Newcomb's Executors v. Newcomb

76 Ky. 544, 13 Bush 544, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 19, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 76 Ky. 544 (Newcomb's Executors v. Newcomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcomb's Executors v. Newcomb, 76 Ky. 544, 13 Bush 544, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 103 (Ky. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinions

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee Cornelia W. Newcomb, by her next friend, J. L. Danforth, instituted the present action in equity in the Louisville Chancery Court on the 2d of March, in the year 1875, in which it is alleged that she is the widow of Horatio D. Newcomb, deceased, and as such entitled to dower in the realty owned by him at his death, and her distributable share of his personal estate; that her husband left a large and valuable estate, and a last will and testament by which he made various devises to his children and to others therein named, all of whom, together with the executors, are made defendants to the action. It is further alleged that she is a person of unsound mind, but has never been adjudged a lunatic, and has no committee. By the provisions of the will the [559]*559appellee has secured to her an annuity of $2,500 during her natural life; this she declines to accept, and through her next friend elects to renounce the provisions of the will made for her benefit, and asks the chancellor, inasmuch as she is disabled, from mental infirmity, from complying with the statute in making a written renunciation, to make it for her. She asks for a judgment allotting dower and her interest in the personalty.

The husband died in August, 1874. Prior to his death, on the 24th of April, 1871, on his petition filed in the Louisville Chancery Court, a decree was entered divorcing him from the present appellee, Cornelia W. Newcomb, and restoring him to all the rights and privileges of an unmarried man. Shortly after this divorce he married Mary C. Smith, and had by her two children. He devised to these two children and their mother about four hundred thousand dollars, and also made them residuary devisees with his son, H. Victor Newcomb, the only surviving child of the first marriage, to whom, the will recites, he had previously advanced four hundred thousand dollars. The construction of the will, and the rights of the parties under it, is not, however, involved in this litigation. Mary C. Newcomb and her two children are parties (appellants) to this record.

The appellants pleaded the record of the proceedings by which the divorce was obtained in the year 1871, as a bar to appellee’s recovery, and upon that record arises the principal question in this controversy. The court below granted relief by giving to the appellee her dower and distributive share of the personal estate. Prom the record in the divorce case, as well as in the present action, it appears that the appellee and Horatio D. Newcomb were married in the city of Louisville on the 23d of June, 1838, and lived together as husband and wife until the year 1852, when the appellee became a lunatic, and was taken by her husband to an asylum for the [560]*560insane located in Sommerville, Massachusetts, where she has continuously remained, and was there living at the institution of this action.

There was never any inquest of lunacy held, or any judicial finding of that fact; but it clearly appears from the evidence that she is a confirmed lunatic, and that such has been her mental condition since she was placed in the asylum. The husband continued to reside in Louisville until his death in 1874. The decree divorcing the parties was rendered under the act of 1865 providing, That the courts of chancery jurisdiction may decree a divorce, to both husband and wife, as an additional cause to those named in said section (chap. 47, art. 3, sec. 1. Rev. Stat.), for lunacy and unsound mind of confirmed and incurable character, and not less than three years’ continuance, to be established by the testimony of those skilled in mental maladies, and other proof; and upon granting the divorce, shall protect the property interest of the person of unsound mind, .... and in case of a wife, a provision shall be made for her out of the husband’s means.” Section 2 of the act makes it the duty of the court to appoint a guardian ad litem for the lunatic, who shall be a member of the bar and skilled in the law, and who shall be sworn to faithfully and honestly discharge his duties. Section 3 provides, that no divorce shall be granted under this act except in eases where the lunacy or unsoundness of mind was the result of intemperance or hereditary taint of insanity, which was concealed from the party at the time of the marriage, nor until the questions of fact shall be tried by a jury; nor shall the divorce be granted until and unless the chancellor shall enter on the record that he has heard all the testimony, and that in his opinion the judgment is sustained by the evidence.

By act of January, 26, 1871, amending the act of I860, it was provided that the court, in its discretion, might dispense with the jury.

[561]*561Under tbe provisions of these several enactments, the appellee was proceeded against by her husband as a non-resident or absent defendant, and a warning order entered requiring her to appear and answer the complaint within sixty days. An attorney or guardian ad litem was appointed to defend for her, and the chancellor, upon the facts, rendered the judgment without the intervention of a jury.

Before a warning order could be made by the clerk under the Code of Practice in force at the institution of the action, an affidavit was required to be made by the plaintiff and filed in the clerk’s office, setting forth the grounds, or some of them, designated by the Code authorizing proceedings by constructive service. Among those grounds is, that the defendant is “Anon-resident of this state;” or, “Has been absent from this state four months.” (Civil Code, sec. 88.) The court may also make the warning order upon the requisite facts being shown by the affidavit of another than the plaintiff or his attorney. (Civil Code, section 89.) The warning order was entered in this case in court, and the appellee proceeded against either as a non-resident or absent defendant. The affidavit showing the facts upon which the warning order was made, does not appear in the record of the action for a divorce, nor does it appear that any such affidavit was made. Counsel for the appellee now insist, as they did in the court below, that the decree of divorce is void for the following reasons: 1. There was no affidavit of the non-residence or statutory absence of the appellee; 2. The husband having placed his wife in the asylum, and being under his control and subject to his will, she was neither a non-resident, nor absent in the sense of the statute, so as to authorize a constructive service; that the domicil and residence of the husband was the domicil and residence of the wife, and actual service was necessary; 3. The appellee was entitled to have the question of her lunacy passed on by a jury. The court below, in the opinion delivered,, [562]*562assigned as one of the grounds for determining the judgment void, the absence from the record of the affidavit required by the Code, showing the appellee to have been a non-resident or absent from the state four months. That neither the clerk or the court had the authority to make the warning order without such an affidavit. There can be no question as to the necessity for such an affidavit before the entry of an order warning the defendant to appear and answer.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Ky. 544, 13 Bush 544, 1877 Ky. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcombs-executors-v-newcomb-kyctapp-1877.