69 P. 465 | Utah | 1902
The material allegations of the complaint are as follows: “That heretofore, to-wit, on the seventeenth day of September, 1900, in this [Eirst district] court, a decree and judgment was entered in an action wherein said defendant was plaintiff, and this plaintiff was defendant, in terms dissolving the bonds of matrimony between this plaintiff and said defendant, and awarding said defendant the three children, issue of the marriage between plaintiff and defendant, viz.: . . . And plaintiff further alleges that the summons in said action was never served upon her, and that she had no legal knowledge of the pendency of said action; that said judgment was rendered against her by default, and upon a complaint” which charged her (the defendant) with having been guilty of adultery. “And that, after the commission of the adultery complained of in the complaint (in said action for divorce), the said defendant forgave her, and lived with and cohabited with her as his wife, and so lived and cohabited with her during the pendency of the action aforesaid, and thereafter left her in possession and custody of their home and children while he went to fill a mission in the Southern states. And she further alleges that the said defendant represented to her and told her that he was procuring said divorce because of the insistence of his parents, and that after said divorce was procured he would remarry her, and provide for her ás he had hitherto done, and under no circumstances deprive her of the custody of the said children, or of the homestead on which they then resided. That, at the time of the bringing of said suit, the title to said homestead was in the father of said' defendant, and he, the said father, refused to make a deed to the said defendant of said homestead unless he would procure a divorce from this plaintiff. That, .relying upon said representations of said defendant, and to enable him to procure the said deed to said homestead, she neglected and failed to appear and defend said action for divorce. That, notwithstanding said representa
The prayer of the complaint was that the decree of divorce be set aside; that thé custody of the children be awarded to the plaintiff; and that alimony and certain sums of money for attorney’s fees and her support during the pendency of the action be awarded to her. The representations and false testimony of the defendant set out in the complaint, and the allegation in respect to the service of the summons in the divorce suit, were denied by the answer. In the third finding of fact, the' trial court found that the summons in the said divorce suit was duly served on the defendant in said action on the thirtieth day of July, 1900. Except in respect to the allegation relating to said summons, and the finding that the defendant herein, since the said decree of divorce, remarried on the third day of October, 1901, the other findings of fact are, in substance, the same as the aforesaid material allegations of the' complaint. As conclusions of law from the findings of fact, the trial' court found: “(1) That the plaintiff is not entitled to have the decree of divorce entered on the said seventeenth day of September, 1900, set aside, so far as it dissolves the bonds of matrimony between her and defendant. (2) That she is not entitled to recover attorney’s fees or suit money in this action. (.3)
The plaintiff contends that under the findings of fact she is entitled to a decree setting aside the decree of divorce, and the defendant contends that under the findings of fact the plaintiff is not entitled to any relief whatever. The findings of fact must support the judgment (8 Enc. Pl. and Prac., 943); and when it affirmatively appears that they fail
Erom the findings, and the plaintiff’s allegations that she, “relying upon the said representations of the defendant, and to enable him to procure a deed to said homestead,
Section 1212, Eevised Statutes, provides that subsequent changes may be made in a decree of divorce, by tbe court, in respect to the disposal of tbe children or tbe distribution
Tbe judgment of tbe lower court is reversed, with costs, and tbe action dismissed.