On June
25, 1951, the plaintiff obtained a decree of divorce from the defendant in the Superi- or Court in Fairfield County. The decree included orders for the payment of alimony and of support for a minor child, each in the amount of $20 a week. The defendant failed to make all of the payments, and this action is brought to secure a judgment for the accrued arrearage under both orders, in accordance with the rule of cases such as
German
v.
German,
The defendant claims that the awards of alimony and support are without validity since service in the divorce action was made on him in West Virginia only by registered mail. Each order in effect consti
After receipt of the copy of the process, the defendant wrote the clerk of the court and asked that he be kept informed of the progress of the action. The clerk answered the defendant
1
and inclosed duplicate appearance forms, properly filled out except for the defendant’s signature. These the defendant signed and returned to the clerk. They were filed under date of February 28, 1951. The defendant mailed a letter, dated February 24, 1951, to the clerk’s office. An inside envelope bore the following instructions: “To Be Delivered to the Judge of the Superior Court or Constituted Authority Who Would Preside at Said Hearing.” The letter was opened and read on April 27,1951, by Judge Comley,
It is unnecessary to quote the letter of the defendant at length. It reviewed his marital difficulties; stated that he would not contest the action if his wife insisted on pursuing it; questioned, but did not unequivocally deny, the jurisdictional allegation of the complaint as to the plaintiff’s residence in Connecticut; and said that he was heavily in debt and that his wife had agreed that she would be satisfied with $10 a week but that he had in fact been sending her $15 a week, which he felt “at present was adequate” and the most that he could afford. “In addition,” he continued, “I have been paying for some medical bills of hers, which she has sent to me.” In the concluding paragraph of the letter, he stated: “. . . I have written directly to you, since it is my only means of acquainting you with my thoughts and feelings in the matter.”
The defendant is a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and is now employed as a research engineer with the Goodyear Aircraft Corporation in Akron, Ohio, where he lives. He received from the clerk, in due course, all papers filed in the divorce proceeding. In March, 1953, he remarried.
The defendant claims that his general appearance was filed solely because he was misled by the clerk into thinking he had to file it if he was to be kept informed of the progress of the case, and that in sending in the appearance forms, as well as in writ
A general appearance is at the very least prima facie evidence of the truth of its recitals, which necessarily embrace an intention to submit generally to the in personam jurisdiction of the court. Whether in all instances an executed general appearance, duly filed, is, in and of itself, conclusive evidence of a submission to the in personam jurisdiction of the court we need not now determine. See
Cockran
v.
Leister,
Here there was no misunderstanding as to the filing of the appearance forms as documents. They were intentionally and voluntarily filed. The only mistake or misunderstanding claimed was in the inducement of the filing, and this mistake was only as to certain of the legal consequences which flowed therefrom. The defendant admittedly intended that the filing should operate, as it did, to cause the pleadings in the case to be sent to him. Not only did he not file a special appearance or a plea of any kind raising any claim of lack of jurisdiction of his per
The entry of an appearance need not necessarily be made by filing a formal appearance form. The conduct of a party may operate as a general appearance. Ives
v. East Haven,
The court was entitled to consider the whole course of conduct of the defendant, both in filing the general appearance forms and in writing the letter, in determining whether he had voluntarily submitted himself to the in personam jurisdiction of the court.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The elerk wrote as follows: “Dear Mr. Beardsley: If you wish to keep posted on the progress of this action, including all papers that are filed in Court, you should sign both copies of this appearance form, where you see your name typed in, and return both of them to the following address: Clerk, Superior Court, 172 Golden Hill St., Bridgeport, Connecticut. Thereafter, the Clerk of Court will mail to you all papers filed in this case.”
