Newton v. Newton

132 N.W. 91, 166 Mich. 421, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 532
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1911
DocketDocket No. 153
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 N.W. 91 (Newton v. Newton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Newton, 132 N.W. 91, 166 Mich. 421, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 532 (Mich. 1911).

Opinion

Bird, J.

The petition alleges that a decree of divorce was granted complainant in this cause in 1894; that the same was prepared and signed by the court, but by the neglect of some one it was neither filed nor entered, and he prays that it may now be filed and entered on the records of the court as of the date when it was rendered. The Chief Justice finds from the records and oral testimony that a decree was granted, prepared, and signed, and that the marriage was dissolved, as alleged by petitioner, but denies to him a nunc pro tunc order to complete the record. I concur with his finding that such a decree was granted, prepared, and signed, and that the marriage was dissolved; but I disapprove of his refusal to grant the relief prayed. If a decree was actually granted, prepared, and signed, but by the neglect of some one it was never filed or entered on the records, and we are convinced of these facts, as we are, I think "the petitioner is entitled to the relief which litigants usually get when they prove their case.

It is safe to assume that the parties did not know of the defect in the record. They would not be supposed to know of it. Such matters are usually attended to by counsel and other officers of the court. It required some such occasion as the present one to bring the defect to the light.

It is said that defendant had no opportunity to ask for a rehearing or a review of the proceeding. If defendant [423]*423had desired a review of the proceeding and had taken steps to that end, the defect would have been discovered and corrected many years before this petition was filed, and from the fact that 15 years have elapsed without any such attempt being made, upon his part, we may safely conclude that he did not desire a review of the proceedings.

The order of the trial court is reversed, and an order will be entered therein agreeable to the prayer of the petition.

Hooker, Moore, McAlvay, and Stone, JJ., concurred with Bird, J.

The complainant filed her bill against the defendant December 5, 1894, for a decree of absolute divorce on the ground of nonsupport. There was no personal service of process, but, upon an affidavit of nonresidence being filed, an order for the appearance of defendant was made and published. The bill was taken as confessed by the defendant June 17, 1895. The cause came on for hearing on June 21, 1895, and proofs were taken. No decree was ever filed or entered. The last entry on the chancery calendar in this cause, in the year 1895, is under date June 17th, when an affidavit of regularity was filed. The next entry in order is July 22, 1907, “Order dismissing suit filed.” The next entry, March 22, 1909, “ Copy of marriage certificate filed,” and, on the same date, “Order permitting removal of marriage certificate from the files filed and entered.” The paper writing upon which the entry of July 22, 1907, is based is entitled in the cause, and is as follows:

“In this cause, on motion of Evaline Newton, the above complainant, it is ordered that the said cause be and the same is hereby dismissed. Evaline Newton, complainant.”

On the 2d day of November, 1909, one O. H. Lent, of Riverside, Cal., filed a petition in said court and cause, setting up, upon information and belief, that after the [424]*424proofs were taken in the divorce suit a decree of divorce was granted by the court to the complainant, and that such a decree was prepared and signed by the judge, but that the decree was never filed, is lost, and cannot be found; that after the decree was granted, the defendant who was a resident of the State of California, and had learned of the decree, married, on October 21, 1908, Nellie R. Cunningham, and, on January 9, 1909, died, the said Nellie surviving him; that on June 26, 1909, the said Nellie Cunningham Newton died in the State of California, and petitioner was appointed administrator of her estate; that as widow of Lyman Newton said Nellie was entitled to property of which Lyman Newton died seised, and that petitioner, as administrator of her estate, is entitled to it. The prayer of the petition is that an order be made for signing, filing, and' entering a decree of divorce in the cause, to bear date prior to October 21, 1908, to take the place of the former decree.

This petition was answered by Evaline Newton, who denies that a decree of divorce was granted or signed, or that the court did anything more than to take the case under advisement. She admits that she caused the order, signed by herself, dismissing the said cause, to be entered; admits that Lyman Newton went through the form of a marriage ceremony in the State of California with Nellie R. Cunningham, but says that it was secretly performed, and that the said Lyman Newton knew that he was still the lawful husband of complainant. Further answering, she says that she is the widow of said Lyman Newton, entitled to, and that she has claimed an interest in, his property, and has been recognized as such widow by the courts of California, and is now acting as administratrix of Lyman Newton’s estate. She further avers that subsequent to the taking of proofs in the original cause a reconciliation was effected between herself and her husband, who thereafter resumed marital relations, and at different intervals lived together as husband and wife.

Proofs were taken in open court. On the part of the [425]*425respondent, Evaline Newton, the proofs tended to show that she never knew of any decree having been granted; never saw a decree; that she cohabited with Lyman Newton after July 22,1907, and that in September, 1906, there was pending in the superior court, in the county of Los Angeles, State of California, a suit instituted by Lyman Newton, as plaintiff, against Evaline Newton, as defendant, the complaint in which set out that plaintiff and defendant intermarried on or about the 13th day of March, 1868, “and ever since have been and now are husband and wife,” and further alleging that on or about the 25th of August, 1890, the defendant deserted and abandoned the plaintiff without cause, and against his will and without his consent. The prayer of the complaint is that the bonds of matrimony between plaintiff and defendant be dissolved.

The testimony relied upon by the petitioner, aside from the files and records in the cause, is the following: An entry on the printed calendar of the circuit court for the county of Muskegon, for the May term, 1895, kept by Judge Russell and in his handwriting, reading: ‘ ‘ Evaline Newton v. Lyman Newton. Divorce. P. W. Kniskern. Decree;” the minutes of the stenographer on file with the clerk of the court, read by his successor, which show that upon the hearing of the divorce case three witnesses were examined (two besides the complainant), and at the conclusion of the testimony the entry, “You may prepare a decree;” the testimony of Mr. Kniskern, who was one of the solicitors for complainant, who examined the witnesses at the hearing, who testified that a decree was prepared and signed by the court, and that afterwards he had the decree in his office and cannot tell the reason for not filing it; that it was in his table drawer for a long time; that his client soon after the hearing went to Chicago; that he had a number of talks with her about the decree, and as to what had become of it. In this respect the testimony of Evaline Newton contradicts that of Mr. Kniskern, as does also that of her daughter. The question is whether [426]

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Bluebook (online)
132 N.W. 91, 166 Mich. 421, 1911 Mich. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-newton-mich-1911.