270 Mo. 137 | Mo. | 1917
— This is an action brought for the purpose of annulling a certain decree of divorce entered in the circuit court of Jasper County in the case of Esther Robertson v. Orrin Robertson in February, 1911. The present action was instituted January 2, 1913. The petition herein charges lack of jurisdiction in the circuit court of Jasper County in the case of Esther Robertson v. Orrin Robertson. It also charges fraud in the procurement of that judgment. Upon trial the circuit-court dismissed plaintiff’s bill and entered judgtnent against him. From such judgment the plaintiff appealed to the Springfield Court of Appeals, which court by a divided opinion reversed and remanded such cause, with directions to the trial court to enter a judgment for plaintiff on his bill. One of the -judges dissented and certified the case here. It therefore reaches us in due form, and is here for consideration from all angles.
In the Court of Appeals the division of the court arose upon the sufficiency of the affidavit attached to the petition of plaintiff in case of Esther Roberts on v. Orrin Robertson. In that case the petition is very short, and charges as a ground for divorce:
“But the said defendant wholly disregarding his duties as the husband of the plaintiff, did on said September 16, 1908, desert and leave plaintiff and has absented himself without a reasonable cause for the space of one year, to-wit, since the 16th day of September, 1908, that ever since last named date, defendant wholly disregarding -his duties as the husband of plaintiff, has failed and neglected to support plaintiff, has contributed nóthing to plaintiff with which to provide for her the necessities of life.”
This petition alleges defendant to be a non-resident of Missouri, and had other usual formal allegations. This petition was signed “Esther Robertson, Plaintiff.” Following this signature was the following:
*141 “State of Missouri, 7 County of Jasper. ) SS‘
“On this 16tli day of December, 1910, before me, the undersigned notary public within and for Jasper County, Missouri, personally appeared Esther Robertson to me known to be the person described in, and who executed the above and foregoing petition, who being by me duly sworn on her oath, did say that she is the plaintiff in the above entitled action and- that the facts in the foregoing petition are true according to her best knowledge and belief, and that the complaint is not made out of levity, or by collusion, fear or restraint between the plaintiff and defendant for the mere purpose of being separated from each other, but. in sincerity and truth for the causes mentioned in the petition.
U______
“In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my notarial seal at my office, in Joplin, Missouri, this 16th. day of December, 1910.
Beatrice L. White, Notary Public,
Jasper County, Missouri.
Commission expires Feb. 28, 1914.”
It will be noted that the said Esther Robertson did not subscribe to the affidavit, and this was the bone of contention in the Springfield Court of Appeals. The majority opinion held that the circuit court, under these documents, acquired no jurisdiction in Esther’s case, and that its judgment should be annulled. The minority opinion contra. Other matters will be stated, if necessity requires.
I. The majority opinion in this ease is bottomed on the case of Hinkle v. Lovelace, 204 Mo. 1. c. 227. Whilst this court was divided upon some questions in that case, we were a unit in holding:
*142 verification Petition™6 *141 “The verification required to be made and annexed to the petition in divorce proceedings is a matter of*142 substance, so much as that the court acquires no jurisdiction of the cause without it. See authorities cited under paragraph three of this opinion.”
In other words we held that unless a petition for divorce was accompanied by the affidavit required by the statute, the circuit court would acquire no jurisdiction in the case. We see no reason for departing from that rule. . In that case the affidavit attached to and filed with the petition, was made by an agent of the plaintiff, and we held that in law it was no affidavit at all. In other words, that the plaintiff was the only person that could make the affidavit required by the statute. The difference between that case and this case is, that in the one the'agent undertook to and did make the affidavit, whilst in the other the plaintiff is averred by the notary to have sworn to the facts in the affidavit, but did not sign it. It will be observed that the Hinkle case settles the jurisdictional character of the affidavit, but does not settle the sufficiency of the instrument involved here. That matter we take nest.
