152 Ark. 399 | Ark. | 1922

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellee instituted this action in the chancery court of Phillips County against the appellant, his wife, to secure a divorce, and this appeal is prosecuted from a decree granting the divorce.

The ground stated in the complaint is desertion, and it is alleged in the complaint that appellee was a resident of the State and of Phillips County for more than a year before the commencement of the action. The action was begun on constructive service, and appellant appeared by counsel and filed her answer, in which she denied the allegations of the complaint with respect to desertion, and she also pleaded, in bar of appellee’s right to sue for' a divorce, a judgment of the civil district court of the Parish of Orleans, in the State of Louisiana, in which the court had adjudged, on the complaint of appellant, a divorce from bed and board.

Appellant’s answer was filed in the action on September 23, 1920, and the cause was heard by the court and a final decree was rendered on July 25, 1921. Nine days before the court convened, appellee’s attorney notified appellant’s attorney, in writing, that when the court convened appellee would ask for a hearing of the cause on oral testimony. Appellant appeared by her attorneys on the day of the trial and moved for a continuance to enable her to take depositions in the State of Louisiana, but the court overruled the motion, and the cause was heard upon the testimony adduced by appellee.

The evidence thus adduced, which has been preserved in the record, is sufficient to justify the court in finding that appellee was a resident of Phillips County, and had resided there continuously for many years, and that the alleged grounds for divorce were established.

After the transcript was lodged in this court, appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that appellant had married again in the State of Louisiana, after the réndition of the decree appealed from. The motion was filed pursuant to the statute in regard to appeals to this court, which provides that where “the appellant’s right of further prosecuting the same has ceased, the appellee, in lieu of pleading, may move the court to dismiss the appeal on writ of error, the grounds of which motion shall be stated in writing, signed by the appellee or his counsel, and, if not appearing on the face of the record, or by a writing purporting to have been signed by the appellant and filed, shall be verified by affidavit. ’ ’ Crawford & Moses ’ Digest, § 2168.

The motion was accompanied by proof of the marriage of appellant in the State of Louisiana since the rendition of the decree appealed from. The motion was submitted at the time of the submission of the case on the merits.

It seems to be well settled by the authorities that an appeal from a decree of divorce cannot be prosecuted after the remarriage of the appellant, for the reason that such marriage constitutes an acceptance of the benefit of the decree and necessarily admits its legality and correctness. 9 R. C. L. 467; 7 Stand. Enc. of Procedure, 811.

Counsel for appellant attempts to escape the application of this well-established rule of law on the ground that the prior decree of the Louisiana court granting a divorce a mensa et thoro was a bar to the right to prosecute the suit for divorce in this State, and that it defeated the jurisdiction of the Phillips Chancery Court. The weakness of this contention, however, lies in the fact that jurisdiction of the court to sustain appellee’s cause of action depends upon the allegations of the complaint. The court thereby acquired ■ jurisdiction to determine whether or not appellee was a resident of Phillips County, and whether there was a prior' adjudication in another State which was conclusive of the rights of the parties.

If the court erred in refusing to grant a postponement of the trial, or in deciding that appellee had established a cause of action which had not been barred by any other decision, the error could only be corrected by appeal, and appellant has, by remarriage, forfeited her right to appeal to this court for the correction of the alleged error.

The Louisiana decree was, as before stated, only for separation, and it could not have been for absolute divorce under the statutes of that State, for the Supreme Court of Louisiana has decided that a decree for absolute divorce cannot be rendered on constructive service of process. Connella v. Connella, 114 La. 950.

The decree of separation did not affect the status of the parties as to the continued existence of the marriage ties. Pettis v. Pettis, 91 Conn. 608, 4 A. L. R. 852.

But if the court erred in determining the effect of the former adjudication, it was, as before stated, an error which could only be corrected by appeal.

The motion to dismiss is therefore sustained, and the appeal is dismissed on the ground that appellant has forfeited her right to prosecute it.

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