89 Kan. 367 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On January 1, 1911, plaintiff, who is the appellant, brought this action for divorce and alimony. The defendant (appellee) answered, setting up a decree of divorce rendered in his favor, June 16, 1909, by the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, alleging that
The first contention is that chapter 184 of the Laws of 1907 was repealed by the revision of the code .of civil procedure in 1909. The title of the act is “An act in relation to foreign judgments of divorce, and defining the faith and credit to be given them.” The act provides that a decree of divorce rendered in another state upon service by publication in conformity with the law there shall be given full faith and credit here, and shall have- the same force with regard to residents of this state and shall affect the status of all persons and be treated and considered the same as a judgment rendered in this state. The act was not a part of the
The claim of appellant that the Missouri decree is void and-subject to collateral attack is fully met and answered in the opinion in the cáse of McCormick v. McCormick, 82 Kan. 31, 107 Pac. 546, and by the case of Miller v. Miller, ante, p. 151, 130 Pac. 681. The McCormick case likewise answers the contention of appellant that her property rights were not affected by the Missouri decree. The decree there dissolved the marriage relation and changed the status of the appellant, so that being no longer the wife of the ap-pellee, she has no rights in his property. Every point suggested in the argument and in the briefs has been covered so fully by the opinions in the cases cited that further comment is unnecessary. Upon the authority of those cases the judgment sustaining the demurrer to the reply must be affirmed.