194 Mo. App. 624 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
This is a suit in equity commenced in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis November 17, 1911. Its object and purpose is to set aside and annul a decree of divorce entered by. that court in a case in which Barney'Blass, defendant here, was plaintiff and Rosa Blass, here plaintiff, was defendant.
It is averred that the decree of divorce was entered by default March 29, 1904; that it was alleged in the petition for the divorce that ever since November 28, 1902, and up to the time of filing the petition for the divorce, which was December 22, 1903, the defendant in that case, plaintiff here, had absented herself from her husband, Barney Blass,, without any cause whatever; that this allegation was untrue; that on the contrary Barney Blass, without any cause or excuse therefor, and without any knowledge on the part of plain
It is further averred that the allegation in the divorce petition, that the place of abode of the defendant in that case, plaintiff here, was unknown to Barney Blass, was untrue, as he well knew that at all the times mentioned in the divorce petition, the place of residence of Rosa Blass was in San Francisco, California. It is further averred that the allegation in the divorce petition that "Barney Blass had resided in the State of Missouri one whole year next before the filing of the petition for divorce, to-wit, 'next before December 22, 1903, was not true, for the reason that until December 20, 1902, and thereafter, he was a resident of the State of California, and that after that time he came to Kansas'City and thence to St. Louis; that by reason of Barney Blass 'not having resided in the State of Missouri for the space of one whole year next before the filing of his petition for divorce, the court was without jurisdiction to entertain the ■ cause or enter a valid decree therein, wherefore it is averred that the decree is null and void.
It is further averred that at the hearing and trial of the divorce case on March 28, 1904, Barney Blass, the plaintiff therein, testified in his own behalf that the allegations here charged to be untrue were true, when in truth and fact he well knew that these allegations and the testimony given by him in .support thereof were untrue, and that the false testimony given by him was made and given for the purpose of deceiving and perpetrating a fraud upon the court, whereby he might procure a judgment and decree of divorce, and that by so falsely testifying, Barney Blass had perpetrated a fraud upon the court in the procure
The defendant answered, first setting up a plea in abatement, which was stricken out on demurrer. By way of further answer defendant admits that on December 22, 1903, he filed the suit for divorce in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, as set out, and that on March 28, 1904, a decree of divorce was granted him from the present plaintiff, but denies all the other averments in the petition here filed. For a further defense defendant pleads the Statute of Limitations, and as a final defense pleads laches on the part of the present plaintiff in the institution of the present action, averring that he, defendant, was legally divorced from plaintiff at the time stated in her petition and that, relying upon the action of the court in said cause and upon the advice of his attorneys, on November 6, 1904, he was duly married to another party and lived with her as her husband until September, 1905, when he was legally and properly divorced from that party, and that after all the matters and things in the petition stated had occurred, on October 6, 1912, he married another party, who is now his wife, and that there has been born to this last marriage a child, now three months old, and defendant avers that the plaintiff here
A general denial by way of reply was filed to this.
The cause was tried before the court, and finding for defendant, the court dismissed it at the cost of plaintiff, from which judgment plaintiff has duly perfected her appeal to our court.
We have read the evidence in this case and discover no reason why we should disturb the finding of the trial court.
There is some conflict in the testimony as to when respondent left California and took up his residence in Missouri. But on due consideration of it we are satisfied that the weight of it, its decided preponderance, is in favor.of the respondent. That is to say, by the decided preponderance of the evidence it appears that when plaintiff in the divorce action commenced that action, he had been a resident of this State for one whole year next prior to the institution of that action. It appears that on December 20, 1902, Barney Blass had come to this State with the intention of remaining here, staying for a few days in Kansas City, Missouri, and then removing to St. Louis, at which place he has ever since resided. Hence the fact of residence for the statutory period, which lays at the very foundation of the jurisdiction of the circuit court in granting the divorce, must be here held to have been established by substantial evidence.
As was held by our Supreme Court in Lieber v. Lieber, 239 Mo. 1, l. c. 31, 143 S. W. 458, the fraud that will authorize a court of equity to set aside or ignore a judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, must be “established by clear, strong and cogent evidence, leaving" no room for reasonable doubt of its existence; and provided further, that the fraud
That plaintiff in this case, defendant in the divorce case, was properly served with notice by publication as a nonresident, also clearly appears. Admittedly she was then a nonresident and could be served by publication. There was some discrepancy in the testimony which is shown to have been given in the divorce action by; Barney Blass as to the time of his arrival in this State and that now given, but that is explained satisfactorily by his testimony in this case. It is also in evidence that Barney Blass and his then wife Rosa, plaintiff here, then residing in California, had concluded to remove to this State. Rosa Blass was then residing in Sacramento, apparently learning some kind of a trade or business. They were married in Sacramento and a day or two after' the marriage the husband went to San Francisco. He remained there a short time and purchasing a railroad ticket for himself from San Francisco to St. Louis, as also a return ticket from San Francisco to Sacramento, went to Sacramento and gave his wife a ticket from Sacramento to St. Louis, it being the understanding that she should follow him to St. Louis. Barney Blass went back to San Francisco and left there about-Decémber 15 or 16, 1902, going to Kansas City, Missouri, where he is shown to have been December 20, 1902, then coming to St. Louis. His wife did not follow him and as far as appears never used the railroad ticket. Barney Blass, according to his testimony, and it does not appear to be seriously contradicted, wrote her several letters urging her to come on to St. Louis and join him. She did not follow him and answered none of these letters and finally he wrote her several letters, sending two' or more of them by registered mail to her at her last known address in Sacramento, as he testifies, and these were returned undelivered. That happened to several other letters he sent her by regular mail. This sitúa
We have referred to the testimony given by plaintiff in the divorce case, and which is attacked as false and perjured testimony, and have set out the testimony given at the hearing of the present case with the view of showing, as we think it does, that it does not appear by the preponderance of the evidence in the case at bar that the testimony given by plaintiff in his divorce case was false or perjured. We do this, not as decisive of this case but in justice to the defendant.
In Lieber v. Lieber, supra, quoting at length from Wabash R. R. Co. v. Mirrielees, 182 Mo. 126, l. c. 143, 81 S. W. 437, and authorities there cited as holding that a judgment of a court cannot be sqt aside in a collateral proceeding for perjury committed at the trial of that case, our Supreme Court (l. c. 46) concludes with this quotation from that decision: “Nothing can be added to the reasoning of the courts on this question. Accordingly we hold that the allegation of perjury on the part of plaintiff in the original suit is not sufficient to set aside his judgment.” Lieber v. Lieber was a case in which, among other things, a decree of divorce was attacked as void. Vance v. Burbank, 101 U. S. 514, is also quoted approvingly (l. c. 519) as holding: “It has also been settled that the fraud in respect to which relief will be granted in this class of cases must be such as has been practiced on the unsuccessful party, and prevented him from exhibiting his case fully to the department, so that it may properly be said there has never been a decision in a real contest about the subject-matter of the inquiry. False testimony or forged documents even are not - enough, if the disputed matter has actually been presented to or considered by the appropriate tribunal.”
In Gray v. Barton, 62 Mich. 186, l. c. 196, it is said: “But it does not seem to me that the mere allegation that the defendant committed perjury upon
In the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary to pass upon the question of the Statute of Limitations or laches.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.