Suiter v. Suiter

57 N.E.2d 616, 74 Ohio App. 44, 41 Ohio Law. Abs. 120
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1944
Docket3667
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 57 N.E.2d 616 (Suiter v. Suiter) 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
Suiter v. Suiter, 57 N.E.2d 616, 74 Ohio App. 44, 41 Ohio Law. Abs. 120 (Ohio Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*122 OPINION

By HORNBECK. J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment dismissing the amended petition of defendant-appellant, Francis H. McFarland, after the Court had sustained a demurrer to said amended petition.

Four errors are assigned which may be epitomized as, error in the sustaining of the demurrer to the petition of defendant-appellant, McFarland, and error in sustaining the demurrer to the amended petition of said defendant-appellant. The first error assigned is not well made for two reasons: (1), It is not the subject of appeal in the notice filed by defendant; (2), The sustaining of the demurrer to the petition was not a final order because defendant elected to plead further and no judgment was entered against him in the entry journalizing the sustaining of the demurrer.

Holbrook v Connolly, 6 Oh St 199.

Krauser v Stichtenoth, 15 O. C. C., 199.

National Guarantee & Finance Co. v Russell et, 25 Abs 483.

Hendrickson et, v Galbreath et, 27 Abs 422.

Robbins et v City National Bank & Trust Co., 29 Abs 467.

Liesman Admrx. v Brookville, 32 Abs 343.

Davies, etc. v Columbia Gas & Elec. Corp., et, 34 Abs 473.

The fact pattern and questions of law presented by the second assignment of error on this appeal are unusual. The action was instituted by petition filed by defendant, McFarland, to vacate a divorce decree granted to plaintiff from her husband, Ellis Suiter, on September 20, 1921, to which original action the defendant, McFarland, was not a party. His petition to vacate was filed June 2, 1942, and the amended petition filed June 5, 1943.

Defendant’s petition, in part, alleges that the plaintiff was married to Ellis Suiter on June 14, 1915, and married the defendant, McFarland, on December 1, 1917, at which time she represented to the defendant that she was an unmarried woman, whereas, in truth and in fact, she was still married to Ellis Suiter; that on August 1, 1921, plaintiff filed her petition *123 for divorce in the Common Pleas Court, Franklin County, Ohio, in which she made affidavit that she had been continuously for more than three years last past a bona fide resident of Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio; that said allegation was false and untrue and plaintiff was a resident of the state of Pennsylvania and had at no time been a bona fide resident of Columbus; that on September 30, 1921, said Court not knowing the true facts and being misled and deceived by the false and untrue allegations of said petition and the evidence offered in support thereof, rendered a decree of divorce to said plaintiff from said defendant based upon the false and perjured allegations of the testimony of plaintiff and others. The petition alleges that said decree of divorce is void and should be vacated and set aside and the petition dismissed because of the fraud practiced by the plaintiff upon said Common Pleas Court, and for the further reason that said Court had no jurisdiction over the persons of the parties nor of the subject matter nor to hear and determine said cause or to render final decree.

The trial Judge sustained the demurrer for the reason that defendant, McFarland, was a stranger to the divorce action and had no standing as a party to seek the action of the Court in vacating the divorce decree.

After the demurrer to the petition had been filed defendant filed an amended petition wherein he alleged, that he did not become aware of the divorce proceedings between the plaintiff and her former husband until November 1, 1941, that “on October 1, 1921, said Florence Fricker Suiter persuaded and induced this party defendant to go through another alleged marriage ceremony at Wellsburg, West Virginia, under the pretense that they would make a completely fresh start”, to which amended petition the second demurrer was filed and sustained. ■

The briefs are voluminous and discuss many aspects of the law related to the questions presented by the appeal. The appellee’s brief presents a keen and scholarly analysis of all phases of the questions presented and upon the substantive question arranges his argument under several headings, as follows:

A. Divorce decree not subject to attack by anybody.

B. If decree subject to attack, it cannot be done by defendant, McFarland.

C. If defendant can attack this judgment, his petition is insufficient for that purpose.

*124 D. The claim of defendant is barred by the statute of limitations.

E. Defendant has not sought equitable relief.

F. If defendant had sought equitable relief it would not have availed him anything.

G. The mischief of endless litigation.
H. This court is not concerned with the evidence on the merits.

All of these propositions are fully and ably briefed. Appellant’s brief likewise is comprehensive and, in the main, is devoted to the claim that he is a proper party to invoke the proceeding to vacate the divorce decree and that the petition states a cause of action because it pleads facts which, if true, establish that the Court which granted the decree of divorce to the plaintiff was without jurisdiction either of the parties or of the subject matter. We briefly advert to some of the propositions presented by the appeal although not in the order set forth in the briefs.

This conclusion, in our judgment, is sound. The proceeding here is statutory and based upon our sections of the Code relating to relief after judgment, particularly Parts 4 and 10, §11631 GC, although as to Part 10 the allegations of the amended petition are insufficient because there is no averment that plaintiff has been convicted of the perjury charged.

D. The claim of defendant is barred by the statute of limitations.

The proceeding is not barred by any statute of limitations because of the averment in the amended petition that defendant did not become aware of the divorce proceedings until November, 1941. Obviously, if the defendant did not know of his rights until the time set forth, then the amended petition does not affirmatively disclose the bar of the statute, although it is difficult to reconcile the averment that the defendant, McFarland, knew nothing of the divorce proceedings until November, 1941, with his further statement that on October 1, 1921, one day after the divorce decree, plaintiff persuaded him to go through another alleged marriage ceremony, (the second) at Wellsburg, West Virginia, etc.

We do not consider nor discuss the question whether or not the divorce decree here under consideration may not be attacked by anybody, nor the purely jurisdictional question, for the reason that, at this time, there is pending in this Court on *125 a.ppeal a case wherein both of these questions are presented for determination.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 N.E.2d 616, 74 Ohio App. 44, 41 Ohio Law. Abs. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suiter-v-suiter-ohioctapp-1944.