37 Neb. 535 | Neb. | 1893
The parties to this action were married in the state of Pennsylvania in the year 1866, where they resided until
It is necessary to consider but one of the several questions argued, viz., the jurisdiction of the district court of Douglas county to vacate the decree of the district court of Fillmore county. It should be observed that no objection
Referring to the inquiry first suggested, we do not hesitate to hold that the petition presents a cause for equitable interference. It is therein alleged that the defendant deserted his family in the year 1872; that the allegations in the divorce proceeding, charging the plaintiff herein with «desertion, were false and made for the purpose of corruptly deceiving the court, and supported at the trial by false and perjured testimony; that she was not personally served with notice of said action and did not at the time know it was pending, and that she first learned of the whereabouts of the defendant and of said divorce proceeding about the time this action was commenced in 1889, nearly eleven years subsequent to the date of the decree.
The provisions of the Code being inadequate, it follows that the remedy afforded by courts of equity is still available to the plaintiff. The subject under discussion might have been dismissed by a reference to the case of Wisdom v. Wisdom, 24 Neb., 551, but for the reason that it is not apparent from the statement thereof whether or not the legal remedies provided by the Code were available to the plaintiff at the time the action was commenced.
2. Is the action cognizable by the district court of Douglas county? It is apparent that the cause of action is primarily to vacate the prior decree, and that the petition for divorce is but an incident thereto, upon the evident theory that the court, having once acquired jurisdiction, will retain it for the purpose of such equitable relief as the plaintiff is entitled to. (A.dams, Equity, 7th Am. ed., 418.) This case differs essentially upon principle from one in which the beneficiary of a fraudulent judgment or decree has undertaken to assert a right thereunder. In such case, whether it be by means of an execution or an action, fraud which inheres directly in the judgment or decree may be interposed as a defense. Here, however, the decree is assailed by the defendant therein in the first instance in a collateral proceeding.
According to the practice which formerly prevailed in the courts of chancery, a decree, when once enrolled, could be set aside or impeached at the instance of the parties thereto only upon a bill of review or a bill to impeach on the ground of fraud. Before the enrollment thereof the remedy was by supplemental bill in the nature of a bill of review. (Adams, Eq., 416*; 2 Madd., Chancery, 537*.) But according to the modified form of the chancery practice as it prevails in the equity courts of this country, the term bills of review is used in a more comprehensive sense and includes supplemental bills of the same nature and
The conflict of opinion upon the subject is sufficiently illustrated by reference to two leading American authors. In Willard’s Equity, page 1C3, such bills are treated as strictly original bills, while in Story’s Equity PL, secs. 18, 20, 21, they are classed with those bills which “are for the purpose of cross-litigation, or of controverting or suspending or reversing some decree or order of the court or carrying it into execution,” and therefore not original bills. Other writers treat them as bills in the nature of original bills. (Harrison, Prac. in Chancery, 166.) The writer has, during an examination of all of the authorities attainable, found no reported case in which the power of a different court, although possessing the same general jurisdiction with respect to the subject-matter, has been invoked to impeach a decree on the ground of fraud in accordance with the practice in the courts of chancery. In short, the terms original bill and bill in the nature of an original bill are used by the judges and text-writers in a restricted sense and refer to the character of the pleading rather than that of the action or proceeding to which they apply. The view just expressed finds support in Willard’s Eq., p. 163, where it is said : “ There is no case in which equity has ever undertaken to question the judgment of another court for mere irregularity. The power in such case is always exercised by the court in -which the judgment was given and the relief is frequently granted upon terms.” The term irregularity as here used evidently includes fraud as well as such other acts or omissions as render the judgment void
Our conclusion is that the district court of Douglas county did not have jurisdiction of the cause of action. • The decree, therefore, should be reversed and the action
Dismissed.