39 S.E.2d 268 | W. Va. | 1946
In this original proceeding in prohibition, the relator, Charles M. Watson, prays that the Honorable Decatur H. Rodgers, Judge of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, be prohibited from proceeding further in a suit for divorce in which the relator is the plaintiff and Beatrice V. Watson the defendant. The case was submitted to this Court upon relator's petition and Judge Rodgers' answer.
On June 29, 1946, Beatrice V. Watson filed her bill of complaint in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, praying that she be granted a divorce from the relator. A summons was duly issued upon relator returnable to July Rules, 1946, in the office of the Circuit Clerk. On the same day relator accepted service of process and waived in writing the maturity of the cause at rules and consented that it be placed immediately upon the docket of the Circuit Court, which was then in session. On June 29, 1946, the Circuit Court placed the case upon its docket and set it for hearing on July 13, 1946.
The petition alleges that relator, being advised that a decree for divorce which has not been matured at rules, as provided by Code, 56-4, is void, appeared specially before the Circuit Court on July 1, 1946, for the sole purpose of objecting to the docketing and setting the case for trial at the then term of the Circuit Court, and moved the court to vacate and set aside its order of June 29, 1946, which motion was overruled and a decree entered accordingly.
The Circuit Court, having jurisdiction of both the subject matter and parties in the divorce suit, the question presented here is: Did the court exceed its jurisdiction in setting the divorce cause for hearing as provided *176 by the consent decree of June 29, 1946, before it had been matured at rules?
Initially, it must be said that the agreement and consent decree did not constitute collusion. It may be true, as contended by respondent Judge, that the determination of whether a certain act or series of acts amounts to collusion within the meaning of Code, 48-2-14, when, among other things, it appears that the suit has been brought by collusion, is a matter within the province of the Circuit Court. But there are other considerations to be considered in this case.
It is to be noted at the threshold in our consideration of this case that in this jurisdiction divorce has always been governed by statute. West Virginia Code 1868, Chapter 64. As stated by Judge Poffenbarger in Boger v. Boger, 86. W. Va. 590, 104 S.E. 49, "The Statute [Barnes Code, Chapter 64] is not amendatory of either the common or the ecclesiastical law. It is full, complete and comprehensive, covering every phase of divorce; wherefore it was manifestly designed by the Legislature to be a substitute for all other law applicable to that subject."
Code 1931, 48-2-23, provides that in the case of a resident defendant in a suit for divorce, if process has been served upon the defendant sixty days before the term of court, the case shall be placed on the trial docket. This section was amended by Chapter 35, Acts, West Virginia Legislature, 1935, by the deletion of the sixty-day provision and the substitution, in lieu thereof, of a provision that: "Suit for divorce or annulment shall mature the same as other cases in chancery, and when properly matured the case shall be placed on the docket for trial * * *".
Counsel for respondent contends that by the 1935 amendment the Legislature intended that the rule prevailing in regular chancery cases that where a defendant chooses to waive the maturity of cases at rules he may *177
do so (McDermitt v. Newman,
Under Code,
We think a proper construction of this statute leads to the conclusion that the Circuit Court exceeded its jurisdiction. We say this not only because of the express words of the statute itself but because the public policy of this State, as stated in Code, 48-2-14, is against collusion in divorce cases. True there was no collusion here, but in our opinion the Legislature did not intend to give the opportunity for collusion which would exist if respondent's view of the statute were followed. If maturity at rules is not required then parties to a divorce suit could consent to have the case set for hearing on one day and on the same day the case could be heard. This we think would do away with the cooling off period provided by Code, 1931, 48-2, which we think still exists under the 1935 amendment by the requirement that a divorce case shall be matured at rules as other chancery cases and only when so matured shall be set for hearing.
For the foregoing reasons we are of the opinion that a writ of prohibition as prayed for in relator's petition should be awarded.
Writ awarded. *180