Sweet v. Sweet

277 Ill. App. 545, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 150
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1934
DocketGen. No. 37,301
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 277 Ill. App. 545 (Sweet v. Sweet) 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
Sweet v. Sweet, 277 Ill. App. 545, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 150 (Ill. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error seeks to reverse certain orders of the superior court denying defendant Elsie Sweet’s motions to vacate and set aside a default decree entered June 27, 1933, granting her husband, Arthur Sweet, a divorce on the ground of adultery. Defend-, ant’s motions were supported by verified petitions alleging lack of jurisdiction of the court to enter the decree.

Plaintiff filed his bill of complaint May 8, 1933, charging as his sole ground for divorce that defendant committed adultery May 4, 1933. The summons was returnable to the June, 1933 term, and was returned as having been personally served on defendant May 9, 1933, by Fred C. Heintz, deputy sheriff of Cook county. An order of default was entered June 22, 1933, for want of appearance and answer. The evidence was heard by the chancellor June 22, 1933, and the certificate of evidence was filed and the decree of divorce entered June 27, 1933.

Section 8, paragraph 9, Cahill’s 1931 Revised Statutes of Illinois, ch. 40, is as follows:

“If the bill is taken as confessed, the court shall proceed to hear the cause by examination of witnesses in open court, and in no case of default shall the court grant a divorce, unless the judge is satisfied that all proper means have been taken to notify the defendant of the pendency of the suit, and that the cause of divorce has been fully proven by reliable witnesses. Whenever the judge is satisfied that the interests of the defendant require it, the court may order such additional notice as equity may seem to require. ’ ’

Plaintiff testified in his own behalf as to facts and circumstances in support of his charge of adultery. The only other witnesses called by him were police officers Martin A. Sonnenschein and John Antone of Blue Island, Illinois, who not only did not corroborate plaintiff’s testimony, but flatly contradicted it. It is suggested that the court believed that these witnesses testified falsely. As to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the decree, it matters not whether the court believed the police officers or not. The fact remains that the decree of divorce was entered on the uncorroborated evidence of plaintiff alone.

In passing upon the above section of the Divorce Act in Wellington v. Wellington, 137 Ill. App. 394, 397, this court said:

“It is said further that the decree was not justified by the evidence. There is, we think, force in the contention. The finding that defendant has wilfully deserted and absented himself from the complainant for two years rests upon the testimony of the complainant alone, and is not ‘fully proven’ by the other evidence. The divorce statute (chapter 40, section 8) provides that in no case of default shall a divorce be granted unless the judge is satisfied ‘that the cause of divorce has been fully proven by reliable witnesses.’ This requires ‘the evidence of more than one witness.’ Kline v. Kline, 104 Ill. App. 274.”

No further citation of authorities is required in support of the well established rule that in case of default a divorce will not be granted unless the cause of divorce is “fully proven” by more than one witness. In our opinion the decree of divorce in this cause was illegally entered.

July 10, 1933, defendant filed her verified petition alleging inter alia that she had not'been served with summons and that she had no notice of any kind of the divorce proceeding until July 6, 1933; that she did not commit adultery at the time and place alleged in plaintiff’s bill of complaint nor at any time; that the court had never acquired jurisdiction over her; and that the decree was void for want of jurisdiction. The petition prayed that the decree be set aside; that defendant be given leave to appear and file her answer; and that she be granted leave to file a cross-bill and that plaintiff be ruled to answer same.

On the same day an order was entered which, after reciting that the court had heard the testimony' of Fred C. Heintz, deputy sheriff of Cook county, Elsie Sweet and H. C. Maddus, denied defendant’s motion to vacate the decree of divorce.

July 27, 1933, by leave of court defendant filed another verified petition which alleged substantially the same facts as were alleged in the petition of July 10, 1933. It also alleged that on July 10, 1933, defendant presented a petition praying that the decree of divorce be vacated and set aside inasmuch as the court never had jurisdiction of her; that she had no knowledge when she filed said petition July 10, 1933, as to the time of day on May 9, 1933, nor at what place the deputy sheriff claimed to have served her with summons; that she moved that her petition of July 10, 1933, be set for hearing, but the court caused the hearing to be had immediately; that the deputy sheriff testified that he served the summons in this cause upon her at 12043 South Western avenue, between 6:45 p. m. and 7 p. m., while the defendant was preparing a meal in the kitchen at said address; that his testimony was the first information she had received as to the exact time and place of the purported service; that she testified that she was not served with the summons at that time nor at any other time; that H. C. Maddus, who happened to be in court with her at that time, testified that he was present in her home at 12043 South Western avenue, between 6:45 p. m. and 7 p. m., May 9, 1933, and that no summons was served upon her at that time; that she moved to that address on May 9, 1933, and that two men who moved her furniture were present on the premises from 6:20 p. m. until 8:30 p. m. on said date; that these two men would testify that she was not served with summons during that time and that the deputy sheriff was not present during the period from 6:20 p. m. until 8:30 p. m. May 9, 1933, at her home, 12043 South Western avenue; and that she did not have an opportunity to present the testimony of these two witnesses at the hearing on July , 10, 1933. This petition concluded with the prayer that the order of July 10, 1933, denying defendant’s motion to vacate the decree of divorce be vacated and set aside; that the decree of divorce entered by default be vacated; that she be granted leave to appear and file her answer to plaintiff’s bill of complaint; and that she be granted leave to file a cross-bill and plaintiff ruled to answer her cross-bill. This petition also contained a prayer that plaintiff be required to answer same and that the matter be set for hearing*.

September 19, 1933, defendant moved the court for a rule on plaintiff to answer her petition of July 27, 1933, and that the petition and answer thereto be set for hearing. On the same day the court refused to order plaintiff to answer defendant’s petition and denied her motion for a hearing, but entered an order which, after denying her motion to vacate the order entered July 10, 1933, and to vacate the default decree of divorce theretofore entered, dismissed her petition of July 27, 1933.

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277 Ill. App. 545, 1934 Ill. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweet-v-sweet-illappct-1934.