123 P. 630 | Idaho | 1912
The respondent commenced an action in the district court of Idaho county against the appellant for a divorce and also to have certain real property assigned and adjudged to her as her sole and separate property and also certain personal property, all of which was alleged to be property accumulated during the marriage relation, and for the custody of her three children, the issue of such marriage, aged respectively, sixteen, nine and three years — two sons and one daughter. The ground alleged was adultery with one M.ay Ann Dyer.
The complaint was filed on January 6, 1911. Summons issued upon that day and return made showing .that service of the summons and complaint was made on the defendant in Nez Perce county on the 13th day of April, 1911. On May 25, 1911, the default of the defendant was entered and the cause was tried to the court upon the evidence of the plaintiff, Nettie F. Hamilton, and May M. Dyer. The court found that the defendant was duly served with summons and failed to appear, and a decree of divorce was granted and the property described in the complaint was awarded to the plaintiff as her sole and separate property and also the custody of the three children.
On September 3, 1911, the defendant caused to be served upon the plaintiff a notice that on the 9th day of September, 1911, the defendant would move the court to vacate and set aside the decree of divorce and open the default; and that leave be given the defendant to file his answer to the complaint upon the grounds that such judgment and decree were rendered by reason of his mistake, inadvertence, surprise and excusable neglect, and that said motion would be
In opposition to the granting of said application, the plaintiff appeared and filed two counter-affidavits, one made by the plaintiff and the other by Edgar Snowman, to whom the plaintiff had been married subsequent to the granting of said divorce. The defendant also filed affidavits by Clay MeNamee and L. W. Clark, and at the hearing presented his answer and cross-complaint and asked leave to file the same.
On September 20th the motion to open the default was presented and by stipulation ten days were given to file affidavits in reply to the affidavits of Clark and MeNamee, and on October 10, 1911, the court made an order denying said motion. From this order this appeal was taken.
The only question presented on appeal is, Did the trial court err in denying the motion to set aside the default? It appears from an examination of the answer tendered that such answer is sufficient as an affidavit of merits and shows a defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action, and the cross-complaint states facts which show a sufficient cause of action for divorce by the defendant against the plaintiff.
The appellant in his affidavit, among other things, alleges that May M. Dyer, a sister of the plaintiff, came to the home of affiant about four years prior to the making of the affidavit, and has ever since resided in that neighborhood, part of the time at the home of affiant and part of the time at the home of another sister, the wife of one J. W. Parker; that in the year 1910 the said May M. Dyer became pregnant; that at said time she was at the home of said J. W. Parker; that one Edgar Snowman, a widower, lived on an adjoining ranch to that of affiant, whose home was about one-half mile distant from affiant; that Snowman for several years, and especially the year 1910, was a frequent visitor at the home of affiant, and, as affiant believes, was unduly intimate and free with affiant’s wife; that a stranger came to affiant at night and after dark and stated that he came to warn affiant to get out of the country at once, as said stranger had heard that Parker and another neighbor threatened .that they were going
In the counter-affidavit filed on behalf of the plaintiff in opposition to the motion to open the default, the plaintiff alleges that in the year 1910 May M. Dyer became pregnant; that at such time she was unmarried; that she is the sister of the affiant, and also a sister of Carrie Parker, the wife of J. W. Parker; that at such time said May M. Dyer lived with affiant and her husband and also at times with the family of J. W. Parker; that May M. Dyer had informed her of her condition and the cause of the same, and the defendant’s relations with her; that she knows nothing about a stranger visiting the defendant or what he told the defendant except what the defendant told affiant, and that she did not conspire with any person to send such person to defendant; that she did not at any time urge the defendant to turn over his property for any purpose or cried or begged the defendant or made any threats or statements or expressed any desire to have the defendant turn over his said property; that affiant told the defendant that if he was not guilty as charged by May M. Dyer, he should stay and fight the matter out and vindicate his character; that about December, 1910, defendant
Plaintiff also filed an affidavit of Edgar Snowman in corroboration of her own affidavit, in which the affiant in substance states that he had known both plaintiff and defendant for a long time, and has been their neighbor; that until after the divorce of plaintiff he had no thought nor neither did the plaintiff that they should marry, and that'the only relations existing between the plaintiff and affiant were those of ordinary neighborhood friendship, and that affiant at no time attempted individually or in connection with others in any manner at all to persuade the defendant to turn over his property or to leave the state,- that at the time plaintiff and said Snowman were married they believed they had a right to do so and obtained a license and had a marriage ceremony performed, and afterward learned that a marriage could not be solemnized until six months after a divorce was granted, and thereafter went into the state of Washington and were duly married upon proper license; and in a general way denies the other allegations of the defendant’s affidavit.
