58 Vt. 414 | Vt. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In divorce proceedings in this State, but little attention is paid to the pleadings. The procedure in such cases has not been regarded as subject to the rules and forms of pleading that prevail in common law causes. Usually there are no pleadings, even in contested libels. The practice certainly does not require it. Anything that tends to show that the libellant is not entitled to a divorce for the causes alleged, is admitted in evidence; and a former adjudication may be shown in evidence by a copy of record
But inasmuch as the counsel have resorted to common law pleading, and the case comes to this court on the question of pleading, the same must be considered here.
The pleadings close with the defendant’s demurrer to the libellant’s surrejoinder. As this demurrer reaches back over the whole record to the first defect in substance in the pleading, no defects of form being reached by it, except such as appear in the surrejoinder itself, and are especially noted as causes of demurrer, — we must examine the whole record.
The defendant’s plea to the libel sets up in bar, that the very matters of the libel have been once adjudicated upon a like libel of the libellant, setting forth the same causes and facts, brought to the County Court for the county of Chittenden, and theré tried and determined upon its merits, with judgment for the libellee dismissing the libel, as appears of record.
The libellant, in his replication, avers in substance that said former libel is not a bar, because he says the dismissal of the former libel mentioned in said plea was a dismissal without prejudice to the libellant’s rights to bring and prosecute another libel for the same causes mentioned in said previous libel, and vouches the record.
The defendant contends that the replication is not a sufficient answer to the defendant’s plea, for the reason that the County Court, in the exercise of the special jurisdiction given it in divorce matters, has no power, after hearing the evidence in a cause, to render and enter a qualified judgment of libel, dismissed without prejudice to the right of the libellant to bring another libel for the causes mentioned in the libel dismissed; and that the addition of the words, without prejudice, to the decree of dismissal does not nullify or change the conclusive effect of the dismissal as a judgment upon the merits.
In equity a decree dismissing a bill of complaint without restricting words is confessedly presumed to be a judgment upon the merits of the issue tried; and it is universally held, that a decree not restricted by qualifying words, unless made because of some defects in the pleadings or for want of jurisdiction, or some other cause that does not go to the merits, is a final determination and constitutes a bar to any further litigation of the same subject matter between the same parties. And accordingly the general practice has obtained in this country and in England, when a bill in equity is dismissed, without a determination of the merits, for the purpose of giving the complainant the right or privilege, in his election, to take further legal proceedings upon the subject matter of the controversy, for the court to express in its decree that the dismissal is without prejudice.
When a dismissal is so qualified, it is never regarded or treated as an adjudication of the merits of the subject in controversy, nor as constituting a bar to further litigation of the same subject matter between the same parties. Freeman on Judgments, s. 270; Borrowscale v. Tuttle, 5 Allen, 377; Bigelow v. Winsor, 1 Gray, 301; Foote v. Gibbs, 1 Gray, 412; Sewall v. R. R. Co. 9 Cush. 5; Perine v. Dunn, 4 Johns. Ch. 140; Neafie v. Neafie, 7 Johns. Ch. 1; Walden v. Bodley, 14 Pet. 156; Parrish v. Ferris, 2 Black, 606; Hughes v. U. S. 4 Wall. 232; Durant v. Essex Co., 7 Wall. 107; Woollam v. Hearn, 7 Ves. 211 b; Lindsay v. Lynch, 2 Sch. & Lef. 1; Stevens v. Guppy, 3 Russ. 171; Coop. Eq. Pl. 270; 2 Daniels Ch. Pr. 993-5; Mills v. Mills, 18 N. J. Eq. 444; Gove v. Lyford, 44 N. H. 525.
The foregoing cases fully recognize the principle that a judgment dismissing a bill in equity which is qualified by the words “without prejudice” is notan adjudication on the merits of the subject matter in controversy. No au
Such a qualified dismissal is in the nature of a discontinuance or nonsuit at law, and it may be entered in the discretion of the court to prevent injustice being done, which might result from an unqualified dismissal.
Cases may at times be so peculiarly circumstanced, after a full hearing of the evidence, even, as to make it manifestly equitable and proper for the court, in order to prevent probable injustice being done, to dismiss the proceeding without prejudice. The power of the court in such cases after hearing the evidence to enter up such a qualified judgment is fully recognized in Hepburn and Dundas’ heirs and executors v. Dunlop & Co. 1 Wheat. 179. Hepburn and Dundas’ heirs and executors brought a bill as vendors of a parcel of land against the vendees, Dunlop & Co., seeking a specific performance of the agreement to purchase the land in question and the same was dismissed without any restriction or qualification on account of a defect in the orators’ title to the land. Immediately after the dismissal, the defect in the title was removed and the title perfected, and the vendors brought another bill against the vendees seeking a specific performance of the same contract to purchase.. The objection was made that the dismissal of the former bill was a bar to the second bill. The court held that the objection was well founded. And also held, — Washington, J., delivering the opinion of the court, — first, that “when a bill by the vendor of land, seeking the specific performance of the contract to purchase, is dismissed on account of a defect in the title, the doors of a court of equity are and ought to be forever closed against him, notwithstanding he should afterwards have it in his power to make the title good and second, that “ in a case peculiarly circumstanced, if the court intended to give the complainant further time to complete his title, it should have either continued the first cause or dismissed the bill therein without prejudice.”
