Wright v. Wright

159 So. 220, 230 Ala. 35, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 17, 1935
Docket6 Div. 138.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 159 So. 220 (Wright v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Wright, 159 So. 220, 230 Ala. 35, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 52 (Ala. 1935).

Opinion

KNIGHT, Justice.

The bill filed in this cause by appellee, complainant in the court below, is an original bill in the nature of a bill of review, and seeks “to impeach for fraud in its procurement a decree” rendered in the circuit court of Jefferson county, wherein the present appellant was complainant and the appellee here was respondent.

To the bill as first filed the appellant, respondent in the court below, filed an answer and cross-bill.

Subsequently, the appellant sought to amend her answer by incorporating therein demurrers to the bill, and by striking therefrom the cross-bill feature of the answer. The court declined to permit the appellant to amend her answer by incorporating the demurrers, holding that the demurrers came too late. This ruling of the court constitutes one of appellant’s assignments of error on this appeal.

The appellee and appellant were husband and wife, and on the 21st day of July, 1931, the appellant, Thelma Wright, filed in the circuit court of Jefferson county, on the equity side of the docket, her bill against the said J. W. Wright, praying for a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony then existing between them. For that purpose she employed Clark Williams, an attorney at the bar of said court, to represent her in the divorce proceedings.

Before filing the divorce bill for his client, Mr. Williams wrote appellant’s husband no *37 tifying him that he had been employed by Mrs. Wright to institute the divorce proceedings, and suggested that appellee come to his office for a conference with reference to the controversy. (This letter appears in evidence in the cause.) In response to this letter, the appellee appeared at the office of Mr. Williams, and after one or more conferences an agreement was reached as to alimony and the custody of the child; and an answer to Mrs. Wright’s divorce bill was prepared by Mr. Williams, which was filed in the court. This answer is made an exhibit to the present bill, and is in the following language:

“Thelma Wright, Complainant, vs. J. W. Wright, Respondent.

“Circuit Court Tenth Judicial Circuit of Alabama, In Equity.

“Comes J. W. Wright, the respondent in the above styled cause and for answer to the bill of complaint says:

“This respondent admits the allegations of paragraphs one, two and three of said bill of complaint, but denies the allegations of paragraph four and demands strict proof thereof.

“The respondent waives the issuance of a commission and notice of taking testimony and any other notice in said cause and agrees that the cause may be submitted for final decree.

“J. W. Wright, Respondent.”

It will be noticed that, in this answer, the said Wright denied the allegations of cruelty charged against him in appellant’s suit for divorce, and demanded strict proof of the same, but waived “the issuance of a commission and notice of taking testimony and any other notice in said cause, and agreed that the cause may be submitted for final decree.”

It also appears from the bill in this cause that, at the time of the signing of the above-mentioned answer, the said J. W. Wright entered into an agreement with his said wife by which he was to pay her alimony, at the rate of $50 per month, and it was agreed the wife should have the custody of the child of the union, a girl under ten years of age; that he would defray certain expenses of the child, and agree to pay the solicitor of Mrs. Wright $150 for representing her in the cause.

The court on the 29th day of July, 1931, on submission of the cause upon the bill of Mrs. Wright, the answer and waiver of the respondent husband, and testimony as noted by the register, granted Mrs. Wright an absolute divorce, fixed the amount of alimony at $50 per month, and awarded her the custody of the child. This alimony the appellee paid for a while, but was in default in its payment at the time the bill was filed.

In his bill, the complainant avers that he was a mechanic “without legal education or understanding”; that he was not aware of the fact “that there was anything wrong or illegal or in anywise fraudulent or wrongfully collusive in entering into the agreements” alleged in the bill; that “in fact he was ignorant of law and legal procedure, and that divorces could not be agreed to as herein alleged, — or that one attorney could not represent and handle matters of such agreements for both complainant and respondent in such suits — nor properly prepare the pleadings for both such parties,” and, in substance, represent them both. “Nor was the complainant advised or informed by said attorney that there was anything unusual or wrongful or fraudulent or wrongfully collusive in any of the matters hereinabove stated or in anything said attorney or the complainant or complainant’s wife did or said in connection therewith or in making said agreements, signing or filing the pleadings or obtaining the divorce. And complainant further avers that he did not know at said time that it was illegal for a husband and wife to agree to the obtaining of a divorce.”

Complainant denied that he had been guilty of cruelty to his said wife.

Complainant averred that after the decree of divorce was obtained he learned for the first time of the true immoral character of his wife; that she had been guilty of adultery with divers persons, all of which was unknown to him; and that she “carefully and successfully concealed the same from him.”

Complainant charged that the appellant was an unfit person to have the custody and rearing of the child which had been awarded to her.

Complainant further charged that the decree granting the divorce, the allowance of alimony and counsel fees, and awarding the custody of the child to respondent was “obtained as a result of the collusion and fraud hereinabove described, to which he was an innocent party, and about which he was ignorant as stated.”

On final submission on the pleadings and proof, the court entered a decree setting aside, vacating, and annulling the decree *38 granting appellant a divorce from her said husband, and awarding her alimony and the custody of the child, and transferred the custody of said child to her paternal grandmother. The court also refused to allow the appellant to incorporate in her amended answer demurrers to the original bill, and declined to consider the same. Prom this decree, the present appeal is prosecuted.

That the trial court erred in declining to allow the respondent, appellant, to amend her answer by incorporating therein demurrers to the bill, and in refusing to consider the same, though noted by the respondent on the submission of the cause, is too clear to need argument to demonstrate the fact.. That such an amendment was permissible has been our uniform ruling for many years, as fully appears in. many of our reported cases. The offer to amend the answer by incorporating demurrers to the bill was timely made. The amendment, with the demurrers incorporated, was actually filed in the cause, and npw appears in the amended answer.

In the case of Baggett Mercantile Co. et al. v. Vickery, 213 Ala. 427, 105 So. 207, 208, it was observed: “Demurrer to a bill of complaint may be incorporated in the answer at any time before final decree, though no demurrer was originally filed or incorporated. Shaw v.

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 220, 230 Ala. 35, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-wright-ala-1935.