Taft v. Taft

172 So. 2d 403, 252 Miss. 204, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 1091
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1965
DocketNo. 43359
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 So. 2d 403 (Taft v. Taft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taft v. Taft, 172 So. 2d 403, 252 Miss. 204, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 1091 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Rodgers, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Chancery Court of Harrison County, Mississippi, wherein a former consent decree was opened and set aside because of fraud alleged to have been prepetrated upon the court in the procurement of the previous decree by the appellant, Albert J. Taft. Appellee cross-appealed upon the ground that the decree opening the former decree was erroneous because it did not fully reinstate the former decree.

A synopsis of the events leading up to the final decree is necessary. Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Taft were married in 1942, and are the parents of three children: one son, now an adult, and two daughters, ages eleven and sixteen. Mr. Taft was a member of the armed forces of [208]*208the United States until his retirement, after having served twenty years in the air force. Mr. Taft was assigned to many locations during his tenure in the air force, including Alaska and Germany. A few months after appellant returned to Keesler Air Base, he 'moved away from the home he had purchased for his family. Whereupon, his wife filed suit for separate maintenance and a consent decree was entered on March 20, 1961, in the chancery court, in which appellant was required to pay separate maintenance. He also deeded the residence to his wife. When appellant failed to make payments in compliance with the decree, he was arrested and held in contempt of court on April 1, 1963, and he was incarcerated in jail pending payments. He was required to post bond for the faithful performance of the order of the court. Appellant made the payments due and filed a motion asking the court to reduce future payments required of him. He also filed a bill for divorce. The two causes were consolidated, and after trial the court prepared a decree refusing to grant appellee a divorce and required appellant to pay $245 per month separate maintenance. This decree was not entered because on June 7, 1963, appellant filed a motion requesting the court to dismiss the entire proceeding. He represented to the court that they had effected a reconciliation and that they were again living together as man and wife. The parties met with the chancellor, and after consultation, a consent decree was entered finally'dismissing both causes and vacating* all former orders and directing the chancery clerk to return to appellant $1,000 posted with him.

Thereafter, on August 6, 1963, Mrs. Taft filed a petition asking the court to set aside the decree of June 7, 1963, and to reinstate the previous decree of March 20, 1961. She alleged that the later decree had been obtained by premeditated fraud practiced upon the court. After, a hearing on this petition, the conrt entered an [209]*209order dated November 29, 1963, setting aside the previous order dated June 7, 1963, reinstating the consent decree of March 20, 1961. The separate maintenance payments, however, were reduced from $245 per month to $175 per month, in accordance with the ruling of May 1, 1963. The chancellor reduced the required bond to $500 and made other minor adjustments as to the amounts due Mrs. Taft under the previous order of the court.

Appellant, Taft, argues here that the decree of June 7, 1963, was a final decree, and the chancery court had no jurisdiction or authority to reopen this decree and to set it aside so as to reinstate in part the decree of March 30, 1961, after the expiration of the term of court, at which it was entered.

Appellee, Mrs. Taft, has cross-appealed and claims the court erred, in not reinstating the decree of March 20, 1961, in full, and in allowing appellant credit for two items claimed by appellee. Appellee also argues that the court erred in failing to permit two witnesses to testify, summoned by her.

The evidence in the case at bar, on behalf of the wife, is to the effect that the husband did not carry out his promise of reconciliation after the June 7, 1963 decree; that he did not come back to live with her as a member of the family but went on a vacation to Germany and that he told her he had never intended to live with her. On the other hand, the husband claims that his wife left and went to California and when she returned he went to their home but she refused to sleep with or have anything to do with him. She claimed he did not come home, except on three occasions, and. that he harassed her in an effort to get her to consent to a divorce. The husband denied these charges,. He claims he is a fisherman and stays out in the Gulf many days. He said he had returned to the family.home on numerous occasions and had made an effort to reestablish a mari[210]*210tal relationship with his wife, but to no avail. He offered checks to show that he had paid his wife $275 and had given his daughters $200, as well as made numerous payments on debts due by appellee and appellant at the bank. It was shown that the money he gave his family and paid on obligations due occurred within the short period of time after the consent decree had been entered.

The children agreed with the mother that the father had not been at home since the attempted reconciliation except on about four occasions. One of the children claimed she heard her parents discussing a divorce.

Thus, it is obvious that the wife made charges and the husband denied them. However, there are certain admissions made by the appellee which are revealing. Appellee admitted that she called her attorney and asked him if there were some way that she could keep her husband away from her home. She said “I asked him if we could do something with the man.” She offered as an excuse for this effort to prevent her husband from coming to her house, that he kept asking her for a divorce.

During the course of her testimony, in answer to the question as to how many nights her husband had spent at home, she said: “Since May 20th, it would be two and then that night the 23rd of August, he wouldn’t leave.” At another place in the record, she testified that her husband came home and said “I have come home. . . . This is my home. ... I’m going to stay”, and then she said “ ‘there is plenty of bedrooms, take your pick’, so I went to my room and I went to bed. Now I assume, I don’t know, whether he stayed that night or not. The youngest one slept with me and the next morning her bed had been slept in. I didn’t see him leave. I didn’t hear another word out of him until . . . .” Again appellant admitted that she had permitted her attorney to make complaint to the Youth Court charging that appellant was doing nothing to support [211]*211his children. Finally, appellee testified that she did not want to agree to the reconciliation decree at the time it was entered hut that the court had required her to do it. She said she was willing to do anything to get support, hut did not know whether or not she was willing to make a sincere effort at a reconciliation to establish their marital relations.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the chancellor determined that the evidence showed that the defendant (appellant here) did not act in good faith and that the decree of June 7, 1963 was void. The chancellor therefore entered a decree cancelling the June 7th decree and partially reinstating the decree entered on March 20, 1963.

Judge Griffith in his Mississippi Chancery Practice § 642, at 705-706 (2d ed.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 2d 403, 252 Miss. 204, 1965 Miss. LEXIS 1091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taft-v-taft-miss-1965.