Sullivan v. Sullivan

275 Ill. App. 597, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 435
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 15, 1934
DocketGen. No. 8,823
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 275 Ill. App. 597 (Sullivan v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Sullivan, 275 Ill. App. 597, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 435 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Davis

delivered the opinion of the court.

August 5, 1932, appellee filed a bill in the circuit court of Vermilion county, Illinois, seeking a divorce from appellant, and alleged that she wilfully deserted and absented herself from him without any reasonable cause for the space of one year and upward preceding the filing of his bill.

Summons issued and was returned showing that appellant was not found in Vermilion county. On the 5th day of August, 1932, appellee filed an affidavit, in which it is alleged that appellant is a nonresident of the State of Illinois; that on due inquiry she cannot be found within the State, or that she is concealed within the State so that process cannot be served upon her; that upon diligent inquiry he has ascertained, and so states the fact to be, that her last place of residence and address was and is Webb City, Missouri, and caused publication to be made of the pendency of said suit, and on August 12, 1932, the clerk of said court made and filed a certificate of mailing notice to appellant at Webb City, Missouri, and proof of publication of notice was made and filed on October 7, 1932.

On October 11, 1932, appellant was defaulted, hearing was had upon the bill and a decree entered dissolving the marriage between said parties and declaring the same null and void.

On May 18, 1933, appellant filed her petition in said court, alleging that at the October term, A. D. 1932, appellee exhibited his bill of complaint against appellant and, on making an affidavit of nonresidence of appellant, caused publication to be made of the pend-ency of his suit for divorce, and that on October 11, 1932, at the October term of said court, a decree pro confesso was entered against appellant; that she had not been summoned, or served with a copy of the bill of complaint, or received a notice of the pendency of this suit, required to be sent her by mail by the clerk of this court, and had received no notice in writing within 90 days of such decree; that said decree is fraudulent as to your petitioner, and is based upon perjured testimony; that petitioner did not wilfully desert complainant, and praying that the court upon a hearing on said petition vacate said decree of divorce and grant her leave to answer the bill of complaint and make a defense.

On July 14, 1933, appellee filed an answer in which he denies the allegations of the petition and prays that the same be dismissed. On September 6, 1933, after a hearing upon said petition and answer the court denied the prayer of the petition, and this cause is here on appeal from the decree of said court.

Appellant filed affidavits in support of her petition, in which she stated that she is a resident of Webb City, Missouri, and that she has resided there practically all of her life; that appellee knew that she had resided there for several years past and also knew her street address, where they lived together as husband and wife until March, 1928, when he left to go to the Veterans’ Hospital at Kansas City, Missouri, for treatment and remained there for a period of about three years, and then left for a Veterans’ Hospital at Hines, Illinois, where he continued to take treatment; that appellee is a totally disabled veteran of the World War, and that when he left for the hospital there was no suggestion or intimation that he was going to leave appellant permanently, as he occasionally came home and remained for a time and then returned; that appellant was with him for several months in Kansas City, Missouri, and was in correspondence with him thereafter relative to his physical condition.

Appellant also states that although she has resided in Webb City, Missouri, practically all of her life, and was well known by the postmaster and the postal clerks and carriers, she never received through the United States mail at Webb City, Missouri, any notice of the pendency of a divorce suit brought against her by her husband in the circuit court of Vermilion county, Illinois, and had no notice that he had filed a suit for divorce, until advised some months later by the Veterans’ Bureau discontinuing her compensation as the wife of appellee by reason of his having been divorced from her; that she was never summoned or served with a copy of the bill of complaint or received any notice whatever of the pendency of said divorce bill in Vermilion county, Illinois, on behalf of her husband, and received no notice in writing from anyone at any time concerning' the entry of said decree; that after she heard from the Veterans’ Bureau that her husband had secured a divorce she did not believe the information so given her by said Veterans’ Bureau to be true, as her husband had previously tried to secure a divorce from her without success, and she had received similar reports prior to this report which were false; that immediately after receiving such advice from the Veterans’ Bureau that her compensation had been stopped, she inquired of various clerks of courts in Illinois, including Cook county, and finally ascertained that a divorce had been granted in Vermilion county, Illinois.

She further states that she was married to appellee on April 2, 1918, and that in 1921 he entered the Hospital at Kansas City, Missouri, and that she accompanied him; that in 1928 he suddenly left Webb City, Missouri, where he resided, for the Veterans’ Hospital at Kansas City, Missouri, but that she did not go with him, but expected him to return as on previous occasions; that she failed to hear from him until July, 1931, when he returned home and informed her he had been in a Veterans’ Hospital in Illinois, near Chicago, but did not state where; that he intended to remain in the hospital in Illinois until they gave him his permanent total rating, and that was the reason he was there; that when he had the total permanent rating he would be home, and that the next day after the conversation, which was sometime in the month of July, 1931, he left home and she did not hear from him personally after that time; that there never was any desertion on her part, but that he left her and never returned; that she heard that her husband was in the Veterans’ Hospital, at Hines, Illinois, and wrote said hospital and the hospital replied that her letters would Tbe forwarded to appellee, and she never received any reply from him; that she never knew that he was in the Soldiers’ Home at Danville, Illinois, until long after the divorce was granted when Mr. M. B. Lively, her attorney of Webb City, Missouri, after extensive inquiry from various clerks of courts in Illinois and elsewhere, finally learned, several months after the divorce was granted, that appellee had been in the National Soldiers’ Home, in Danville, Illinois, and that he had secured a divorce in Vermilion county; that she received the following letter, dated November 11, 1932, from the Veterans’ Administration at Hines, Illinois:

“Mrs. Callie Sullivan,

215 South Oronoco St.,

Webb City, Mo.

“Dear Madam:

“Please make payment of $20.32 by'postoffice money order, draft, or check, payable to the Treasurer of the United States, and mail to Disbursing Officer, Veterans’ Administration, Hines, Ill., attaching the enclosed copy of this letter to your remittance.

“Apportioned Award of Disability Compensation to you is discontinued October 10,1932, day prior to your divorce from the above named veteran.

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Related

Parkinson v. Collier
147 N.E.2d 691 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
275 Ill. App. 597, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-sullivan-illappct-1934.