89 Mo. App. 228 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
If this proceeding is treated as a petition for a review of the original judgment of decree of divorce in respect to the custody of the minor child, it will not lie. Section 2932, Eevised Statutes 1899, is a restriction of the right to have a judgment reviewed given by section 777 et seq., by making it inapplicable to judgments for divorce. That section was enacted on account of the decision in Smith v Smith, 20 Mo. Í66. The chancery act in the statutes of 1845 conferred on the circuit court jurisdiction as a court of chancery in cases of divorce, alimony or maintenance and provided that like .process and proceedings should be had in those cases as in others on its equity side. That act contained provisions for a petition for review similar to those now found in our practice code. It was ruled in Smith v. Smith that a defendant in a divorce suit who had neither been summoned nor appeared, merely notified by publication, might have the decree reviewed and set aside by taking the statutory steps. This was found to be impolitic, because divorced parties often remarried soon and were liable to be embarrassed by having the decrees which freed them subsequently annulled. Section 2932 was passed to prevent such results. Oases construing it so hold, and make it clear, that the petition for review intended, is the same as that allowed by section 777, or at least includes and bars the latter, as well as purely equitable bills for review based on fraud. Salisbury v. Salisbury, 92 Mo. 683; Childs v. Childs,
The learning on the subject of the power of a court to modify its decree in divorce suits after the term at which they were rendered is cloudy. The right to make changes depends largely on statutory provisions. 2 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, secs. 1187, 1188, and notes. By a severely logical interpretaton of section 2926, Revised Statutes 1899, which empowers the court to decree concerning alimony and the custody of the children, and then further empowers it to alter its decree concerning the alimony, but fails to confer the same authority in regard to the custody of the children, it would seem that the latter was exempt from subsequent interference
The question arises, whether a change of venue is permissible on such subsequent motion for a modification of the decree? This is to be answered by ascertaining whether the motion can be considered a new suit, because changes of venue may only be awarded in suits. R. S. 1899, sec. 818. The right to a change of venue is purely statutory and does not exist except in those instances where the statute gives them. State ex rel. v. Wofford, 119 Mo. 408. If the proceeding for an alteration of the decree in divorce eases, concerning the custody of the children, is a continuation of the original action, there can be no change of venue allowed. Sutton v. Cole, 155 Mo. 206. That it is a continuation, we have no doubt. It is said to be analogous to that concerning alimony (In re Gladys Morgan, supra), and it would hardly be contended that a subsequent motion to have the decree for alimony modified, is a new suit. Belief of this kind is granted exclusively for circumstances which arise afterwards, showing that the welfare of the child demands a new custodian. Deidensheimer v. Deidensheimer, 74 Mo. App. 234; Wilde v. Wilde, 36 Ia. 319; Dubois v. Johnson, 96 Ind. 6; Semrow v. Semrow, 23 Minn. 314; Peterson v. Thomas, 28 Ohio St. 596.
All proceedings of an ancillary chararcter, and designed to effectuate or change a decree already entered, are commonly
We conclude that the motion or petition in the present case, for an alteration of the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, was not a new suit and that a change of venue was inadmissible. The circuit court of Texas county had no power to make the order awarding it, said order was void and left the motion where it was. Therein, the matter differs from State v. Porter, 5 Mo. 538; Squires v. Chillicothe, 89 Mo. 226; Stearns v. Railway Co., 94 Mo. 317; Moore v. Railway Co., 51 Mo. App. 504, and Hardware Co. v. Riddle, 84 Mo. App. 275. All those cases were suits, in which the court awarding the change irregularly, had the statutory right to make such an award, which was, therefore, not void. Parties can not, by their act, change the venue of a proceeding for which the statute contains.no warrant; nor can the court where it was instituted usurp authority to make an order to that effect, which will become lawful if acted on, any more' than any other wholly unwarranted act can be thus validated. No case has ever held such an act gives jurisdiction. This being true, the circuit court of Wright county acquired no jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action because the venue thereof was not changeable. The proceedings in that court were coram non judice. We are strengthened in this view because it was adopted in a precisely similar matter by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin. Bacon v. Bacon, 34 Wis. 594; Hopkins v. Hop