Newcomer v. Newcomer

201 N.W. 579, 199 Iowa 290
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 20, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 201 N.W. 579 (Newcomer v. Newcomer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newcomer v. Newcomer, 201 N.W. 579, 199 Iowa 290 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Albert, J. —

I. On the 13th day of May, 1913, appellant procured a decree of divorce from the appellee in the district court of Iowa in and for Tama County. This decree gave the appellant costs, including attorney’s fees, $1,000 cash alimony, $200 a month for 5 years, and $100 a month after that time, so long as the appellant should remain unmarried. In 1922, appellant filed a petition in the same court to modify said decree and increase the monthly alimony. While a demurrer to this application was pending, the appellant dismissed the application on the 23d day of July, 1922; and on the 26th day of July, 1922, she filed her petition in this case in the district court of Hardin County, Iowa. In the presént petition she makes the usual allegations for a divorce on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment and adultery. She further pleads the Tama County decree, and alleges that it is void because neither the appellant nor the appellee was a resident of Tama County at the time said decree was procured, and further alleges that said proceedings in Tama County were instituted and the decree procured through false and fraudulent representations made to her at the time, by the appellee; not of her own free will, but through duress at the hands of the appellee. In due time, the appellee herein filed what he designates a “special appearance and motion to dismiss petition for want of jurisdiction. ’ ’ In this paper the appellee, in substance, sets up three matters which he claims show want of jurisdiction in the Hardin County court. He says:

1. That there is no jurisdiction because, by reason of the Tama County decree, the relation of husband and wife did not exist between the appellant and the appellee at the time this action was brought.

*292 2. That the statute of limitations has barred the plea of fraud and duress.

3. That the appellant is estopped by reason of having received the benefits provided for in the Tama County decree; that the appellee, acting in good faith on that decree and its provisions, has since married, and has one child now living.

Under Section 3541 of the Supplement to the Code, 1913, the defendant is entitled to appear specially and object to the jurisdiction of the court. We have held, contrary to the current ru-*-e *n most' states, that this statute is broad enough to warrant the defendant in ob-5=5 jeeting to the jurisdiction of the subject-matter, as well as that of the persons. Scott v. Scott, 174 Iowa 740, at 747.

The substance of the special appearance and motion filed herein raises three questions. The first amounts to a plea of former adjudication; the second, a plea of statute of limitations; and the third, a plea of estoppel. Each one of these pleas is purely defensive, and generally would be held not the subject of a special appearance. More than this, any one of these pleas would ordinarily amount to a general appearance; but the status of the present case is somewhat peculiar.

This alleged special appearance and motion are in no way attacked by the plaintiff herein, by motion, demurrer, or otherwise. Both parties seem content to submit the case on the record thus made; and we will so treat it.

As to the plea of the plaintiff attacking the Tama County decree on account of fraud and duress, it is elementary that the decree procured by fraud and duress is voidable, and not void. Kwentsky v. Sirovy, 142 Iowa 385. It being a voidable decree, the attack here made 0 7 is, therefore, collateral. It is said in 34 C. J. 521, at Note 55:

“* * * If the action or proceeding has an independent purpose and contemplates some other relief or result, although the overturning of the judgment may be important or has been necessary to its success, then the attack upon the judgment is collateral. ’ ’

In the present proceedings, she seeks a divorce and alimony, *293 incidentally attempting, necessary to her success, to overturn the Tama County decree. So viewed from either angle, the attack made on that decree is collateral; and we hold that the Tama County decree cannot be collaterally attacked in the Hardin County court, so far as this matter of fraud and duress is concerned.

Section 3171 of the Code of Iowa, 1897, provides:

“The district court in the county where either party resides has jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this chapter” (divorce, alimony, etc.).

Under this section, at least one of the parties to the divorce proceedings must be a resident of the county where the divorce is pending, in order to give jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

The Tama County decree specially finds that the court had jurisdiction both of the subject-matter and of the persons. Appellant alleges in her petition, ■ however, that neither she nor the appellee was a resident of Tama County at-the time the decree was entered. Plaintiff, *i /»/*> ■* 11 • i i i . -* • however,- affirmed this decree by her1 application for an increase of alimony, in the petition filed by her in Tama County in 1922. If the appellant were in a position to take advantage of this matter, we might hold that the Tama County decree was void for want of jurisdiction; as the appellee, in his showing, does not deny plaintiff’s assertion that neither of them was a resident of Tama County at the time of the entering of the decree; but we do not pass upon this proposition, by reason of the matters to which reference is hereinafter made.

II. The appellant herein was the plaintiff in the Tama County divorce proceedings. She was compelled to establish, before she was entitled to procure that-decree, that she or her husband was, at the time of the commencement of that proceeding, a resident of Tama County. jn procee¿ing} the court proceeded to a decree, and necessarily and actually found that it had jurisdiction of both the persons and the subject-matter involved. The appellant herein, therefore, either by herself or by some of her witnesses, or by some other means, must have satisfied the court *294 that either she or her husband, at the time, was a resident of Tama County. Under the allegations she now makes, she says that this finding of residence was not true. The plaintiff having-procured the Tama County decree under these circumstances, and having affirmed the same by her application made in 1922 for additional alimony, and having accepted the benefits of that decree, we are of the opinion that she cannot now be heard to say that the Tama County district court was without jurisdiction. She seeks to avoid this situation by asserting that the decree was procured by fraud and duress. As hereinbefore stated, that is a collateral attack on the Tama County judgment, and is not available in this proceeding.

III. She shows, in her affidavit and application for temporary alimony and support money, that the appellee has fully and faithfully carried out the provisions of the Tama County decree, so far as he is concerned. He has made all payments to her as therein provided, and was' so doing, and tendered payments, at the time of the commencement of this suit. He availed himself of the provisions of said decree by shortly thereafter mai-rying another woman, with whom he is still living, and has one child.

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201 N.W. 579, 199 Iowa 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomer-v-newcomer-iowa-1925.