Courts of law in the exercise of their special jurisdiction of hearing and determining libels for divorce are properly given as great discretion as courts of equity in equity proceedings. The precedents uniformly show that the discretionary power of courts in divorce proceedings in continuing causes and ordering and entering of final decrees against libellants, is very large.
A suit for divorce is different in character from a private action in which the personal rights of the parties alone are concerned. It is one in which the public have an interest, and in the conduct and result of which the best interests of society are concerned.
And these several and important interests must be regarded by the court in the administration of the law. The whole proceedings necessarily rest largely in the judicial discretion of the court. The statute fairly implies this.
In divorce proceedings in this State, it was held in Blain v. Blain, 45 Vt. 538, “ To be the duty of the court to see that society and the public receive no detriment in proceedings affecting the marital relations of citizens. Petitions for divorce are addressed to the judicial discretion of the court; and courts are justified, in some form; in reaching the proof of every essential fact touching the character of such relation. The manner of pleading is measure-ably addressed to the discretion of the court.”
The rights and interests of society and the public as well as of the parties are in a measure involved in each libel and must not be overlooked. This,.of itself, is sufficient reason for the courts exercising this jurisdiction with great discretion and in modes unknown to the common law and in paying little attention to the strict rules of pleading
The methods of procedure in many respects are substantially the same in the states named; and the form and effect of a final decree against a libellant in a divorce suit is like that of a decree against a complainant in an equity proceeding.
In Thurston v. Thurston, 99 Mass. 39, it was held that “in libels for divorce the usual form of a final decree against a libellant is that the libel is dismissed. In this respect it is like a decree against a plaintiff in equity. If it is not intended to be a bar to a new libel for the same cause the decree is that it be dismissed without prejudice.”
Such is the recognized rule of practice in this State; and when the libel is in the discretion of the court dismissed without prejudice, it is not a conclusive adjudication on the merits, nor a bar to a new libel for the same 'cause. The same rule of practice is followed in New Jersey. Mills v. Mills, 18 N. J. Eq. 444.
The court in its discretion may, after hearing the evidence, continue the cause to another term of court for the purpose of giving opportunity to procure further evidence, which the court, in the discharge of its duty to the public and the parties, deems ought to be heard; or, if the evidence develops such a peculiar state of circumstances as satisfies the court, in view of such duty, that a bill of divorce ought not then to be granted and that a dismissal of the libel ought not to be a bar to another libel for the same cause, it may in its discretion dismiss the libel without prejudice. Such a qualified dismissal cannot be attacked collaterally; nor can the reasons of the court for making such an order
Therefore the libellant’s replication vouching the whole record of the dismissal of the former libel as being without prejudice to his right to bring and prosecute another libel for the same cause is a sufficient answer to the defendant’s plea.
The defendant, in her rejoinder, says the libellant ought not by reason of anything alleged in said replication to have and maintain his said libel, etc., because she says the “judgment of dismissal of said libel upon its merits was finally rendered, completed, and ended, and entry thereof made upon the docket of the court in said cause, in the words following, viz.: ‘Libel dismissed,’ and that it was only on an occasion and a day subsequent thereto, to wit, on the 15th day of November, 1884, and a day out of term, and after the adjournment without day of said September Term of said court that the clerk of said court by order of one of the judges of said court added to said original entry of final judgment upon the docket of said cause the words ‘without prejudice,’all which was so ordered and done without the presence, knowledge, or consent of the defendant and without any notice to her,” etc.
The rejoinder does not answer or tender any issue upon the only material averment of the replication; that is, that the dismissal as shown by the record was without prejudice. It attempts to attack the correctness of the record vouched in the replication by the allegation that the words ‘ ‘ without prejudice” were added to the judgment of dismissal on a day out of term and after the adjournment of said court sine die, and without proper authority. The rejoinder is altogether matter in pais. It professes to contradict the record set forth in the replication, which, as it is not denied in the rejoinder, must be taken as a correct description of the record. In thus attempting to contradict the record by
As the defendant’s rejoinder is held bad it is not necessary to consider the surrejoinder, to which the defendant demurred, assigning several causes of demurrer; for however bad the surrejoinder, it is a sufficient answer to a had rejoinder.
The County Court orally allowed the libellant on his oral motion, after the pleadings were closed, and without notice to the defendant, to amend his replication by interlining the words following, viz.: “all of which fully appears and is shown by the record of said court, which the said libellant is ready and offers to produce.” The defendant thereupon filed a motion to strike out said amendment; which motion the court upon hearing dismissed; and the defendant excepted thereto.
The County Court had power to allow the amendment, and we cannot revise its exercise of that power. Skinner v. Grant, 12 Vt. 456; Bowman v. Stowell, 21 Vt. 309; Stevens v. Hewitt, 30 Vt. 265; Waterman v. Conn. & Pass. R. R. Co. 30 Vt. 610.
Neither can the defendant complain, for in her rejoinder she does not attack the replication for its omission to vouch the record.
The judgment of the County Court dismissing said mo