131 Wash. 13 | Wash. | 1924
Relator comes to this court seeking a writ of mandate requiring the respondent judge to enter a final decree of divorce.
It appears that relator began an action in the superior court for Pierce county, which resulted in due course in the entry of an interlocutory decree of divorce in her favor on June 16,1923. On June 26,1924, more than six months after the entry of the interlocutory decree, relator appeared in the superior court with the usual proof that marital relations had not been resumed between the parties, and moved for the entry of a final decree. At that time the husband, defendant in the case, also appeared, and filed and presented an affidavit which set forth that the relator, within six months following the entry of the interlocutory decree, and on September 26, 1923, had, in the state of Oregon, complied with all of the required forms and ceremonies which would, if she had been free to so contract, have made her the wife of another. Relator moved to strike this affidavit as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, which motion was denied, and the trial court thereupon refused to enter a final decree, and directed the relator to submit herself to the jurisdiction of the court for the purpose of determining, the truth respecting the matters alleged.
The statute, Rem. Comp. Stat., § 988 [P. C. § 7507], in positive terms says that the interlocutory decree “shall be final and conclusive upon the parties, subject only to the right of appeal.”
In State ex rel. Morris v. Superior Court, 128 Wash. 496, 223 Pac. 583, the statute is set forth at length, and it was there held that the subsequent resumption of marital relations, the parties still being husband and wife, was sufficient to estop either party from obtaining a final decree. When the doctrine of condonation,
We conclude that the framers of the statute intended just what the statute says, that the interlocutory decree should be final and conclusive, and if neither party has by any act estopped himself or caused a situation which
The relator’s motion to strike the affidavit should have been granted, and the final decree should have been entered. The alternative writ will be made peremptory.
Main, C. J., Holcomb, Parker, and Mackintosh, JJ., concur.