58 N.E.2d 456 | Ill. | 1944
The question involved in this case concerns the validity of a certain divorce decree entered by the city court of Calumet City. The cause arises on a complaint, filed in the circuit court of Cook county, by which appellant here seeks annullment of his marriage which he contracted with appellee Harriet Stevens, on the ground that at the time of their marriage said appellee had not been divorced from her then husband, Paul Stevens. The action was brought against both Harriet and Paul Stevens. Both appellees appeared and filed separate motions to dismiss the complaint. After hearing, the motions were sustained and the complaint was dismissed.
The ground of the alleged invalidity of the divorce decree of the city court of Calumet City was that that court did not have jurisdiction to enter it. Two reasons are assigned: (1) that it appears on the face of the complaint filed in this case and admitted by the motion to dismiss, *37
that Harriet Stevens was not a resident of Calumet City, and (2) that it also appears from the record in the divorce case that the cause of action did not arise within the territorial limits of Calumet City. It is also alleged here that section 5 of the Divorce Act, giving jurisdiction to city courts in divorce cases, where the plaintiff lives in the county in which the court is located, is invalid. In McFarlin v. McFarlin,
The basis of appellees' motions to dismiss the complaint in this case, and their contention here, is that this is a collateral attack upon the divorce decree entered by the city court of Calumet City, and that that decree is not open to collateral attack. Appellant, on the other hand, urges that the city court of Calumet City did not have jurisdiction to enter the decree for divorce and that its decree is therefore open to collateral attack. The basis of this contention is that the complaint in this case alleges want of jurisdiction because the evidence in the divorce proceeding shows that Harriet Stevens, complainant in that case, was not a resident of Calumet City or Cook county, and that the cause of action did not arise in Calumet City is also shown by the testimony of Harriet Stevens in the divorce case, as that testimony appears in the certificate of evidence.
That the plaintiff shall reside in the county where the suit is filed, is a prerequisite to the filing of a complaint in a divorce proceeding. (Dean v. Dean,
The principal remaining question in this case, therefore, is, What is the "entire record"? Does it include the certificate of evidence? This court has never had occasion to pass directly upon that point although its decisions have touched upon it. In the early case of Vail v. Iglehart,
This definition of a record was again approved in People et.rel. Kilduff v. Brewer,
The cases before this court, where the judgment was attacked collaterally, or where it was claimed that the court was without jurisdiction, all indicate that the court was considering parts of the record itself rather than the bill of exceptions or certificate of evidence. In the case of Rabbitt v. Weber Co.
That the definition of the term "record," or "complete record," does not include the bill of exceptions or certificate of evidence, has been generally held in various jurisdictions throughout this country. In Mead v. Rudnick,
The Supreme Court of Vermont in Rutter v. Borke,
In Smith v. Mosely,
In Chicago Terminal Transfer Railroad Co. v. Barrett,
252 Ill. 86 , where the question was as to what had been decided in a previous lawsuit, it was held that the certificate of evidence, as a part of the decree, might be adverted to to show what issues were tried. It can scarcely be said that this case is authority for the claim that a certificate of evidence is essential or is to be considered in determining whether the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter or *42 of the parties. That was not a case of collateral attack. Under the present Practice Act it is not required that a certificate of evidence be filed to support the decree.
From a consideration of these various cases, the definition of "record," "record proper," or "complete record," to be deduced, is that the record shall consist of pleadings, process, verdict of the jury and judgment or decree of the court. This must, necessarily, be the limitations of a record if there be stability in decrees and judgments of the court. To include the certificate of evidence as a part of the record would involve opening many questions and the production of many lawsuits. There could be no certainty in decrees. A re-examination of the evidence upon collateral attack would result in far-reaching consequences, involving, among other things, the disturbing of titles long considered settled as well as weakening the jurisdictional presumption that has always obtained.
However, appellant says in this case the presumption of jurisdiction is overcome by the fact that it is alleged in the complaint here and admitted by the motion, that the city court of Calumet City did not have jurisdiction of the divorce cause. He points out that it is alleged in the complaint here that Harriet Stevens, the plaintiff in the divorce proceeding, testified that she was married in the city of Chicago to Paul Stevens, on October 3, 1940; that they went back "to our town, (meaning a town in the State of Indiana,)" and that on that date Stevens left her and she has not seen him since. The decree in the divorce case recites that a certificate of evidence was filed therewith. There is nothing in the decree about where the desertion occurred and the term "to our town" does not indicate the State of Indiana, or any other than the city of Calumet City for that matter. As to what witness meant is a conclusion of the pleader in this complaint and is not admitted by the motion to dismiss. The city court *43
of Calumet City being a court of general jurisdiction within the limits of that city, its decree is entitled to the benefit of the presumption that the court had jurisdiction to render it until the contrary, appears from the record. (Horn v. Horn,
Decree affirmed.
Mr. JUSTICE SMITH, dissenting.