O'Dell v. O'Dell

64 N.E.2d 126, 78 Ohio App. 60, 33 Ohio Op. 416, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 539
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 19, 1945
Docket644
StatusPublished

This text of 64 N.E.2d 126 (O'Dell v. O'Dell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Dell v. O'Dell, 64 N.E.2d 126, 78 Ohio App. 60, 33 Ohio Op. 416, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 539 (Ohio Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Miller, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Darke county, Ohio, wlierein the court refused to set aside a decree of divorce wliicli had been granted to the plaintiff at a former term of court.

The plaintiff, appellee herein, filed his petition for a divorce against the defendant on the 18th day of July 1944. At the time of the filing of the petition, the defendant, appellant herein, was in the city of Niles, Michigan. The plaintiff, without filing any affidavit or making any showing to the court that the defendant was not a resident of the state of Ohio and that service of summons could not be had upon her in this *61 state, caused summons, and a certified copy of the petition to be issued to the sheriff of Berrien county, Michigan. The sheriff, thereupon, on the 7th day of August 1944 served the defendant with a copy of the summons and a certified copy of the petition. Proof of service was made by affidavit. Immediately upon receiving the summons and a certified copy of the petition, the defendant came to Ohio and shortly thereafter talked with-the plaintiff and held several other conversations with him prior to the granting of the decree. A day or two before the divorce was granted, the defendant met the trial judge and upon inquiry he advised her that in all probability her case would be heard on the following Saturday morning. On that morning the defendant was physically present iii the courtroom in the court house in Greenville, Ohio. During the course of the morning the plaintiff appeared with his witnesses and submitted his case. The defendant heard the testimony that was offered against her and also heard the trial judge announce that the plaintiff was entitled to a decree of divorce. At no time did the defendant file an answer nor did she, by writing, enter her appearance in court. At a subsequent term of court the defendant filed her petition to vacate the decree., on the ground that the court had not acquired jurisdiction. That petition was not allowed and the court found that the service, together with the subsequent acts of the defendant, conferred jurisdiction upon the Common Pleas Court, and that the decree of divorce was valid.

Several assignments of error are made, but only one is discussed in the brief of the defendant. We shall, therefore, confine ourselves to it. Such assignment of error is in substance that the court committed error in holding it had jurisdiction over the defendant at the time the decree of divorce was rendered.

*62 The question here presented for our determination is whether a service which is irregular and invalid, followed by a discussion by the defendant with the trial judge, the physical appearance of the defendant in the courtroom at the time of the trial of the cause and her hearing the evidence and the decree of the court pronounced, is sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the court in a divorce case. No answer was ever filed or appearance entered in. writing. Consequently, if defendant’s appearance was entered it was by her acts after the service of process upon her in the state of Michigan. No attempt was made to secure service upon her by publication. No affidavit was filed alleging that she was not a resident of the state of Ohio or that service of summons could not be had upon her within the state. Had this been done, service could then have been had upon the defendant by publication as provided for in Section 11984, General Code. No service was ever made upon her in Ohio under Section 11983, General Code. These two sections constitute the entire law relative to service in divorce cases, and neither was followed. It is well established that the foregoing provisions of the statute are mandatory and exclusive and that they are to be strictly construed. The general doctrine has been tersely stated as follows:

“The defendant in a divorce suit in Ohio is not in court without full and complete conformity to the provisions of the statute on the part of the plaintiff.” Ready v. Ready, 25 Ohio App., 432, 158 N. E., 493. See, also, 14 Ohio Jurisprudence, 416, Section 35.

Compliance with provisions as to process cannot, as a general rule, be waived by the defendant, and it lias been held under this doctrine that neither the voluntary entry of the defendant’s appearance nor an acknowledgment of acceptance of service by counsel *63 oil belialf of defendant is sufficient to confer jurisdiction in a divorce proceeding.

On the question of jurisdiction the plaintiff seems to rely solely on the case of Black v. Black, 110 Ohio St., 392, 144 N. E., 268, where the following statement was made:

“Upon the question of jurisdiction it need only be further stated that the defendant, not merely by his pleadings, but by his appearance in open court, waived any question of jurisdiction over his person, as is well settled by a long line of decisions of this court; the latest one, wherein the previous ones are cited, being Klein v. Lust, ante [110 Ohio St., 197] * *

The facts with reference to the service of process in that case do not fully appear from the opinion, and it seems probable that the statement of the court, relative to the filing of pleadings by the defendant and his personal appearance in court as constituting a waiver of jurisdiction over his person, is intended to refer only to the alimony branch of the case or to the issue respecting the custody of the child, which was also involved. Judge Zimmerman, in commenting on that case in State, ex rel. Haun, v. Hoffman, 145 Ohio St, 31, 60 N. E. (2d), 657, said:

“Besides, the language of the court in the per curiam opinion in the Black case, that, by his actions, the defendant Black had waived any question of ‘jurisdiction over his person,’ seems to have been directed primarily to that phase of the suit having to do with the custody of the child.’.’

The difference between the case at bar and the Black case is that the defendant did not file any pleadings in court.

In commenting on the Black case, in the case of Tucker v. Tucker, 143 Ohio St., 658, 56 N. E. (2d), 202, Judge Williams said:

*64 “The Black case is authority for the principle that the appearance of the defendant may he entered in a divorce action so as to give jurisdiction over the person of the defendant; but the opinion in that case should be read in the light of the surrounding facts. There was at least attempted service on Black, as an examination of the original record shows, and he filed a pleading and defended the action.” (Emphasis ours.)

The court held in that case that in an action for divorce the court acquired jurisdiction of the defendant where he, after personal service irregularly made on. him which was not quashed or sought by him to be quashed, filed an answer in which was incorporated an entry of appearance, a waiver of issuance and service of summons, and denial of material averments of the petition.

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Related

Ready v. Ready
158 N.E. 493 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1927)
Black v. Black
144 N.E. 268 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1924)
Klein v. Lust
143 N.E. 527 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1924)
Hayes v. Kentucky Joint Stock Land Bank
181 N.E. 542 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1932)
Tucker v. Tucker
56 N.E.2d 202 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 N.E.2d 126, 78 Ohio App. 60, 33 Ohio Op. 416, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odell-v-odell-ohioctapp-1945.