Tillman v. Tillman

172 F.2d 270, 84 U.S. App. D.C. 171, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2002
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 1948
DocketNo. 9603
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 F.2d 270 (Tillman v. Tillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillman v. Tillman, 172 F.2d 270, 84 U.S. App. D.C. 171, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2002 (D.C. Cir. 1948).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from orders entered by the United States District Court pursuant to two motions in two separate divorce actions, the motions having been by order consolidated for hearing.

The first of the two divorce suits was filed May 23, 1944, by Andrew Tillman against Cora G. Tillman. The second action was instituted by him on February 6, 1946, against Grace Tillman. In the first case, Andrew was divorced from Cora G. by a judgment entered June 26, 1945, which he sought to transform into a divorce from Grace by moving, on November 3, 1945, to substitute her name for Cora’s. He abandoned that motion, however, by filing the second suit, and then died soon after Grace had answered it, and before any other step had been taken in the new proceeding.

Some months subsequent to his death Grace moved, in the second suit, that the court declare her to be his widow. After intervening action which will be described hereinafter, her motion was - consolidated with Tillman’s motion to correct the judgment in the first suit which he had made during his life. This consolidation was ordered long after Tillman’s death. The trial court, in considering the consolidated motions, proceeded to hear evidence and then announced that Andrew had been divorced from Grace by the judgment against Cora G., and that -the second suit against Grace herself should be dismissed. Grace appeals from those holdings. There has been no appearance before us in opposition to the appellant’s position except that of an attorney who took the role of amicus curiae. He did not purport to act for Tillman’s alleged common law wife, whom he represented in the District Court.

We shall discuss the two actions separately, for only in that manner can the confusion be cleared, and the legal questions involved made manifest. It will plainly appear that this is not a situation in which ■there is involved the mere correction of a misnomer of a defendant, as contended by the amicus curiae and as it may superficially seem to be. For it will be apparent that, because of Andrew’s death, both actions abated before the court reached the question of misnomer. Nor do we have here a clerical mistake which, under Rule 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,1 a court may correct at any time; for the face of the record disclosed no mistake, and Tillman died many months before an effort was made (purportedly in his behalf) by the introduction of new and extraneous evidence to show that an error had been made in naming the defendant in the first divorce suit.

Before discussing the details of the two divorce suits, it is necessary to note Andrew’s marriages and unconsecrated alliances. He first married Cora Rax, who died in 1926. Later he married Grace Diggs. After living with her some years a separation occurred and he began an extramarital relationship with one Annie Lee. Still later, without having gone through any marriage ceremony, he began to live as man and wife with one Marie Francis, with whom he was so living when he died.

The first suit. On May 23, 1944, although his wife Cora had died some years before, Tillman filed in the United States District Court a suit for absolute divorce against “Cora G. Tillman.” A deputy marshal’s return of the process issued in that action showed personal service on Cora G. Tillman. When the defendant did not appear, either in person or by counsel, ■the district judge appointed an attorney to defend for her, who filed what he termed an “Affidavit in Lieu of Answer”, stating he had “contacted the defendant” but had [272]*272found her uncooperative. He did not give the name of the defendant whom he had “contacted.” Following the hearing of unreported evidence the court, on June 26, 1945, entered a judgment granting Andrew Tillman an absolute divorce from Cora G. Tillman.

On November 3, 1945, Tillman filed a written motion to correct what he described as a clerical mistake made by his attorney in the judgment “wherein the defendant is designated as Cora G. Tillman, when it should have been Grace Tillman, * * His affidavit in support of the motion was to the effect that Grace Tillman was the person intended to be named in the complaint, the person to whom plaintiff was married, the person from whom he wanted a divorce, and the person against whom evidence was presented at the trial. It should be noted, however, that Tillman did not allege that the summons issued against Cora G. Tillman actually had been served on Grace Tillman. This' motion was brought up for hearing but was never formally passed on by the court, that is to say, no order was entered with respect to it.2 While it was pending Tillman died on March 20, 1946.

A divorce suit, being purely personal in nature, is abated by the death of either party before judgment, and we held, in Bailey v. Scott, .1927, 57 App.D.C. 142, 18 F.2d 184, 185, that “this effect extends to whatever is identified with those [divorce] proceedings.”3 In that divorce action] the' wife died while her motion for the. allowance of counsel fees was pending. Bailey, her attorney, then moved for an allowance which was denied because the action had abated with the wife’s death. It thus appears that abatement occurs regardless' of the survival of the party against whom relief was sought.

Under this rule, Tillman’s motion of November 3, 1945, to correct an alleged clerical mistake was abated by his death. Moreover, notice of that motion was never given to Grace Tillman before its abatement. The attorney who had been appointed by the court to defend for Cora G. Tillman acknowledged service of the motion and noted that he had no objection. This did not amount to service on Grace Tillman.

We hold that, because of abatement, Tillman’s motion of November 3, 1945, to correct a record which was fair on its face, not only ceased to have any efficacy when he died, but also was no longer pending after his death. It was a closed chapter and the judgment theretofore rendered simply stood as one which divorced Andrew Tillman from Cora G. Tillman, with nothing in the record to indicate a misnomer of the defendant except Tillman’s assertion he, had intended to sue Grace; and with the record barren of any suggestion that Grace had been served either with process on the complaint or with notice of the motion to substitute her name for Cora’s.

That was legally the end of the first suit, but the District Court did not stop then. .On January 2, 1947, when Tillman had been dead more than nine months the court permitted the filing of a supplemental memorandum of points and authorities in support of the abated motion of November 3, 1945. It was filed by the attorney who had represented Tillman, who signed as “attorney of record.” Filed with the memorandum were three affidavits, two of which tended to show that the woman who called herself Marie Francis Tillman had lived with Andrew Tillman for some years, and until his death, as his common law wife. On February 12, 1947, Marie Francis Tillman, the alleged common law widow, moved for leave to intervene or to be substituted as party plaintiff. Five days later the court entered the following order:

[273]

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172 F.2d 270, 84 U.S. App. D.C. 171, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillman-v-tillman-cadc-1948.