95 Ky. 545 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion oe the court.
Iii September, 1890, the appellee obtained a judgment of divorce from his wife on the ground of separation without cohabitation for five years next before the application therefor. In his petition he had sought to cancel a' deed for .a house and lot in Newport, made by him to his wife, through a trustee, in 1866, upon the ground that it had been made solely in' consideration, or by reason of marriage. This the wife, who was in possession of the property by her tenants, resisted, and in her answer alleged that the property had been bought with her own means.
On August 25,1890, the cause was continued, we presume for preparation on the issue presented in the pleadings, but, on the same day, “by consent,” the order of continuance was set aside, and on motion of plaintiff' the cause was “ discontinued as to property.” In a few days thereafter the case was submitted and a judgment rendered, annulling the marriage, but appended to it, in the face of the -plaintiff’s discontinuance of any claim as to property, was this order: “And all property obtained by these parties during marriage, and directly or indirectly in consideration of the marriage, of which disposition was not made when this action was begun, is respectively restored to them.” Thereupon the husband, who is the appellee, brought the present action for the enforcement of the order of restoration, alleging that his late wife refuses to surrender the house and lot directed to be restored to him, as he contends, in the judgment of September, 1890. The wife urges a number of reasons why
The section of the Code under which this contention is asserted is as follows: “Every judgment for a divorce from the bond of matrimony shall contain an order restoring any property, not disposed of at the commencement of the action, which either party may have obtained, directly or indirectly, from or through the other, during marriage, in consideration or by reason thereof; and any property so obtained, without valuable consideration, shall be deemed to have been obtained by reason of marriage. The proceedings to enforce this order may be by petition of either party, specifying the property which the other has failed to restore; and the court may hear and determine the same in a summary manner, after ten days’ notice to the party so failing.” (Civil Code, section 425.)
Of section 462 of the old Code, which was like the new section so far as the point now involved is concerned, this court, in Williams v. Gooch, 3 Met., 486, said: “ The order of restoration contemplated by this section is a formal one, to be made in cases in which no mention of the property to he restored has been made in the pleadings, and was not designed to apply to any specific property, or to settle any controversy with reference thereto, even between the divorced parties. We doubt whether section 462 was intended to apply to any case in which an issue as to the restoration of specific property is made by the
Whatever may bo said of the design of this section as it now appears in the Code, certainly it can be given no force in this case, or be construed to affect the rights of the wife to the property in dispute. It would be singular if the plaintiff, who was seeking a divorce and a cancellation of the deed, could obtain the relief he declined to ask for when, if he had continued to ask it, it would have been refused. Except he had discontinued his claim to the property he was not entitled to a trial. An issue had been raised as to its ownership by the pleadings of the defendant first filed, and by avoiding the issue, or-in fact abandoning his claim to the property, it is insisted he got an order entitling him to what he had in fact abandoned. Instead of such being the result, it seems to us it might well be argued that the discontinuance of his claim to the property in the action wherein the issue was made as to the ownership worked a forfeiture of the right ever to claim it. Indeed, in her amended answer in this case, the wife charges that “when the plaintiff, by his counsel, agreed with the defendant in September, 1890, in case No. 3833-1- (which was the divorce suit), to discontinue all claim to the property involved if a submission were allowed on the claim for a divorce, defendant in good faith believed she would have the house and lot for her own to do with as she saw proper.”
It seems to us that the record so strongly conduces to establish some arrangement by which all claim to the
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.