139 Tenn. 211 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the opinion' of the Court.
Complainant and defendant were both born and reared in Hawkins county, this State. On the 23d of January, 1913, they went to Asheville, N.- C., and were married, returning to the home of the husband’s parent, where they lived until shortly before their separation. On December 12, 1913, a girl child was born to them. Shortly after the birth of this child, on the 20th of December, 1913, they separated. In March, 1914, Mrs. Kenner removed to Birmingham, Ala., to make her home with her brother, Dr. C. M. Nice, who had resided there for some years, and was
“The father and mother shall be given the monthly custody, control, and society of their child. The husband shall at other times have the right to look after and secure the support, education, and welfare of the child. Each.party will be required to enter into a. bond' of $5,000 not to permanently remove the child from the jurisdiction of the chancery court of Hawkins county. While the mother may take the child on a visit to Birmingham, or elsewhere, she will not be permitted to keep it out of the jurisdiction of the courts of this State for a longer period than a month, and the father will not be allowed to keep the child, until further orders, without its jurisdiction for a longer period than a month.”
Although it is true, a divorce decree procured in a foreign State without personal service of process on the defendant therein, the latter having been made a party only by publication or other substituted process, under the foreign law, and the plaintiff in such proceeding having gone to the foreign jurisdiction solely for the purpose of instituting such litigation, may be successfully attacked by a bill for fraud in any other State wherein rights are claimed under such decree (Gettys v. Gettys, 3 Lea [71 Tenn.], 260, 31 Am. Rep., 637; Chaney v. Bryan, 15 Lea [83 Tenn.], 599); yet such attack cannot be sustained when it appears, as in the present case, that the party obtaining the decree removed to the foreign State with the bona-fide purpose of making a home in that State, although entertaining at the same time a purpose to bring in the latter State an action for divorce as soon as a domicile therein could be acquired (Thomas v. King, 95 Tenn., 60, 31 S. W., 983; Colburn v. Colburn, 70 Mich., 647, 649, 38 N. W., 607; Hunter v. Hunter, 64 N. J. Eq., 277, 281, 53 Atl., 221; Fosdick v. Fosdick, 15 R. I., 130, 23 Atl., 140). Jurisdiction of the person of the defendant may be acquired in the foreign State by publication, or other substituted service, although the defendant is in fact á nonresident. Thomas v. King, supra; Thompson v. Thompson, 91 Ala., 591, 8 South., 419, 11 L. R. A., 443; Dunham
Should such foreign decree be accorded binding' force when it purports to determine the right of custody of the children of the marriage, when such children were in the foreign State, in the custody of the plaintiff therein, where the suit was brought, and where the decree was pronounced or should the defendant in that suit, aside from grounds of fraud, be permitted to reopen the question, on such child or children being brought into the residence State of such defendant, for a temporary purpose, as for a visit?
The case presented to the chancellor in Alabama, was that of a mother who had been grossly abused by her husband, and of a girl child less than two years old, delicate, weak, sickly, in the custody of her mother, and constantly needing and receiving the loving care of that mother.. The disposition of this child was an integral part of the case, practically inseparable from it, and so calling for the judgment of the chancellor thereon. Wills v. Wills, 104 Tenn., 382, 389-390, 58 S. W., 301. Who can say that a different judgment should have been rendered even if the father of the child had been present, and had offered the most strenuous opposition? But it is suggested the father should be permitted to see the child on proper occasions; that this should be accorded him as a matter of right, by the court, not as a voluntary concession by the mother. This is a matter for the Alabama court. That court, on being applied to, would no doubt even now make a suitable order on the subject; such power being held essentially in reserve by all courts in such cases. Hoffman v. Hoffman, 15 Ohio St., 427, 434, 435; Neil v. Neil, 38 Ohio St., 558; Miner v. Miner, 11 Ill., 43, 49, 50; Williams v. Williams, 13 Ind., 523, 528; Stone v. Stone, 158 Ind., 628, 64 N. E., 86; Morrill v. Morrill, 83 Conn., 479, 484, 77 Atl., 1. And see Neville v. Reed, 134 Ala., 317, 32 South., 659, 92 Am. St. Rep., 35; Green v. Campbell, 35 W. Va., 698, 14 S. E., 212, 29 Am.
Other jurisdictions are in accord. The determining fact seems to be that the child was in the foreign State in the custody of the parent who had there acquired a domicile, and was there suing for divorce, at the time the foreign court passed its decree. Wakefield v. Ives, 35 Iowa, 238; Kline v. Kline, 57 Iowa, 386, 10 N. W., 825, 42 Am. Rep., 47; Rodgers v. Rodgers, 56 Kan., 483, 43 Pac., 779; Seeley v. Seeley, supra. Where the child is within the local jurisdiction the court has the power to award its custody to the one parent or the other; when it is not within- that jurisdiction, no such power exists. Cases supra.
We are of the opinion that as between the parents, parties to the litigation, the decree of the foreign court awarding the custody of the children is res adjudicata, subject, as between those parties, to modification only by the court that granted the decree. Hammond v. Hammond, 90 Ga., 527, 16 S. E., 265; Wilson v. Elliott, 96 Tex., 472, 73 S. W., 946, 75 S. W., 368, 97 Am. St. Rep., 928; Hardin v. Hardin, 168 Ind., 352, 81 N. E., 60; Bennett v. Bennett, Deady, 299, Fed. Cas., No. 1318. However, we think this
There is nothing in the present case to show that it would be to the interest of the child to change, its custody. Such good reason is not found in the fact that the father of the complainant is richer than the father of the defendant, and on that ground the expectations of the former greater. Nor is it a good reason that the father is earning money, and the mother is not; it appearing that the latter through the very competent aid of her father and brother is furnishing, and may be expected to furnish, indefinitely, any needed care and comfort for the child. Moreover, it would require a very strong and urgent case to justify any court in interfering during the brief visit of the mother and child to a point outside of their home State.
The child was made a party to the present litigation by an amended bill. It is said Chancellor Haynes committed error in refusing to appoint a guardian ad litem for her on complainant’s application. This was no error, since the child was not a proper party, and was at most only a nominal party; the mother, its custodian, being before , the court.
It is said the defendant herself, being a minor when this action was tried, should have had a guardian appointed to defend for her, pursuant to complainant’s application for such appointment. This is likewise a mistaken view. She needed no guardian to effect the contract of marriage; nor yet to escape its bond. Still less did she need one to defend the rights she acquired under the decree that freed her. The court itself can protect personal rights of the nature here involved without.the aid of a guardian. At all events, since these rights will be fully protected by the decree which we shall order, no harm is done, and the error, if any, is wholly without effect.
It is insisted that the custody of the child was disposed of between the present parties in a former divorce suit between them in Hawkins county, this State. That action was brought by the wife in the chancery court of Hawkins county, but was dismissed by her on her own motion before final decree by leave of the court. While the suit was pending an interlocutory order was made concerning the temporary
The result is, the decree of the court of civil appeals must he reversed, and that of the chancellor dismissing the hill must he affirmed, with costs.