The defendant also filed an affidavit of Clay McNamee who alleges that on the 9th day of January, 1911, the defendant consulted the affiant concerning a certain purported criminal charge of rape alleged to have been committed on a sister in law residing near Kamiah, Idaho, during the year 1910, and about his property rights as between him and his wife; and that after such consultation he again returned to affiant’s office on said day and requested the affiant to draw a deed to all of the community real estate owned by him and his wife to his wife, and that affiant protested and remonstrated with the defendant against such a course, advising him that if he did so, if his wife desired to take advantage of such
An affidavit was also filed on behalf of the defendant by one L. W. Clark, which in substance states that on or about the 10th day of January, 1911, affiant took the deed and bill of sale mentioned in the affidavit of W. S. Hamilton and delivered the same to the said Nettie F. Hamilton, and the plaintiff then told affiant that she had persuaded the defendant to transfer and turn over to her the defendant’s property so that she could sell and dispose of the same, which she intended to do as soon as she could, and that she would then go to the defendant, her then husband, and that she had filed a suit for divorce, but that she did not want a divorce, and did not intend to prosecute said suit; that her attorney had told her that she could file said suit, but that it would not be necessary to prosecute, but that it could lie over and be continued until she could sell and dispose of her said property and that the same could be dismissed; that she did not want to start said suit for divorce, but that her brother in law, J. W. Parker, demanded that she start the same or that he would have the said defendant arrested and prosecuted for adultery or rape; and that if she did not bring the suit said Parker told her he would not live with her sister and she had better go to Missouri, and that she told affiant she did not intend to prosecute said suit, and told affiant to tell "Will, meaning the defendant, to be a good boy and save his money and everything would come out all right, and that affiant told the defendant within a few days thereafter the foregoing facts and assured him that he need not worry or be uneasy about his suit, that the plaintiff assured affiant that the suit would not be prosecuted and that she did not intend to get a divorce and that said suit was brought to pacify Parker and to prevent trouble-and litigation.
There was also filed an affidavit of the plaintiff in which she states that L. W. Clark is an uncle of the defendant Ham
Did the trial court err ’ in overruling the application to open the default? In the case of Pittock v. Buck, 15 Ida. 47, 96 Pac. 212, this court announced the general rule of law governing such applications: “An application to open a default is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial court, and the order of the court will not be reversed on appeal, unless it clearly appears that the court abused its discretion; and in determining the question of discretion,
Clay McNamee makes affidavit that the defendant consulted him as an attorney on the 9th day of January, 1911, concerning the charges made against defendant of a criminal nature and the disposition of his property rights as between himself and his wife, and requested Mr. McNamee that he draw a deed to the plaintiff, his wife, for all the community real estate owned by him and his wife, and that Mr. MeNamee remonstrated with the defendant against such a course, and that the defendant said that the transfer was being made for the benefit of his minor children, and that he had perfect and absolute confidence in his wife, and insisted on the deed being made, which was done accordingly. This in a way corroborates the plaintiff and that defendant was aware that the plaintiff was taking some action against him, and shows a desire on his part to place the title of the property in his wife so that the children might be taken care of, and this is just what the trial court did in the decree of divorce. This act on the part of the defendant was after he and his wife had separated and she had gone to Grangeville to com
Upon this evidence the trial court determined that the showing was not sufficient to authorize the opening of the default. It appears from the nature and character of the affidavits as to the merits of the case, and which we have not set out in full in this opinion because of the vicious charges made by the plaintiff against the defendant, and made by the defendant against the plaintiff, charging immorality and adultery with various parties, and the affidavits themselves are so general and vicious as to cause anyone to pause and doubt long before the statements could be accepted as being truthful. The record shows that the charge in the complaint for divorce was adultery; that upon the trial the trial court heard the evidence given by the plaintiff and also the person wúth whom such adultery was alleged to have been committed, and that the divorce was granted upon such proof, and the trial court, having read such affidavits on the hearing of the motion, must have concluded that the mere statements of the defendant that the charge made in the divorce suit was not true did not show that the defendant had been denied any rights which would arise by the trial of the cause upon its merits.
The defendant was not served with summons in the divorce action until April 13, 1911, and he then knew that he had been sued for divorce and that he must answer in the said cause or else his default would be taken within the time fixed by law. This is in accord with what the plaintiff says she told the defendant at the time they separated. In the face of these facts the defendant gave no attention to such suit until the application to set aside the default was made by the notice on September 3, 1911.
Upon the affidavits made, it no doubt was a difficult task for the trial court to determine who had sworn to the truth, and the trial court, after reading the affidavits and seeing the parties and also having heard the divorce trial and observed the parties who testified, concluded upon such hearing to refuse to open the default, and we are not inclined to hold
The order appealed from in this case is affirmed. Costs awarded to the respondent.