“It is generally held that, in the absence of any statute or rule of court requiring a signature, if it clearly appears who made the affidavit, and the fact of his swearing is certified by a proper officer, the affidavit is sufficient, although not subscribed by the affiant.”
The authorities cited do not include Missouri, however. So too we find in 1 R. L. C. 769, the general rule stated in this fashion:
*143 “In tlie absence of a statute or rule of court to tbe contrary, it is not necessary to tbe validity of an affidavit that it have the signature of, the affiant subscribed thereto, although all the authorities and general custom recommend as the better practice that it be signed by the affiant.”
No Missouri authorities are cited by this author to support the rule. On the other hand, in both of these authorities Missouri is recognized as holding to a different view.
To start with it must be said that our statute as to the affidavit which must accompany a divorce petition (Sec. 2371, R. S. 1909) does not specifically provide for the signature of the plaintiff to the affidavit. The pertinent portion of this statute reads:
“The petition shall be accompanied by an affidavit annexed thereto, that the facts stated therein are true according to the best knowledge and belief of the plaintiff, and that the complaint is not made of levity, or by collusion, fear or restraint between the plaintiff and defendant, for the mere purpose of being separated from each other, but in sincerity and truth, for the causes mentioned in the petition.”
But it must be further said «that the statute does require statements to be sworn to, which are in addition to the statement in the petition. We have italicized the portion of the statute making this requirement. In other words the statute requires (1) an affidavit to the effect that the matters stated in the petition are true, and (2) an affidavit as to the additional matters in the italicized portion of the statute mentioned. All of these last requirements are as to matters within the personal knowledge of the plaintiff, and most of them are things that could be known by no one save and except the plaintiff. This fact alone should require us to proceed with caution in determining what is and what is not an affidavit in a divorce case. The public interest (the third party in every divorce proceeding) would seem to require a rather rigid construction to be given the law. We can see where it could well be said, that the law-mak
Blair, C., with the unanimous approval of this Division, approved the ruling in the Hargadine case as late as the case of Norman v. Insurance Co., 237 Mo. l. c. 584. True he was not discussing an affidavit in this exact shape, but he was discussing the question of jurisdiction without an affidavit. In Hargadine’s case we had held that an affidavit without a signature was no affidavit, and thus the' citation of the case. The minority opinion from Springfield Court of Appeals cites us to the case of State v. Headrick, 149 Mo. l. c. 403. This case simply says:
“The word affidavit, ex vi termini, means an oath reduced to writing. [1 Ency. Pl. and Pr. 309; 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 909, and cases cited.]”
“An affidavit is &m written statement or declaration sworn to before some officer authorized by law to administer oaths, and signed at the end by the affiant or deponent. [Hathaway v. Scott, 11 Paige Chan. 173.]”
This definition comports with the ruling in Hargadine’s case, supra.
We have cases which hold that because an affidavit in attachment may be defective in the matter of substantial statements therein, yet this fact, does not defeat jurisdiction. Of this line of cases Burnett v. McCluey, 92 Mo. 230, is a type. But these cases do not contravene the rule that an unsigned affidavit is no affidavit at all, nor the further rule that the absence of an affidavit defeats jurisdiction. It should also be considered that in attachment proceedings there is specific statutory authority for amending defective affidavits, and the cases holding that jurisdiction is not defeated by affidavits merely defective in statements, all refer to this statute. But, as said, none of these cases go to the matter involved here. In the Hargadine case we ruled that an unsigned affidavit was no affidavit, and this ruling remains the rule of this court to-day. We see no good reason to depart from it. Especially do we see no good reason to adopt a different rule in divorce cases. Too often the courts are imposed upon in such cases. To require the statutory affidavit to be signed by the plaintiff is but another safeguard.
The majority opinion of the' Springfield Court of Appeals is right. Let the judgment nisi be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the circuit court to enter up a judgment for plaintiff herein annulling the decree of divorce in Esther Robertson v. Orrin Robertson, as prayed for in plaintiff’s bill.- It is so ordered.