitled Alyce Moore, Plaintiff, v. William H. Moore, Defendant. The facts upon which said application is based, and which are practically undisputed, are the following: On the eighth day of April, 1914, the said Superior Court made and entered its interlocutory decree in said action, wherein and whereby the care, custody, and control of the two minor children of the parties to said action was awarded to the plaintiff, and the defendant was ordered to pay to the plaintiff monthly the sum of $30 for the support and maintenance of said children, and the further sum of $12.50 at stated intervals for their necessary clothing. The final decree, which was made and entered on April 12, 1915, embodied the foregoing terms of the interlocutory decree. During the trial of said action the defendant, who had been personally served and had appeared therein, was represented by one E'. G. Ryker, Esq., as his attorney of record in said cause. In the year 1917 the defendant went to reside in Portland, Oregon, in which state he has since resided. On the eighth day of September, 1926, the plaintiff in said action filed in said court her notice of motion for an order amending the final decree of divorce therein so as to direct the defendant to thereafter pay to said plaintiff the sum of $60 per month for the support and maintenance of said minor children, and the further sum of $50 in January and June of each year to assist in purchasing clothing for them. The time fixed in *240 said notice for the hearing of said motion was the twenty-fourth day of September, 1926, at the hour of 10 o’clock. Service of said notice of motion was attempted to be made and consisted in the mailing forthwith of a copy thereof to said E. Gr. Ryker at the office address of said Ryker in Oakland, California, the said Ryker being, as the affidavit of mailing deposes, the attorney of record for the plaintiff in said action at all the times mentioned therein; and in the further mailing of a copy of said notice to the defendant himself at his Portland place of residence. On the day fixed in said notice for the hearing upon said motion the plaintiff appeared in court in support of said motion; the defendant also, represented by other counsel than said Ryker, made a so-called special appearance for the sole alleged purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court to make any order upon said motion and of moving the court to quash the attempted service of notice thereof. In support of said objection and motion counsel for the defendant presented and filed the affidavit of said E. Gf. Ryker, who deposed that while he had at all the times mentioned therein been an attorney and counselor at law, with his offices in the city of Oakland, he had ceased to be the attorney for the defendant at the time of the entry of the final decree therein and had not since represented him in said action. The plaintiff, in resisting said motion, introduced the affidavit of service of the moving paper therein, wherein it was asserted that said Ryker had at all times been and still was the defendant’s attorney of record in said action. The court overruled the defendant’s said objection and denied his said motion, and thereupon proceeded to hear and determine the plaintiff’s motion for the amendment of said final decree; and after taking testimony thereon, in the taking of which the defendant’s counsel took no part, made and entered its order amending its final decree in said action so as to provide for the payment to the plaintiff of the sum of $50 monthly for the support and maintenance of the one of the children of the parties who still remained a minor, said sum being in addition to the sums required for clothing as required by the terms of said decree. In the body of said order the trial court found and recited that due and legal notice of the hearing of said motion had been duly given to said defendant as required' by law. *241 Following the making and entry of said order the defendant made application for this writ of review, wherein the petitioner averred that the trial court acted beyond and in excess of its jurisdiction in the making and entry of its foregoing orders. In making this insistence the petitioner herein concedes that during the trial of said action for divorce, and up at least to the time of the entry of the final decree therein, the trial court had acquired full jurisdiction over both the person of said defendant and the subject matter of said action, including the right in said tribunal to make" and enter its orders embraced in both the interlocutory and final judgment therein relating to the custody, care, support, and maintenance of the minor children of the parties to said action. The petitioner also substantially admits that in respect to the last-named content of said decrees the trial court, by virtue of the provisions of section 138 of the Civil Code, retained a continuing jurisdiction over the subject matter thereof to the extent that it might modify or vacate at any time thereafter during the minority of such children such order or orders as it might have embodied in its said decrees for the custody, care, education, maintenance, and support of such minor children. The petitioner, however, insists that such jurisdiction, while it continues over the subject matter provided for in said section 138 of the Civil Code, is not retained over the person of the defendant after the date of the making and entry of said final decree. The language of section 138 of the Civil Code is read into every decree of divorce which purports to deal with the care, custody and support of the minor children of the parties to the action, and this being so, whatever orders or decrees the trial court may make or enter in the premises are not in the nature of final judgments which determine the relation of the parties to each other, or to the action or to the subject matter over which the court has thus retained all of the jurisdiction which it had during every stage of the proceedings and pendency of such action. In the foregoing sense the trial court retained under said section of the Civil Code, so read into its orders and decrees, the same jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter to which said section relates that it had and exercised prior to the making and entry of either its interlocutory or its final decree in said action. The *242 petitioner herein has referred us to no authority which is opposed to this conclusion, and we are satisfied that no such authority exists. It does not, however, follow that the trial court, which has acquired general jurisdiction over the parties to an action, may arbitrarily or ex parte make and enter either during the progress of the proceedings before it, or after its entry of a so-called final decree therein, orders and decrees adjudging the amount which defendant may be required to pay either in the way of alimony to his wife or in the way of the support of his minor children. Before such orders, which have the effect of money judgments and which are under the law enforceable by several drastic methods, can be made in an action for divorce or maintenance, some such sufficient notice must be given to the defendant as will amount to what is known as due process of law.

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Bluebook (online)
263 P. 1009, 203 Cal. 238, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-superior-court-cal-1928.