Warren v. Warren

15 P.2d 556, 127 Cal. App. 231, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 415
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 28, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4576.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 15 P.2d 556 (Warren v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Warren, 15 P.2d 556, 127 Cal. App. 231, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 415 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

The defendant appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County granting the plaintiff a divorce and awarding him the custody of two minor children. The plaintiff appeals from that portion of the judgment which permits the defendant to have the custody of said minor children for four weeks during the summer vacation period.

Two questions only are really presented upon this appeal for our consideration: First, the validity of divorce proceedings instituted by the defendant in the state of Nevada. Second, the fitness of the defendant to have the custody and control of the two minor children, the issue of the marriage between plaintiff and defendant. The two minor children are at the present time named and aged as follows: Jean Marjorie Fay Warren, over the age of eleven years, and George Cameron Warren, over the age of eight years.

The record shows that the plaintiff and defendant had, for a number of years been residents of the county of Los Angeles in the state of California; that the marital domicile had at all times been in the county of Los Angeles; that the defendant began a suit against the plaintiff to obtain a decree of divorce in the county of Los Angeles and thereafter dismissed the action, went to Reno, filed a complaint praying for a divorce in the District Court of the State of Nevada at Reno; that substituted service only was made of the summons in said action; that the plaintiff in this action *234 never appeared therein; that the children of the marriage were not in the state of Nevada during the court proceedings there taken and had.

The findings of the trial court relating to the action for divorce prosecuted by the defendant in the state of Nevada are as follows:

“From the time of said marriage until the commencement of this action plaintiff was .a resident of the City of Los Angeles, county of Los Angeles, State of California. Except for temporary visits to other places, and except during a separation of the parties for less than two months in the months of May and June, 1926, plaintiff and defendant resided together in said city of Los Angeles. The matrimonial domicile of the parties from the date of said marriage until their said separation on November 15, 1926, was in said city of Los Angeles. During said separation in May and June, 1926, both of said parties resided in said city of Los Angeles. On November 15, 1926, defendant instituted in this court an action for divorce against plaintiff. In the complaint in such action she alleged her residence to be at Los Angeles, California. In said city she continued to live until June 22, 1927. On June 22, 1927, defendant dismissed her said action begun as aforesaid on November 15, 1926, and journeyed to the city of Reno, State of Nevada. To such city, and without the knowledge and against the will of plaintiff, defendant took with her the minor children of the parties. Shortly before such departure for Reno, defendant caused to be issued to her a United States passport for herself and said minor children to England and Austria. Her application for such passport was filed April 4, 1927. Therein under oath, defendant alleged her residence to be in said city of Los Angeles. Defendant remained in said city of Reno, except for trips made to San Francisco, or Los Angeles, and to New York, until about March 1, 1928. On or about said date she returned to the State of California. Defendant did not go to the State of Nevada and did not remain in the State of Nevada for the purpose of there establishing her domicile or for the purpose of making said State her place of residence, but only for the purpose of commencing an action in said state against the plaintiff for a divorce and securing a judgment therein. Defendant did not intend" when she went to said State of Nevada, and has not since *235 intended to remain in the State of Nevada except for the time necessary to procure such decree of divorce. Neither the domicile nor the legal residence of defendant has at any time in the year 1927 or in the year 1928 been in the State of Nevada. Defendant during all of the year 1927 and during the year 1928 until the trial of this action has been a legal resident of and a citizen of the county of Los Angeles, State of California.
‘1 On November 11, 1927, said defendant instituted against the plaintiff herein, in the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, in and for the county of Washoe, an action for divorce in said court numbered 25226. On the 28ch day of February, 1928, was signed, and on the 12th day of March, 1928, was filed and entered in said court a judgment purporting to dissolve the bonds of matrimony between plaintiff and defendant, to grant to E. Marjorie Warren a decree of divorce, and to award to her the custody of said minor children of the parties. Said judgment is in the form and words of the exhibit attached to the answer of defendant herein.
• “Neither upon the day when said action was instituted in said court in the State of Nevada, nor at any time thereafter were said minor children in the State of Nevada, or within the jurisdiction of said court of the State of Nevada. Said children during all of said time were in the custody and care of the plaintiff herein. Plaintiff, Van Court Warren, was not at any time personally served with summons or other process in said action instituted in the State of Nevada. Said plaintiff did not at any time appear in said action and has not at any time submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court wherein said action was instituted. Summons in said action was published in the State of Nevada. Said court of the State of Nevada did not at any time acquire jurisdiction of the marital status of the plaintiff and defendant or jurisdiction over the plaintiff herein, nor over said minor children or their custody, nor to make or enter the judgment signed and filed in said court as aforesaid. Said judgment is not entitled to any faith or credit, but is invalid and of none effect, and is not binding upon this court.”

*236 Upon the question of the fitness of the defendant to have the care, custody and control of the two mentioned minor children, the trial court found as follows:

“Defendant in her relations with her husband has been untrustworthy and untruthful and has failed to keep various promises made by her. On or about April, 1925, in the course of an operation performed upon her, she unnecessarily, against the will, and without the knowledge of her husband, but to please another man and render safe her improper relations with him, caused herself to be made sterile and barren.
“During a period of several years prior to the separation of plaintiff and defendant, defendant sustained adulterous relations with one James Scripps Booth. During said period and since said separation practically until the time of the trial of this action defendant received from said Booth many and large sums of money. While plaintiff and defendant were living together, and after promises by defendant that she would cease all relations with said Booth, she continued to receive moneys from him and to correspond with him, and to conspire with him against her husband.

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Bluebook (online)
15 P.2d 556, 127 Cal. App. 231, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-warren-calctapp-1932.