204 Ky. 104 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion of the Court by
— Reversing.
Appellant and defendant below, 'William H. Logs-don, and the appellee and plaintiff below, Emily J. Logs-don, were married on November 13,1906, and lived from that time until the latter part of the year 19Í7 in Edmonson county, Kentucky, where they both lived at the time of their marriage and long prior thereto. There were horn to them three children. Defendant, either by his voluntary action or by the draft, became a soldier in the American Army in the World War, and his wife, the plaintiff, experienced great difficulties in providing the means of support for herself and children while her hus
Plaintiff herein, who' was the defendant in that action, knew nothing of the McLean county judgment until some months thereafter, when, ignoring it on the ground that it was void ab initio, she filed this action in the Edmonson circuit court against defendant wherein she set out grounds for divorce and in her petition she averred the facts with'reference to the McLean circuit court proceedings and charged that defendant’s affidavit therein for the obtention of constructive process against her was false and known to be false by him when he made it, and that in doing so he committed perjury and that because thereof that court did not obtain jurisdiction of her person so as to give validity to the divorce judgment it subsequently rendered. She prayed for alimony and all other equitable relief to which she was entitled.
An answer filed by defendant denied the averments of the petition and affirmatively alleged that the McLean circuit court had jurisdiction to grant the divorce, and that the judgment therein rendered was valid, but if not that it could not be collaterally attacked in the Edmonson circuit court and in no event could it be set aside because, being one granting a divorce, it changed the ■status of the parties which had in the meantime become settled beyond all methods of attack as alleged by de
It will be seen that there are presented for'our determination two principal questions: (1), whether a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction is void because of false and fraudulent statements by the party in whose favor it Avas rendered affecting the jurisdiction of the court over the person of his adversary, by which it was made to appear that the court had such jurisdiction when the facts were that it did not; which, reduced to its last analysis and differently stated is, whether it is competent in any event to prove such invalidating and vitiating facts by testimony aliunde, the record, and in opposition to its recitals; and, if that question should be answered in the affirmative as to either a direct or collateral attack then (2), will a judgment of divorce be set aside and held to be void because of such false, fraudulent and perjured statements made, as we have seen, for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction of the adversary’s person?
At the outset we feel that it should be stated that since an opinion of a court should be strictly confined and relate to the facts contained in the record before it, we will not undertake to notice the various rules, either at common law or under our code, relative to what Constitutes a direct or a collateral attack of a judgment either of a court of original and coordinate jurisdiction, or of one of an inferior jurisdiction; nor will we engage in a discussion of the rules relative to presumptions in favor of the judgment attacked where it is a collateral one, but# will proceed to dispose of the questions presented in the light of our code provisions as heretofore interpreted by this court.
It is insisted, and we think it is true, that this case brought in the Edmonson circuit court is beyond question a collateral attack of the judgment of the McLean circuit court, and it being fair upon its face can not be set aside by evidence aliunde that record, although such
It might be insisted, however, that since this court has held in the case of George v. George, 190 Ky. 706, and other cases therein referred to, that a proceeding, the sole.purpose of which is to recover maintenance or alimony, is a transitory one, that the Edmonson circuit court would have jurisdiction of this case to the extent
We held in the cases of Baker v. Baker, Eccles & Co., 162 Ky. 683; Harrod v. Harrod, 167 Ky. 308; Ratliff v. Childers, 178 Ky. 102, and Johnson v. Carroll, 190 Ky. 689, that any attack of a judgment other than by the methods pointed out in sections 344, 414, and 518 of the Civil Code of Practice is a collateral attack, and that one made pursuant to the provisions of those sections was a direct attack. Section 344 provides for the obtention of
It would seem that question (1) supra, is sufficiently answered by the remedy given by subsection 4 of section 518, .since we can imagine no species of fraud more vicious and vitiating in its nature than the one having the effect to bring a defendant before the court as a party litigant, and to thereby vest the. court with apparent jurisdiction to adjudicate upon his rights, when in truth and in fact the court did not have jurisdiction of his person because of the false and fraudulent statements of plaintiff whereby the necessary facts were made to appear. Surely if the court, under the subsection referred to, could set aside a judgment for fraud in any other respect it also could and would do so when the established fraud furnished the very basis for the authority of the court to take jurisdiction of the cause, and the text writer’s so hold and the cases so adjudge. The leading case in pur court is that of Newcomb’s Executor v. Newcomb, 13 Bush 544, which involved a prior rendered divorce judgment, but the action attacking it was brought in the srnne court granting the divorce and which rendered the judgment attacked.
In 15 R. C. L. 704, paragraph 156, the general rule is stated and which is also found in all text writers upon the subject, that “It is generally held that judgments procured Toy fraud may be set aside or vacated at the instance of one who himself is not a party to the fraud. The principle is well established that courts of justice have power, on due proceedings had, to set aside'or va
Numerous other cases, both foreign and domestic, as well as text writers, might be cited in support of the same practice, and they also hold with equal unanimity that if the attacked judgment is one of a court of general jurisdiction and the record is fair upon its face, and especially where it affirmatively shows the jurisdictional facts (not taking into consideration any presumptions in favor thereof), the attack must be a direct and not a collateral one. And it is also the law as expounded with equal unanimity that whatever may be the effect of fraud in the procurement of a judgment in other respects, if it is directed toward conferring jurisdiction on the court of the person of the defendant, by falsely misrepresenting the facts, it may be shown to be void for that reason by the employment of the proper proceeding- for the purpose, which necessarily is a direct attack in view of what we have hereinbefore determined, and which remedy we think is provided by subsection 4 of section 518 supra of the code.
