252 P. 972 | Or. | 1927
REVERSED. REHEARING DENIED.
On October 22, 1913, by a decree of the District Court of the State of Minnesota for Hennepin County, plaintiff was granted an absolute divorce from her husband, the defendant herein, and he was required to pay in future installments the sum of twenty-five dollars per month for the care and maintenance of their minor child. Without having paid any of said installments, defendant removed from the State of Minnesota, and became a resident of this state. In 1918, plaintiff commenced an action in this state on said decree, to recover a judgment for the amount of the then past due and unpaid installments and obtained a judgment for said amount. That *46
judgment was reversed upon appeal, Levine v. Levine,
In its former opinion, a majority of the court were of the opinion that the decree of the Minnesota court providing for the payment of future installments *47 in a divorce suit was not, as to such future installments, a final decree, and pointed out the manner by which the plaintiff could have the matter finally determined in the Minnesota court so as to entitle her to maintain an action upon the decree in this state for the recovery thereof. That decision has become the law of the case and is binding, not only upon the parties, but upon the courts of this state. The decree of the Minnesota court adjudicating the amount which plaintiff was entitled to recover from the defendant under its former decree, is protected by the full faith and credit clause of the federal Constitution. The facts alleged in the complaint are sufficient, if sustained by proof, to entitle plaintiff to recover judgment for the amount adjudicated by the Minnesota court. The case is here upon a ruling upon the demurrer to the complaint, and the correctness of the ruling is to be determined by the allegations of the complaint, and not by any defensive matter, if any such exists, that may be put in issue by the answer. Since the complaint alleges all of the facts essential to a recovery by plaintiff, the demurrer should have been overruled. The judgment will therefore be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to overrule the demurrer.
REVERSED AND REMANDED, WITH DIRECTIONS. REHEARING DENIED.
BURNETT, C.J., and BROWN and BEAN, JJ., concur. *48