Taylor v. Taylor

240 S.W. 6, 153 Ark. 206, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 17, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 6 (Taylor v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Taylor, 240 S.W. 6, 153 Ark. 206, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 368 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Hart, J.

Willie Albert Taylor brought this suit in equity against Frank B. Taylor, from whom she had previously obtained a divorce, to have set apart to her on-third of Ms real and personal property, under § 3511 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff obtained a decree of divorce from her husband on June 6, 1914, in the chancery court of Jefferson County, Ark., but that the decree was not entered of record during the term at wMch the divorce was granted. It is alleged that the court of its own motion at a subsequent term entered a decree nunc pro tunc.

A certified copy of the record in the divorce proceedings is made an exhibit to the present suit. Plaintiff asked for a divorce from her husband on the ground of ill treatment. She alleges in her complaint that no property was accumulated during the marriage. She asked for an absolute divorce from her husband, and for such sum for1 her support as the court might deem proper.

No defense to the suit was made by the husband. The decree recites that, after hearing the evidence, the court was of the opinion that the prayer of the plaintiff’s complaint should be granted. It was decreed that the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff, Willie Albert Taylor, and the defendant, Frank B. Taylor, should be set aside and that both should be restored to all the rights and privileges of unmarried persona. There was no appeal from this decree.

In the present case there was a finding and decree in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The plaintiff obtained a divorce from the defendant on the ground of ill treatment, and her sole ground for a reversal of the present decree is that she is entitled by independent proceedings to secure the division of property given her under § 3511 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest. It will be borne in mind that she is not seeking a restoration of her own property under the first part of the section, but is seeking one-third of the land whereof her husband was seized of an estate of inheritance during the marriage. The first part of the section providing for a restoration of the property which either party obtained from or through the other during the marriage seems to have been borrowed from Kentucky. In construing the Kentucky statute, the court said that it did not require that the decree of divorce should order the property to be restored; but that the statute seems to have contemplated that the latter order should be based upon the former and consequently that it might be made afterwards. In short, it was held that the section was designed to regulate the mode of enforcing the right of restoration of property acquired during the marriage. Williams v. Gooch, 3 Met. (Ky.) 486.

Again, in a case note to 11 L. R. A. (N. S.) 103, it is said that where the institution of community property of husband and wife exists and there is a statute providing for its division in connection with divorce proceedings, the general rule is that where the community property is not referred to in the decree of divorce, the parties become, as to such property, tenants in common. Hence she may recover it in a separate proceeding. We do not think that either of that class of cases controls here.

In the first class of cases, the statute provides a remedy for the restoration of property obtained by one spouse from the other during the marriage. It does not affect the title to the property, but simply restores it.

In the latter class of cases, when the divorce is granted it causes a dissolution of the marital rights in relation to the community property, and the wife is entitled to her share of such property and also to her own separate property, if any she had.

So it will be seen that in -each class of cases there is a restoration or division of property between parties who have a vested interest in it. The statutory estate given to the wife when she obtains a divorce from her husband is in the nature of dower. The statute provides that, when the wife is granted a divorce against the husband, she shall be entitled to' one-third of the husband’s personal property absolutely and one-third of all the lands whereof her husband was seized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage, for her life, unless, etc. The concluding part of the section provides that such decree shall be a bar to all claim of dower in and to any of the lands or personalty of the husband then owned or thereafter acquired on the part of his wife divorced by the decree of the court. This was but declaratory of the common law as it already existed in this State. .

In Barrett v. Failing, 111 U. S. 523, it was said that, unless provided by local law, a decree of divorce by a court having jurisdiction of the cause and of the parties dissolving the bonds of matrimony put an end to all obligations of either party to the other, and that a valid divorce from the bonds of matrimony for the fault of either party cuts off the wife’s right of dower, and the husband’s tenancy by the curtesy, unless expressly or impliedly preserved by the statute.

This case was cited in Wood v. Wood, 59 Ark. 441, where it was held that divorce from the bonds of matrimony bars the wife’s right of dower. The question involved in this appeal was touched upon, but not decided in that case. There the former wife had filed a bill of review to set aside a decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony obtained by her husband.. She contended as a part of her relief that a third part of. the estate of her divorced husband should be set apart to her, according to the terms of the statute under consideration in this case. With respect to her contention the court said: “But she did not assign the failure to do so as error in her bill of review, and seek to have it corrected. On the contrary, she sought to have the decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony set aside, and thereby to surrender the right to one-third of her husband’s estate, if she was entitled to it, and for a divorce from bed and board and for alimony against appellee. She therefore has no right to complain in this court that she did not recover that which she neither asked for nor desired. Appellant did not undertake to show, in her original or amended bill for divorce, that she was entitled tc tne benefits of the act of March 2, 1891. Her original bill was filed before it was passed, and it was not amended thereafter in that respect. For the purpose of showing that she was entitled to considerable alimony, she alleged in the original bill that the defendant was not worth less than $200,000, but did not say in what his estate consisted, or that it was within the jurisdiction of the court. No information is given to show that the court had jurisdiction, by reason of the quality and location of the property, to set apart to her one-third of it under the act. It might have been real estate situated in another State. Nothing appears in the record, outside of the evidence, to show that the court committed an error of law in failing to divide the estate of the husband in accordance with the act. ’ ’

It seems, from the reasoning of the court in that case, that our statute allows one-third of the husband’s estate to be assigned to the wife when she obtains a divorce, and not afterwards.

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Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 6, 153 Ark. 206, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-taylor-ark-1922.