Warren v. Warren

73 Fla. 764
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 29, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 73 Fla. 764 (Warren v. Warren) 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
Warren v. Warren, 73 Fla. 764 (Fla. 1917).

Opinions

Ellis, J

In January, 1913, Alicia M. Warren, the appellee, hereinafter referred to as the complainant, exhibited her bill in equity in the Circuit Court for Monroe County, Florida, against Jerry J. Warren, who will be hereafter referred to as the defendant. The object of the suit was to compel the payment by the defendant to the complainant of permanent alimony in a sum commensurate with the defendant’s means and ability. The bill contained a prayer for alimony pendente lite also, and for suit money.

The complainant seeks .the relief prayed for under the provisions of two sections of the General Statutes of Florida, 1906, vis: Section 1933, which is as follows: “If any of the causes of divorce set forth in Section 1928 shall exist in favor of the wife and she is living apart from her husband, she may obtain alimony without seeking a divorce upon bill filed and suit prosecuted as in other chancery causes; and the-court shall have power to grant such temporary and permanent alimony and suit money as the circumstances of the parties may reiider just; but no alimony shall be granted to an adulterous [768]*768wife.” The other section, which is 1934, is as follows: “If any husband having ability to maintain or contribute to the maintenance of his wife or minor children shall fail to do so, the wife living with him, or living apart from him through his fault, may obtain such maintenance or contribution upon bill filed and suit prosecuted as in other chancery causes; and the court shall make such orders as may be necessary to secüre to her such maintenance or contribution.”

The complainant’s bill contained in substance the following allegations, viz: That the complainant is a legal resident of the State of Florida, and has been for two years last past; that the. defendant is a citizen and residefit of Monroe County, Florida, and that they were each over the age of twenty-one years; that complainant and defendant were married in December, 1886, at Key West, Florida; that in 1896, they were divorced upon suit of the defendant; that in 1901, defendant represented to complainant that the. divorce was void and of no effect because of some legal defect, and persuaded complainant to resume marital relations with him; that in February, 1901, the defendant while residing temporarily in Havana, Cuba, sent for the complainant to join him in Havana; that she complied with the request, and on February 18th, 1901, they were married in Havana, where they cohabited and lived together as man and wife until January, 19x2; that during that time the defendant continuously maintained his “legal and voting residence at Key West, Florida,” and from time to time'during such period the complainant and defendant visited Key West and other Florida points together as man and wife, and that the defendant in Havana, and in Florida and all other places and at all times, introduced and acknowledged the complainant as his lawful wife; that in Feb[769]*769ruary, 1912, the defendant commenced proceedings in the “Primary Court of the East in the City of Havana, Cuba,” for the annulment of their marriage. The complainant appeared by her attorney and answered the petition, but that in July, 1912, the court rendered its final judgment by which it was “decreed in effect that the marriage ceremony of the 18th day of February, 1901, in Havana, between your oratrix (the complainant) and defendant was performed and solemnized in accordance with the laws of Cuba, but that the same was null and void, because the said parties were at the time thereof already man and wife, and so incapable of entering upon a new marital contract.” The bill then proceeds to attack the judgment of the “Primary Court of the East in Havana” by alleging that the court was without jurisdiction to enter the judgment because “the parties thereto were shown by the record therein to have been at the time citizens and residents of Florida, temporarily sojourning in Havana, and it was beyond the jurisdiction of the said court to pass upon the marital status of said parties, and said pretended decree was void and ineffective to dissolve the marital relations existing between the parties.” That after February, 1912, the defendant through his own fault deserted the. complainant and has left her without means of support; that the defendant has great property interests, is worth approximately a million dollars, and has an income of over fifty thousand dollars per annum; that in August, 1912, he was guilty of adultery in the town of Fairfield, Connecticut, with one. Clarissa V. Prescott and is openly living with her as his wife. A copy of the defendant’s petition filed by him in the “Primary Court of the East” for annulment of the marriage, also a copy of the complainant’s answer and the court’s decree, as translated from the Spanish into the English language, [770]*770are attached to the bill of complaint as Exhibits “A,” “B” and “C.”

On the 2nd day of April, 1913, the defendant answered the complainant’s bill. This answer denied that the complainant was a resident of the State of Florida and that she had resided in the State for the two years last past, and averred the truth to be that she. had her only bona fide residence in Cuba since February, 1901, and has not resided in Florida since that date. The marriage between the defendant and complainant in 1886, and the subsequent divorce in 1896 were admitted; he denied, however, that he represented to complainant in 1901 that the. divorce was void and that at any time prior to February 18, 1901, he persuaded the complainant to resume marital relations with him. It was averred that the defendant went to Havana, Cuba, December 27, 1900, and did not leave there until some, time after the marriage on the 18th of February, 1901-. The answer denied that the defendant deserted the complainant and left her without means of support, and denied that he was worth a million dollars or had an income of fifty'thousand dollars annually. The allegation of adultery with Clarissa V. Prescott is denied, and in this connection it is averred that after the marriage between the defendant and complainant in Cuba in 1901 had be.en annulled, the defendant, after obtaining the opinion and legal advice of certain distinguished members of the bar in Cuba, married Miss Prescott in August, 1912, and is now living with her as his wife. It was denied that any ma'rital relation exists between the. complainant and defendant. It was averred that in 1899 the defendant became interested in business in Cuba, and that ever since the establishment of the Republic of Cuba “he. has subjected himself and his business to the laws of the Republic of Cuba, and that when [771]*771he was married to the complainant on the 18th day of February, 1901, in the Island of Cuba, he subjected himself and his marital relations tp the laws of that country and the jurisdiction of its courts.”

Replication to this answer was filed in February, 1914. .

On August 29, 19x4, after ¡the testimony had been taken in the case, the defendant filed his petition for leave to file an amended answer, a draft of which was attached to the. petition, and to add to that answer a section or paragraph charging the complainant with adultery, or if the court should not allow the filing of the amended answer that the defendant might be permitted to amend the answer then on file by setting forth the complainant’s adultery. The petition alleged that the answer was hurriedly drawn and did not sufficiently set forth the denials and defences necessary for the full assertion of the petitioner’s rights in the cause.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Fla. 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-warren-fla-1917.