223 S.W. 240 | Tex. App. | 1920
The record discloses that a petition for divorce and custody of a child was filed by Vesta Snow against Horace Snow in the Thirty-seventh district court of Bexar county, on September 11, 1919, and that a divorce was granted on October 11, 1919. On December 8, 1919, appellant filed a motion to set aside the judgment on the ground that it was granted before the expiration of 30 days after the suit was filed. The motion was overruled, and from that order this appeal was perfected.
The judgment was rendered on the thirtieth day after the suit for divorce was filed, and, it being the rule that the day of the filing and the thirtieth day will be excluded, the earliest day on which the judgment for divorce could have been legally rendered in this case was October 12, 1919. In regard to the constitutional provision as to no law taking effect, unless otherwise provided, until 90 days after the adjournment of the session of the Legislature at which it was enacted, the Supreme Court has held that, in determining when acts of the legislature shall take effect, both the day of adjournment and the ninetieth day thereafter are excluded. The court said the Constitution should be read so as to state that no law should take effect "until the expiration of ninety days after the adjournment of the Legislature." That is almost the identical language used in article 4632, Revised Statutes, now under consideration. Halbert v. San Saba Association,
The judgment having been rendered in violation of the statute is either void or voidable, and under which class it should be placed, so far as an attack directly made upon it is concerned, would be of no consequence. However, if the judgment of divorce is void, a motion to set it aside, after the term, regardless of any allegation as to what would be accomplished on another trial, would be sustained, but if the judgment is merely voidable, then, in order to have a judgment set aside after the term at which it was rendered, it must be made to appear that the defendant has a meritorious defense to the cause of action, and that a different result will probably be obtained if a new trial is granted. The motion in this case has no basis except that of the nullity of the judgment of divorce, for it rests alone on the proposition that a judgment for a divorce rendered in less than thirty days after the cause is filed is null and void. Is the judgment void, which was rendered in less than 30 days after the filing of the petition? We answer in the affirmative.
In the recent case of Beeler v. Beeler,
In a strong opinion written by the Supreme Court of California in the case of Grannis v. Superior Court of City and County of San Francisco,
"It is sufficient to hold that the Legislature has power to make reasonable regulations as to the proceedings by which the jurisdiction in such cases is exercised, and to prescribe the terms and conditions on which a divorce may be granted, and that, in view of the subject-matter of the act and the object in view, a provision for postponement of final judgment for one year, and a suspension of the power of the court to enter such judgment in the meantime, is not an unreasonable regulation of the procedure, and is within the legislative power to prescribe, as a condition necessary to the existence of the right to a divorce. The right to a divorce is subject to the legislative will and exists only by legislative grant. The change in the method made by this law affects only the procedure and the right of the parties to an immediate divorce, and does not take *242 jurisdiction from the court. The right to a divorce not being inherent or constitutional, but statutory, the Legislature could repeal the law, and thus effectually prevent the granting of any divorces, or it could suspend the right for any number of years after the beginning of the action without affecting the jurisdiction of the court. The Legislature has complete control of the subject, and may impose whatever restrictions or delays it pleases, either as to the time for beginning the action, or the method and order of procedure after the action is begun."
The court held that the order granting an immediate divorce was wholly void and should be so declared. That case applies with peculiar force to the case now under consideration, and its rulings are adopted.
Because the judgment granted the divorce before the expiration of the statutory period of 30 days from the filing of the suit, it is set aside and the cause remanded for further proceedings.