Turner v. Turner

74 P. 55, 33 Wash. 118, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 496
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1903
DocketNo. 4681
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 P. 55 (Turner v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Turner, 74 P. 55, 33 Wash. 118, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 496 (Wash. 1903).

Opinion

Fullerton, C. J.

The appellant instituted this action primarily to set aside and annul a decree of divorce entered by the superior court of Spokane county on the 15th day of August, 1899, in an action therein pending, brought by the respondent against the appellant ; and, secondarily, to secure a division of the community property owned by the parties at the time the decree was granted, in case the same be not set aside.

In her complaint the appellant alleges, among other things, that she and the respondent intermarried in the year 18; that they lived together as husband and wife from that time until about the month of EFovember, 1891, the principal part of the time in the city of Spokane; that on the date last named the respondent, for the purpose of fraudulently and secretly obtaining a divorce from her, induced her to leave Spokane, and go to the city of Mobile, in the state of Alabama, and there take up her residence, promising that he would follow her as soon as his business affairs in Washington-could be settled, when they would again live together as husband and wife; that she believed his representations; and, believing them, did go to Mobile, Alabama, and establish a residence, but that the respondent did not follow her as he had promised; that she thereupon returned to Spokane for the purpose of living in that city with respondent, but that he refused to see her or permit her to come to his apartments, and that, after repeated [120]*120rebuffs from respondent, she returned to Mobile; that thereafter, and on the 1st day of August, 1899, the respondent began an action against her for a divorce, alleging in his complaint that she had abandoned him without cause and against his will, and continually asserted that she would no longer live with him; that no process was sued out or served on her in the action, but that the respondent, as a part of his fraudulent scheme, hired an attorney to pretend to represent her in the action, and that the attorney did file an answer therein, verified by himself as her attorney, purporting to admit certain allegations of the complaint and deny certain others; that afterwards a stipulation was entered into by the attorney pretending to represent her, and the attorney representing respondent, agreeing to the appointment of one John M. G-leeson as judge pro tempore to try the cause, and that Gleeson was appointed in pursuance thereof; that he afterwards heard the cause, and rendered the decree of which she complains; that the fees of the attorney pretending to represent her, as well as the costs of court taxable against her, were paid by the respondent—all of which, she avers, was done without her knowledge or consent, and in pursuance of the fraudulent scheme of the respondent to procure a divorce from her, and that she was kept in absolute ignorance of the proceedings until long after the same were consummated. It is then alleged that the parties own community property to the value of $250,000, all of which is in the possession of the respondent. The prayer is in the alternative, asking for an annulment of the divorce decree, and, if that be denied, a division of the community property.

The answer put in issue the allegations of the complaint going to the appellant’s right of recovery, and set out five separate defenses, one of which was to the effect that the [121]*121community property of the parties had been divided long prior to the divorce by their mutual consent.

The trial court found the issues of fact in favor of the respondent, and held that the decree of divorce was a valid decree, that the community property of the parties had been divided by their mutual consent, and entered a judgment accordingly.

The evidence was mainly directed to the two principal questions suggested in the complaint; namely, was the appearance of the attorney who purported to act for the appellant in the divorce action authorized by her, and was there a mutual division of the community property ? But before passing to a review of these questions, it is well to notice the objection of the respondent to the effect that this action cannot he maintained. He argues that a judgment entered on the unauthorized appearance of an attorney is only voidable, and hence the appellant must show, among other things, diligence in commencing her action to set the judgment aside before she is entitled to be heard, and that so far from exercising diligence in that regard she has been guilty of gross laches. But whatever may be the rule elsewhere, it is the settled doctrine in this state that a judgment entered upon the unauthorized appearance of an attorney, where no original process has been issued and served, is void, and can he set aside at the instance of the judgment debtor in an action instituted for that purpose, whether innocent third persons may suffer thereby or not. McEachern v. Brackett, 8 Wash. 652, 36 Pac. 690, 40 Am. St. 922; Ashcraft v. Powers, 22 Wash. 440, 61 Pac. 161. A judgment entered on the appearance of an attorney without the service of original process, however, is presumed to he valid, and will he set aside only upon clear and convincing proof that the appear[122]*122anee by tbe attorney was unauthorized. Oases supra,. It cannot be set aside by showing that the evidence on which it was granted did not justify granting it, or that the evidence was false in fact and known to be so by the party obtaining the judgment; for these matters were at issue in the original ease, and the judgment concludes any after inquiry into them.

On the question of authorization, it is first argued that the answer, purporting to put in issue the allegation of the complaint to the effect that the appearance was unauthorized, raises no issue, and" is an admission of truth of the matters attempted to be denied. The part of the answer thought to work this result is as follows:

“Defendant . . . admits paragraph 5 down to and including the words, ‘which complaint was duly verified, and filed in this court on the 13th day of August, 1899’, . . . and defendant alleges that the remaining part of said paragraph is so intermingled with truthful and untruthful declarations that it is impossible to further segregate said allegations, and therefore defendant denies each and every part of said paragraph, excepting that which is heretofore admitted to he true.”

It may be that this part of the answer was subject to successful attack in the court below by motion in some form, but, whether this be tx*ue or not, it is certainly not an admission of the allegations which it purports to deny. On the contrary, it is a positive denial of all the allegations of fact contained in the paragraph named not expressly admitted, and it is too late to complain for the first time in this court that the denial is not in accord with the rules of good pleading. "Where a pleading is treated by the parties in the court below as sufficient, and the cause is tried in that court as if upon sufficient pleading, this court will treat it as sufficient on the appeal of [123]*123either party, unless, of course, it discloses an action without the jurisdiction of the trial court, or fails to state a cause of action or defense. Moreover, the defect here complained of is one that could have been cured by amendment; and in such a case, where the objection is raised here for the first time, this court is required by statute to treat the pleading as amended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P. 55, 33 Wash. 118, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-turner-wash-1903.