In determining- this question there is presented two conflicting cherished public policies, i. e., (a), that no one may benefit himself by procuring a judgment in his favor against one whom, through his own perjury, he makes it appear is before the court for the purpose of adjudicating the questions presented and the rights flowing therefrom, although the cause may be one of divorce and, of course, affecting the marital status, and (b), whether a divorce judgment, though fair on its face, will in a proper proceeding brought for the purpose, which
In R. C. L. supra, page 706, paragraph 157, the text on the exact point says: “For example, if a decree of divorce is obtained upon constructive service by plaintiff’s falsely alleging that he resided in the county where the action was brought, and that his wife was a non-resident of the state, she is entitled to have the decree set aside on the ground that it was procured by fraud, and the court will, at her instance, vacate the decree and dismiss the complaint for want of jurisdiction.” There is cited in support of the note the cases of Edson v. Edson, 108 Mass. 590, 11 Am. Rep. 393, and Corney v. Corney, 79 Ark. 289, 95 S. W. 135, 116 A. S. R. 80. The opinion in the Massachusetts case was rendered by Chief Justice Bigelow, of noted judicial fame, and the proceedings were under facts almost identical with those presented in this case, and in the course of the opinion it is said: “The statement of the question is of itself sufficient to make it apparent that, if there is no remedy by which judgments so procured to be rendered can be impeached and annulled, courts of justice may be made instruments by which the grossest frauds may be successfully accomplished, to the great wrong and injury of innocent persons. Such a conclusion cannot be supported, unless it is founded on adjudicated cases which this court is bound to regard as obligatory declarations of the law, or upon reasons of the most decisive and satisfactory nature.” (Our italics). He then continues by showing that no case, nor
In the Corney case, involving the same question under practically the same facts and in a procedure of the same nature, Judge McCullough, in speaking for the court, after stating the facts, said: “It is needless to add that appellant, under the state of facts detailed above; committed a fraud, not only upon his wife but also upon the court, in procuring a decree for divorce upon constructive service and in a court which had no jurisdiction of the subject matter. Suits for divorce must be brought in the county where the'plaintiff resides. Kirby’s Digest sec. 2674. He was then residing in Crawford county. He made affidavit, for the purpose of procuring the issuance of a warning order, that his wife was not a resident of the state of Arkansas, when he knew that she was in the state, and he fraudulently induced her to leave the state immediately thereafter, without disclosing his purpose of suing for divorce.”
Mr. Bishop, in his work on Marriage, Divorce and Separation, vol. 2, chapter XLVII, deals extensively with the subject of fraud in the proceedings to, obtain a divorce; and in section 1545 of that volume, he says: “A divorce sentence rendered without jurisdiction in the tribunal is absolutely, in the full meaning of the word, void. So that this defect (if it appears on the face of the record) may be taken advantage of in any proceeding, direct or collateral, by- a party to it, or any other person. The question presents itself in many aspects and forms, but always with the one result, as the numerous cases cited in the notes to this section and the other sections therein referred to disclose.” And in section 1550 of the same volume and chapter it is pointed out that the same consequence will result, notwithstanding there has been a subsequent marriage and birth of children; but whether such an annulment would have the effect to incriminate the new spouse or to bastardize the children, is not treated of in that work, nor do we express any opinion upon it in this case. In section 1556 (same work) it is stated, in substance, that the proceedings to annul the divorce decree, especially when the facts necessary for that purpose rest in parol proof and must be developed aMuncle the record, must be in the same court and cause wherein it is rendered, which conforms to the practice
That the same consequences follow the false and fraudulent obtention of the jurisdiction of defendant in a divorce case was approved by this court in the New-comb case supra. We do not think that the rule prevailing in this court that a judgment for divorce will not be reversed, nor the statement in section 414 of the Civil Code of Practice excluding judgments for divorce from the particular character of relief therein given, militates against the principle which we have been discussing, since neither of those practices is intended to furnish relief against wholly void judgments. The evidence as developed by the testimony taken in this case proves conclusively that the defendant falsely made the affidavit in the McLean circuit court case to obtain the warning order therein, he knowing at the time that plaintiff herein and the defendant in that case was then residing with her father in Edmonson county and that she was neither then nor had she ever been a non-resident of this state.
Briefly summarizing our conclusions, they are: (1), that this proceeding is a collateral attack on the McLean county judgment, and since it was one of original general jurisdiction and its judgment shows on its face that it had jurisdiction, a collateral attack upon it in another court of equal jurisdiction cannot be sustained; (2), that the attacked judgment having been obtained by perjury or fraud in order to obtain the benefit of constructive process, it may be wholly vacated and set aside in a properly provided proceeding, and that such a proceeding is a suit in the same court to set it aside under subsection 4 of section 518 of the Civil Code; (3), that the judgment should be vacated in the manner indicated even before plaintiff can maintain an independent action for alimony alone, but if she does not desire to invalidate the divorce decree of the McLean circuit court she may obtain relief as to alimony and maintenance by going into that court under the provisions of. section 414 of the Civil Code, in which case the decree for divorce will not be disturbed; (4), if she succeeds in setting" aside the judgment of divorce in her action filed in the McLean circuit court for that purpose, she may either proceed therein for whatever relief she may deem herself entitled under the doctrine announced in the Johnson case, supra (12 Bush 485), provided defendant does not object to that venue; or she may proceed in the circuit court of the county of
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed with directions to dismiss the petition.