Sloan v. Sloan

295 S.W. 62, 155 Tenn. 422, 2 Smith & H. 422, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 62
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 62 (Sloan v. Sloan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sloan v. Sloan, 295 S.W. 62, 155 Tenn. 422, 2 Smith & H. 422, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 62 (Tenn. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The object of the bill is to have the following decree entered in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, declared void and its enforcement enjoined, to-wit:

“W. T. Sloan, Complainant and Cross-defendant v. Katie E. Sloan, Cross-complainant and Dependant,
No. 23166 R. D.
Final-Decree*
“This day this cause came on ag’ain for hearing, the same having been heretofore taken under advisement.
*424 ‘ ‘ And, it appearing to the Court, from the whole record, and the testimony offered by both parties hereto, and the argument of counsel, that the complainant, and cross-defendant, W. T. Sloan, abandoned, turned out of doors, and failed and refused to provide for defendant, and. cross-complainant, Katie E. Sloan;
“It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the bill of complainant, W. T. Sloan, be and the same is hereby dismissed and that he pay all costs lawfully expended in this behalf, for all of which, let execution issue.
“It is furthermore ordered, adjudged and decreed that a perpetual divorce from bed and board be and the same is hereby granted to the cross-complainant, Katie É. Sloan; and the cross-defendant, W. T. Sloan, shall pay to the clerk of this court on the 15th day of February, 1927, and on the 15th day of each and eveiy month thereafter, as permanent alimony, the sum of $40; and, it appearing further that Edgar 'Webster, solicitor for Mrs. Katie E. Sloan, should recover of W. T. Sloan, the cross-complainant, a solicitor’s fee of $100, it is furthermore ordered, adjudged and decreed that he pay to Edgar Webster on the 1st day of February, 1927, the sum of $25, and a like sum on the 1st of each and every month thereafter until the entire sum has been paid.
“It furthermore appearing to the court that W. T. Sloan is delinquent in the alimony pendente lite, to the extent of $50, it is furthermore ordered, adjudged and decreed that he pay to the clerk of this Court on the 15th day of January, 1927, the sum of $50, as alimony pen-dente lite.
“This matter is retained in Court for the purpose of enforcing this decree.
*425 “To all of which action of the Court the complainant then and there excepted and now excepts.”

In the Circuit Court cause the hill charged,. and the answer admitted, that the defendant was a resident of Mississippi; hence the complainant insists that the decree of divorce awarded defendant was invalid because her grounds of divorce arose out of the State and she had not resided in the State two years next preceding the filing of her cross-bill, as required by Section 4203 of Shannon’s Code.

While such is the general rule, an exception is recognized in most jurisdictions where a resident of the State brings an action for divorce against a non-resident, and the latter files a cross-bill seeking a divorce from the original complainant.

This rule is thus stated in 9 R. C. L., 404, section 201:

“Where an action for divorce is brought by a resident of the State of the forum against a nonresident, it is generally held that a divorce may be granted the nonresident on his or her cross-bill though a statute in general terms requires the complainant in an action for divorce to have been a resident of the state for a designated time. And it has been held that the abandonment or dismissal of the original bill or petition does not oust the court of jurisdiction to grant a divorce to the nonresident cross-petitioner. The jurisdiction of the court to entertain a cross-bill' by a nonresident defendant is based on the familiar principle that a court of equity having acquired jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter of the suit will retain and exercise such jurisdiction until the equities of all the parties are meted out to them. ’ ’

The same principle is announced in 19 O. J., 27, in the following language:

*426 “Generally- statutes making residence of plaintiff a prerequisite to the exercise of divorce jurisdiction does not preclude a nonresident defendant from filing a cross-bill and obtaining a decree of divorce against plaintiff, provided plaintiff has resided in the jurisdiction the requisite time.”

From the cases supporting these texts it will be found that the courts in the following states support this rule, to-wit: Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio,Oklahoma, Texas and Washington.

The only court holding to the contrary is the Supreme Court of Rhode Island.

The reason for granting such relief to a non-resident is thus stated in Sterl v. Sterl, 2 Ill. App., 223, to-wit:

“ It is a familiar principle of law that a court of equity having acquired jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter of the suit will retain and exercise such jurisdiction until the equities of all the parties are meted out to them. In this case the jurisdiction of the court is invoked by the appellee, he having, as he had a legal right to do, filed his bill against appellant praying relief and summoning the appellant into the court. When she is thus brought in, and, having responded to the claims o* the appellee by answering his bill of complaint, being, as it were, then forced into the court, submits herself to its jurisdiction, and asks the court to grant to her certain equitable rights, to which she claims to be entitled, then it is that the appellee challenges the jurisdiction of the court to grant to her any equitable rights, but continues to clamor for his. This position is unconscionable and indefensible upon the principles of equity. But we are told, and it is urged by the appellee, that by reason of the arbitrary provisions of the statute, there is no es *427 cape from this dilemma, and that, as a consequence, the appellant is in the court for the purpose of receiving its mandate and yielding obedience to its orders, hut without any equitable rights which the appellee is bound to respect, for the reason, as he claims, that she resided in New York and not in Illinois, and notwithstanding she is dragged into the court, at the suit of the appellee, and, as may be presumed, against her will. We think that by the plainest principles of equity the appellee is, under such circumstances, precluded from questioning the jurisdiction of a court which he has himself invoked; and that, the court having acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties to the suit at the instance and by the prayer of the appellee, he cannot he heard to question the jurisdiction of the court to hear, consider, and determine all the equities of the parties to the end that complete justice may he done to all in the same case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 62, 155 Tenn. 422, 2 Smith & H. 422, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloan-v-sloan-tenn-1927.