Reiss v. Reiss

243 So. 2d 507, 46 Ala. App. 422, 1970 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 428
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedNovember 18, 1970
Docket6 Div. 51
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 243 So. 2d 507 (Reiss v. Reiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiss v. Reiss, 243 So. 2d 507, 46 Ala. App. 422, 1970 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 428 (Ala. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

THAGARD, Presiding Judge.

“Oh what a tangled web we weave, When first we practice to deceive.”

Sir Walter Scott

The appellee in this case, Mrs. Ethel Reiss, flew to Jefferson County, Alabama, from her home in New York on June 11, 1958, and wove for herself a tangled web by going to some office in Birmingham the next day and signing a deposition that she and her husband were bona fide resident citizens of the State of Alabama and thereby obtaining a divorce from the bonds of matrimony on the ground of statutory cruelty.

More than ten years later she again flew from her New York home to Winston County, Alabama, and sought to untangle the web which she had woven by filing a bill in the nature of a bill of review alleging that she and her husband were residents of New York and not of Alabama when the divorce was obtained and praying the court to give her an assist in the untangling by setting aside and annulling the divorce decree that had been rendered some ten years and one month earlier.

Later she filed an amendment to the original bill alleging that she and her husband had entered into a written separation agreement prior to filing for the divorce.

She alleged that she entered into the separation agreement and signed the deposition in the divorce proceeding because of duress, coercion, and fraud on the part of her husband.

A motion to strike and demurrers to the original bill and the amended bill were filed by respondent but as far as the record shows they were never presented to or acted upon by the court; and respondent later waived the same by filing an answer without reserving the right to have the motion to strike and demurrers ruled upon.

The testimony was taken orally before , the court and the cause submitted, and the-Honorable Bob Moore, Jr., trial judge, rendered a decree dated April 4, 1969, declaring the divorce decree that he had rendered on June 12, 1958, null and void and ■ setting the same aside, and ordering the: respondent, Morris Reiss, to pay Bill Fite, solicitor for complainant, the sum of $750.00 for his services to complainant.

On May 1, 1969, respondent filed an appeal bond with a bonding company as surety, which was taken and approved, by the, register on the day filed.

On June 27, 1969, the trial judge, ex mero. motu and without notice to either party, rendered what purported to be an amendment to the final decree dated April 4, 1969, awarding additional relief by declaring void the separation agreement executed by the parties on May 14, 1958. The respondent, on July 25, 1969, filed a motion for a rehearing on the “Amendment to Decree” dated June 27, 1969, which motion was denied by the trial court by a decree, dated September 5, 1969.

Subsequently, on September 26, 1969, the trial court, ex mero motu and without notice to' the parties, rendered another decree' undertaking to clairify the earlier decrees by setting aside and declaring for naught “any and all agreements between the parties heretofore incorporated in any decree of this court by reference or otherwise * * Then on October 30, 1969, the trial court rendered another decree amending and expanding the decree dated September 5, 1969, by denying respondent’s motion for a rehearing on the decree dated June 27, 1969.

[425]*425On November 19, 1969, the trial court, again ex mero motu and without notice, rendered a “final once and for all” decree, undertaking to vacate the decrees dated September 5, 1969, and September 26, 1969, undertaking to explain the purposes and effects of the decree dated October 30, 1969, and again annulling the divorce decree rendered on June 12, 1958, and the separation agreement therein embraced.

On December 18, 1969, the respondent perfected an appeal to this court from the decrees dated June 27, 1969, October 30, 1969, and November 19, 1969, by filing an appeal bond which was taken and approved by the register on the date of its filing.

On December 23, 1969, the Honorable Bill Fite accepted service of a citation of an appeal “to the Supreme Court of Alabama from the decrees heretofore rendered in the above stated cause by the Circuit Court of Winston County, Alabama; and waived “any and all further notices of said appeal”, and consented “that said cause may be submitted at any time without further notice to the undersigned.”

On March 13, 1970, the respondent filed an application that, if this court should find that the decrees or amendments to decrees dated June 27, 1969, and November 19, 1969, are void and not subject to review by appeal, we grant an alternative writ of mandamus directed to the trial judge requiring him by appropriate order or decree to vacate and annul said void decrees.

The appellee, on July 17, 1970, filed a motion to dismiss the appeals of appellant on grounds that the security for costs from the April 4, 1969, decree was not properly filed because of the absence of the power of attorney to the purported attorney-in-fact; further, that no citation of appeal was issued to and served upon appellee; and, finally, that the appellant took the position in a proceeding in a New York court that the Winston County, Alabama, court had set aside the divorce decree and that the parties were husband and wife, and that the position taken by him was a fraud on the New York court and on this court and that he should now be estopped to take a position different from that taken by him in the New York court.

The only statutory requirement that we find pertaining to an appeal bond is that it be approved by the clerk or register or the court. Title 7, § 766(b), 1940 Code of Alabama. The record shows that the appeal bond from the decrees dated December 4, 1968, and April 4, 1969, was taken and approved by the register on May 1, 1969.

The mere act of filing an appeal bond within the time limit fixed by law is the event which effects an appeal and notice of the appeal need not be given within the six months period allowed by law for taking an appeal. Maya Corporation v. Smith, 239 Ala. 470, 196 So. 125.

In Blalock v. Johnson, 270 Ala. 654, 656, 657, 121 So.2d 604, 605, the Supreme Court said:

“After the motion to dismiss was filed a supplemental transcript was brought to this court showing belated compliance with the deficiencies pointed out in the grounds of the motion to dismiss presently under consideration. The supplemental transcript was filed several weeks before the cause was ready for submission on briefs. Under the recent decisions of this court the grounds of the motion to dismiss the appeal presently under consideration must be overruled. Benson-Jackson-Mathers Post No. 5106 v. Donaldson, 267 Ala. 60, 99 So.2d 688; Louisville Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 252 Ala. 532, 41 So.2d 585; Mutual Sav. Life Ins. Co. v. Osborne, 242 Ala. 19, 7 So.2d 319.”

In this case, in response to a writ of certiorari which we issued to the register ordering her to correct and complete the record, the register filed a supplement to the record with an amended certificate to the effect that when she received the writ of certiorari the court files and records in the [426]

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Bluebook (online)
243 So. 2d 507, 46 Ala. App. 422, 1970 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiss-v-reiss-alacivapp-1970.