4 N.W.2d 785 | Minn. | 1942
The facts may be thus summarized: The parties, then residents of this state, were married at Mankato, November 13, 1922. From *26 November 22, that year, until May 1923, they resided at Winthrop, this state, when they moved to Storm Lake, Iowa, where they continued to live until September 1926. Their only child, John Sheridan, was born in 1923. In September 1926, plaintiff took the child with her and moved to New Ulm, this state, where she and the child have since resided. There she secured a job earning ten dollars per week. On January 5, 1932, at the suit of the husband in the district court of Webster county, Iowa, a default decree of divorce was entered. Jurisdiction was obtained by publication only. Plaintiff had no actual knowledge thereof until after entry of judgment. By the terms of the decree, the custody of the child was given to the wife but "with the right of plaintiff [husband] to visit said child at all reasonable times and hours." The husband was required to "pay to the defendant for the support" of the child $30 per month until he "arrives at the age of 18 years."
In August 1932, the present divorce suit was brought by the wife in this state asking for divorce, alimony, and support money for the child. Personal service within this state was made upon the husband, who duly answered and appeared generally in that suit and was represented by competent counsel. He pleaded the Iowa divorce, attaching authenticated copies of the proceedings there had, and averred that the judgment therein entered "has not been set aside" and "is still in full force and effect." He alleged full compliance therewith and prayed that the burdens imposed thereby be not increased. That cause was duly heard, the court finding that the Iowa divorce was effective as to the marriage status, but that plaintiff wife "was entitled to be heard on the question of alimony and support money," since "this is the first opportunity she has had to be so heard." She was awarded $40 per month as and for "alimony and support money" for the child "until the further order of the court." In accordance therewith, judgment was entered March 8, 1933.
Pursuant to the Minnesota decree, defendant husband for a time met these requirements but later paid only the $30 per month directed by the Iowa decree. Plaintiff has since received and accepted *27 these payments, a period of some eight years, and, so far as here disclosed, without registering any complaint. Thus matters rested until the present motion to vacate the Minnesota decree was made. Defendant claims, as the sole ground therefor, that "the court had no jurisdiction to enter said judgment" and that it was "obtained by erroneous proceedings," no other reason being assigned.
1. Ever since the decision in the leading case of Haddock v. Haddock,
2. But most courts, including this court, have, upon principles of comity, recognized foreign divorces insofar as they affect the marriage status, upon the theory that the foreign court had jurisdiction of the status which followed the suing plaintiff to the foreign state in which he resided when substituted service upon the opposite party was made. The following cases are illustrative of the rule: Thurston v. Thurston,
"Under the circumstances, we think the better rule is that the court in Wisconsin had jurisdiction to declare thestatus of the parties before it and grant the divorce, but that the decree in excess of this was void for want of jurisdiction."
That case has been followed and applied in several decisions since, amongst them Mollring v. Mollring,
3. The trial court thought that Sprague v. Sprague,
4. We are not concerned with the judicial correctness of the trial court's decision whereby it arrived at the result it reached, since "a judgment is never void for error, if the court has jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and the subject-matter of the action." 3 Dunnell, Dig. § 5117; McElrath v. McElrath,
The Sprague case,
"The presumption is, in the absence of any allegation to the contrary, that all of defendant's real and personal property, whether of the value of $15,000, as found by the court in the former action, or of the value of $150,000, as alleged in the complaint now under consideration, was within the jurisdiction of the court of his domicile, — concededly Houston county — when the court assumed to adjudge as to such property, and to award to this plaintiff a portion of the same."
The Thurston case,
5. Here we have a case where the court had personal jurisdiction of the parties. The husband's income as a fireman on the railroad was found to be approximately $152 per month. We think there can be no question raised as to the court's jurisdiction, i. e., judicial power, to determine what portion thereof he should contribute to his wife and child. The Iowa decree, as to plaintiff in this suit, cannot be given such extraterritorial effect as to exclude exercise of jurisdiction here.
Plaintiff is allowed $100 attorney's fees in this court plus statutory costs and disbursements.
Order reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, absent because of illness, took no part in the consideration or decision of this case. *31