Vilas v. Vilas

138 So. 731, 103 Fla. 1124
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 6, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 138 So. 731 (Vilas v. Vilas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vilas v. Vilas, 138 So. 731, 103 Fla. 1124 (Fla. 1932).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This ease was heard by Division B on a motion to vacate a supersedeas which had been granted by one of the Justices of this Court. The contention is that the appeal is frivolous and therefore the appeal should be dismissed or the orders appealed from affirmed.

Appellant contends that the -Circuit Court is without jurisdicton to proceed, and because of this we have considered the appeal on its merits in connection with disposing of the application to vacate the supersedeas.

The record shows that the litigation was begun by the appellant Ida Mae Vilas, on January 28, 1931, she filed a bill of complaint against her husband, the appellee, praying for a divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty and also for alimony pendente Ute, permanent alimony and temporary and permanent attorney’s fees. The defendant answered this bill by filing a plea to the- effect that the complainant had not resided in the State of Florida for more than two years next preceding the date of the filing of her bill. On March 14, 1931, a consent decree was entered into by which the husband was ordered to pay the wife $100.00 each week as temporary alimony, and $300.00 as temporary attorney’s fees. On March 19, 1931, complainant filed her bill of complaint for separate maintenance in which she alleged that on account of repeated cruel and inhuman treatment and habitual intoxication that she was forced to live apart from her husband. On March 23, 1931, defendant filed a statement of record in which he stated that he formally and specifically abandoned his plea which had been filed to the bill for divorce, at the same time he filed an answer to the bill in which *1126 he denied in substance the allegations upon which the divorce was sought. On March 31, 1931, complainant filed a motion to dismiss her bill for divorce without prejudice to the complainant. On March 31, 1931, the motion was denied by the Circuit Judge. On April 6, 1931, complainant filed another motion to dismiss her suit without prejudice, alleging that the original bill was drawn and filed by her counsel through mistake and misapprehension of the facts in that it alleges that the complainant had resided in the State of Florida for more than two years immediately preceding the filing of said suit, which allegation was not true.

The answer which had been filed by the defendant to the bill seeking separate maintenance contained a prayer for affirmative relief by way of divorce against the complainant on the ground that complainant had committed adultery with one L. Goree Caruthers. That portion of the answer seeking affirmative relief was demurred to by the complainant on April 6, 1931. The demurrer attacks that part of the answer which seeks affirmative relief by way of divorce on the ground of adultery, but the principal complaint is with the allegations of that answer which charge adultery with divers unnamed other men than Caruthers. On the same date complainant filed exceptions to the answer on practically the same grounds as stated in the demurrer. A separate exception was also taken to the answer for alleged impertinence in some of its allegations.

On May 5, 1931, defendant filed a motion setting up that certain witnesses whose testimony was material to defendant’s rights under the affirmative answer were about to leave the State, and asking the Court to enter a special order for the taking of the testimony of these witnesses before such witnesses left. The Court granted the motion and ordered that the witnesses be produced before the chancellor personally in order that such tes *1127 timony might he taken. The order contained a provision that solicitors for complainant should he served with a copy of the order so that they might govern themselves accordingly.

On October 17, 1931, the Court entered its order by which it denied complainant’s motion for dismissal of her suit; denied complainant’s exceptions to defendant’s answer and motion to strike certain parts of the answer; and overruled complainant’s demurrer to the affirmative answer.

In the last mentioned order the Court, of its own motion, entered an order consolidating the complainant’s suit for divorce and the complainant’s suit for separate maintenance in order that thereafter the two suits should proceed as a consolidated cause, with the pleadings to stand upon the defendant’s answer as an answer to both bills.

The appeals here were taken from the orders of the Circuit Court Judge denying the complainant the right to dismiss her bill of complaint; from the order granting leave to the defendant to take testimony of certain witnesses who were about to leave the State; and from the order consolidating the bill for divorce with the bill for separate maintenance and overruling complainant’s demurrer and exceptions to the affirmative answer filed by defendant.

The Court is of the opinion that the defendant’s affirmative answer charging the wife with adultery with Caruthers alleged to have been committed in the State of Florida is a proper answer to the bill for separate maintenance brought by the wife against the husband, and that inasmuch as the litigation was begun by the wife who is now before the court which has jurisdiction to deal with the subject matter, that the Court has jurisdiction to proceed to hear and determine the whole controversy between the parties and to grant a divorce to the husband by way of affirmative relief, if it be duly established by *1128 the evidence that the wife is guilty of the adultery charged to have been committed in the State of Florida by her with the man named Oaruthers mentioned in the answer.

While Section 4981 C. G. L., 3189 R. G. S., provides that in order to obtain a divorce, the complainant must have resided two years in the State of Florida before the filing of the bill, except where the defendant has been guilty of the act of adultery in this State, in which event am-y citizen of this State may obtain a divorce at any time, and the two years ’ residence shall not be required of such complainant, it does not necessarily follow that when the defendant has been properly brought into court on a bill filed by the wife for separate maintenance under Sections 4988-4989 C. G. L., 3196-3197 R. G. S., that such defendant, being properly before the Court, may not have the benefit of an affirmative answer charging the complainant with adultery, and of obtaining a divorce against such complainant based thereon, even though the defendant interposing such answer is not a citizen of the State of Florida.

Section 4983 C. G. L., 3191 R. G. S., provides that divorces may be granted on the ground that the opposite party has been guilty of adultery. Section 4906 C. G. L., 3120 R. G. S., provides that the defendant may in his answer set out any counterclaim against the complainant chancery cause which might be the subject of an independent suit in equity, and that the answer shall have the same effect as a cross suit so as to enable the court to pronounce a final judgment in the same suit both on the original and, cross claims.

In this case the original claim is by the wife for separate maintenance. The cross claim is by the husband for a divorce on the ground of adultery. Section 4906 C. G. L., supra,

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 731, 103 Fla. 1124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vilas-v-vilas-fla-1932.