Mulligan v. Mulligan

11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585
CourtMercer Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585 (Mulligan v. Mulligan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mercer Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulligan v. Mulligan, 11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

On March 5, 1907, Maggie Mulligan filed her petition in this • action seeking to have set aside a decree of divorce obtained against her by her husband, the defendant, at a former term of the court of common pleas.

In her amended petition, subsequently filed, she alleges that that decree was obtained by fraud and perjury, in this, that her husband was not, at the time of filing his petition for divorce, a bona fide resident of Mercer county, and had not been a resident of the state for one year prior to the filing of his petition; that she had no actual notice of such action in time to make her defense; that no other service was sought to be had upon her than by publication in -a newspaper. She alleges that she did not discover said facts during the term or terms in which said action was pending, nor until the twentieth of November in the [586]*586following year, and that she could not, with reasonable diligence, have discovered such facts. She alleges that Frank Mulligan at all times knew the address and place of residence of this petitioner and that the allegation of his affidavit for service by pulication that “the residence of the defendant, Maggie Mulligan, is unknown and can not with reasonable diligence be ascertained,” was false.

She alleges that said Frank Mulligan practiced fraud and suborned witnesses in obtaining his decree of divorce; that the allegations of his petition as grounds for his divorce are false; she admits that she has been separated from him by reason of his aggression; that she is the mother of -two living children and of'one who has died, and she files a full answer setting up her defense to his action for divorce and asks that the decree of divorce be vacated and set aside and that she may-be allowed to defend.

A demurrer to this amended petition was sustained, and the amended petition dismissed, and plaintiff, not desiring to plead further, prosecutes error to this court.

The original petition for divorce was filed April 12, 1905.,. It appears from one of the pleadings that the entry decreeing the divorce was probably dated June 17, 1905.

Plaintiff says in her petition that she did not learn of that decree until November 20, 1906. ITer petition to set aside the decree was filed March 5, 1907, more than one year and eight months after the granting of the decree. It is not properly before us by any allegation of pleadings, but it is said by counsel in argument, as one reason for not granting the prayer of the petition, that the original plaintiff has married again and hence that the rights of his present supposed wife ought not to be interfered with.

Section 5354, Revised Statutes, provides that:

“The common pleas court, or the circuit court, may vacate or modify its own judgment or order, after the term at which the same was made:
“1. By granting a new trial for the cause within the time and in the manner provided in Section 5309 [and that section limits such action to "one year after the final judgment was ren[587]*587dered and not more than two terms after the discovery — evidently not applicable to this case at bar].
“2. By a new trial granted in proceedings against defendants constructively summoned, as provided in Section 5048 [which provides for the service by publication],
“3. For fraud practiced by the successful party in obtaining judgment or order.”

Both of the two subdivisions last cited are apparently applicable to this ease, as is also Section 5355, Revised Statutes, which provides:

“A party against whom a judgment or order has been rendered without other service than, by publication in a newspaper, may, at any time within five years after the date of the judgment or order, have the same opened, and be let in to defend; but before the judgment or order can be opened; the applicant shall give notice to the adverse party of his intention to make the application, and shall file a full answer to the petition, pay all costs, if the court require them to be paid, and make it appear, to the satisfaction of the court, that during the pendency of -the action he had no actual notice thereof in time to appear in court and make his defense; and each party may present affidavits. ’ ’

It is under this section apparently that the action has been brought, and its provisions have been fully complied with by the present petitioner.

1 In its terms this section is clear and explicit, and apparently applicable to all cases of every kind where no other service has been obtained than by publication. But for some reason, wise or otherwise, the Legislature and the courts of this state have, for a long time, treated divorce suits as if governed by a separate rule and reason from all other suits.

The allegations of the petition in a divorce proceeding are not required to be verified. Distinct rules as to costs distinguish such suits generally from other suits; and it has been held that this statute, clear and explicit and of universal application as it appears to be, must not be held to apply to divorce suits. '

The reason on which all of these judicial decisions are based,is that public policy requires that a “decree which affects directly [588]*588the status of married persons, by sundering the matrimonial tie, and thereby enabling them to contract new matrimonial relations with other and innocent persons, should never be reopened.” See Parish v. Parish, 9 Ohio St., 534, 537.

This principle was first applied to divorce cases in this state in the opinion of Judge Lane in the case of Bascom v. Bascom, 7 Ohio (pt. 2), 125. He supports his conclusion by reasoning regarding the different forms of testimony in chancery cases and divorce cases — reasoning which would have but little weight under our present practice — but the only reason relied on apparently is that of public policy, which, without discussion, he assumes to be against the granting of any relief to the injured party in divorce cases. That ease w>as followed in the case of Laughery v. Laughery, 15 Ohio, 404, but without discussion and merely as decisive of the question as to the appealability of a divorce case — a question now settled by statute.

Both the cases of Bascom v. Bascom and Laughery v. Laughery, supra, were cited and relied upon in the case of Tappan v. Tappan, 6 Ohio St., 64 — not to determine the question here at issue, as to the right of a court which has granted a divorce to reopen the case on notice of fraud and perjury in obtaining the decree— but to support the holding that there can be no review in Ohio by a higher court of a decision of a lower court granting a divorce — a proposition not now before us.

Judge Scott, however, in an obiter dictum in Tappan v. Tappan, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulligan-v-mulligan-ohcirctmercer-1908.