North v. Ringling Ringling v. North

7 So. 2d 476, 149 Fla. 739, 1940 Fla. LEXIS 1145
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 2, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 7 So. 2d 476 (North v. Ringling Ringling v. North) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North v. Ringling Ringling v. North, 7 So. 2d 476, 149 Fla. 739, 1940 Fla. LEXIS 1145 (Fla. 1940).

Opinion

*742 TERRELL, C. J.:

This case arises from the following facts. John Ringling was married to Emily Ringling (nee Emily Buck) in December, 1930. Four days before the marriage, Emily Buck loaned her fiance $50,000, taking his open note therefor and on the day of the wedding, they entered into an antenuptial agreement which will be discussed later. In July, 1933, John Ringling filed suit for divorce which he dismissed September 1, following. The consideration moving dismissal was set out in an agreement entered into between the parties which will be later discussed and referred to as the postnuptial agreement. In March, 1934, John Ringling filed a second suit for divorce. Before pleading to the merits of the second or present suit, two interlocutory appeals reached this Court, the first being from an order denying motion to quash the service, 117 Fla. 423, 158 So. 125, and the second being from an order denying a motion to dismiss the cause, 119 Fla. 210, 161 So. 406.

In May, 1934, John Ringling executed his will to which was attached a codicil dated November 2, 1935. In July,. 1936, final decree of divorce was rendered and John Ringling died December 2, 1936. On December 22, 1936, Emily Ringling secured an order from the circuit court reviving the divorce suit against Ida Ringling North and others as heirs, devisees, executors, and trustees of the estate of John Ringling. On the same date, the order of revivor was granted, Emily Ringling entered her appeal from the final decree of divorce.

In February, 1937, Ida Ringling North and others against whom the divorce suit was revived, moved to vacate the order of revivor. This motion was denied *743 and appeal was prosecuted from that order. Appeal was also prosecuted from the order of revivor. On November 2,1937, Emily Ringling applied to the chancellor for leave to file a bill in the nature of a bill of review, to examine and reverse the final decree of divorce. The chancellor denied said application and Emily Ringling appealed from that decree.

We are therefore confronted with four appeals, as follows: (1) The appeal of Emily Ringling from the final decree of divorce, (2) The appeal of Ida Ringling North, et al., for the order of revivor, (3) Appeal of Ida Ringling North, et al., from the order denying the motion to vacate the order of revivor, and (4) Appeal of Emily Ringling from the order of the chancellor' denying her application to file bill in the nature of a bill of review.

The appeal from the final dceree of divorce is the main appeal. The appeal from the decree denying the application of Emily Ringling to file her bill in the nature of a bill of review is incidental to the main appeal. The two appeals having been consolidated by order of this Court will be treated together on the motion of appellees to dismiss. The second and third appeals involve the same phase of the main case and will necessarily be concluded by the disposition of the motion to dismiss.

We pass sub silentio the charges of bad faith and the verbal assaults of counsel on each other including aspersions they cast on litigants. If we did not know counsel to be such, the arguments and briefs in this case reveal a high degree of ability and industry and would drive us to the conclusion that they are very able lawyers.

*744 The motion to dismiss is predicated on the theory that there being nothing but the marital status of the parties and no property rights whatever involved, the death of John Ringling rendered the divorce controversy moot. By the decided weight of authority in this country an appeal from a final decree of divorce cannot be prosecuted after the death of one of the parties when nothing but the marital status is involved. The one exception to this rule is the case in which in addition to the marital status there is also involved a controversy relating to the property rights of the parties. In such cases, the cause may be revived in the name of the heirs and personal representatives of the deceased spouse. This State recognizes both the rule and the exception. Price v. Price, 114 Fla. 233, 153 So. 904; Bell v. Bell, 181 U. S. 175, 21 Sup. Ct. 551, 45 L. Ed. 804.

This in fine is the whole theory of the case as contended by the representatives of John Ringling, but Mrs. Ringling has a very different story. She contends, (1) that the facts alleged arid proven do not support the decree of divorce, and (2) that the first divorce suit was instituted for the purpose of securing a property settlement, that such a settlement was in fact secured and being so, it worked a condonation of all grounds for divorce alleged therein, that none of said grounds can be alleged or considered in the second suit for divorce and that when eliminated, there is no basis for the second suit as no grounds for divorce were proven to have taken place subsequent to August 31, 1933, the date the first suit was dismissed.

To clarify the atmosphere and place the parties in their appropriate setting, it is not out of place to say that this is not the usual divorce controversy that *745 reaches this Court. Neither is it the case in which a strong overbearing complainant is pursuing a friendless and helpless defendant. Both parties to this cause “knew their way around.” If we may give faith and credit to the record, they were both wealthy in their own right; at the time of the marriage, he was sixty-two and she was forty-five; both had been married before, both had traveled extensively, were seasoned in experience, knew English in all its inflections, could call each other any kind of a name that the state of their temper prompted and whether called in the lingo of the drawing room, the boudoir, or the sawdust trail, the other was ready and did respond in kind. Some of the elements that induce marriage were totally lacking. It was treated as any other civil contract would be and has little on which the equities of domestic relations are usually invoked.

The chancellor who took the evidence and heard the case did not find that the first divorce suit was brought for the purpose of securing a property settlement. The final decree shows that three considerations actuated its dismissal. (1) It was dismissed at Mrs. Ringling’s request and on her assurance that she would be kind to Mr. Ringling in the future. (2) Mr. Ringling secured from his wife a written agreement extending the due date of his $50,000 note before he agreed to the dismissal, and (3) The execution of the postnuptial agreement which restored Mrs. Ringling’s dower in certain properties of the Ringling estate.

Appellant ignores the first of these considerations and contends that the second and third considerations inured solely to Mr. Ringling. Such is the basis on which she says that the first divorce suit was brought for the purpose of securing a property settlement. In *746 our view, the first of these considerations was mutual. She agreed to be kind, he to dismiss the divorce suit and both to resume the marital status. The second consideration was also mutual. Ringling got his note extended with the interest added but Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
7 So. 2d 476, 149 Fla. 739, 1940 Fla. LEXIS 1145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-v-ringling-ringling-v-north-fla-1940.