Stuart v. Cole

92 S.W. 1040 | Tex. App. | 1906

Appellees as plaintiffs below, on the 20th day of January, 1904, filed their original petition in the District Court of Hill County, Texas, against Sarah Stuart, appellant, and Thomas Moss and wife, in the form of an action of trespass to try title to recover the title and possession of 90 acres of land out of the Joseph Greer league in Hill County, Texas, alleging eviction therefrom January 1, 1902. On the 29th day of August, 1904, appellant filed her second amended original answer, same consisting of general denial, special plea alleging that appellant was the lawful and surviving wife and widow of H. A. Stuart, deceased, under whom plaintiffs claim title to the property involved in this suit as heirs; alleging she and the said H. A. Stuart were married in Hill County, Texas, August 3, 1887, and continued to live together as husband and wife in said Hill County until on or about January 30, 1888, on which date he separated himself from appellant and continued to live apart from her without her consent until his death; that said property sued for was occupied by said H. A. Stuart, now deceased, and appellant as their homestead up to on or about January 30, 1888; that said property is now the homestead of defendant and has been continuously since said abandonment, and that she never abandoned same as her homestead; that the decree of divorce obtained by the said H. A. Stuart in the Circuit Court of Boone County, Arkansas, on the 28th day of July, 1891, was void and of no effect for the want of the *480 jurisdiction of said court on account of failure to secure service of citation on appellant, as required by law; that said decree could not determine her status as a citizen of the State of Texas as to her property rights or divest her property right; that said H. A. Stuart died about the year 1902, intestate, and left no child or children or their descendants surviving him; that appellant is an heir of said H. A. Stuart; that he was her lawful husband at the time of his death, and that as such heir she is entitled to one-half in fee simple of said land sued for, and is entitled to claim homestead interest in all of said land during her natural life and so long as she may use said land as a homestead.

The trial court instructed a verdict for plaintiffs and in accordance with such verdict judgment was entered for plaintiffs. Defendant perfected an appeal.

It is contended that the court erred in instructing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiffs, because the evidence of the proceedings in the suit for the divorce in said Circuit Court of Boone County established the fact that said court had not acquired jurisdiction to hear and determine said cause, in that no legal service, constructive or actual, had been had on the defendant in said divorce proceedings. Appellant was divorced from H. A. Stuart by decree of the Circuit Court of Boone County, Arkansas, in 1891. Was this decree void for the want of jurisdiction over the appellant, the defendant in the divorce suit? A decree of divorce is a proceeding in rem and terminates the marriage relation. Being a judgment in rem it has extra territorial force, and is binding and conclusive on the parties to the cause, although one of them was at the time it was granted a nonresident of the State in which the divorce was granted. (Greenleaf on Ev., sec. 525; Spear on Married Women, sec. 362; 9 Am. Eng. Ency. Law, p. 945 (2d ed.); Hunt v. Hunt, 72 N.Y. 217; Black on Judgments, sec. 928.) Such a decree, however, may be collaterally attacked by showing that the court which rendered it was without jurisdiction. (Morgan v. Morgan, 1 Texas Civ. App. 317[1 Tex. Civ. App. 317]; Chunn v. Gray, 51 Tex. 114.) The decree recites: "On this day comes the plaintiff by his attorney, William Keener, and this cause came on to be heard on the complaint of plaintiff unanswered, the report of the attorney ad litem for said nonresident defendant, and the proof introduced, and the court finds that an affidavit has been filed by the plaintiff in this cause that said defendant was a nonresident of this State at the commencement of this suit; that a warning order had been made by the clerk in this case and published in the manner and for the length of time provided by law; that N. B. Crump, an attorney of this bar, had been duly appointed for the defendant for more than sixty days before the beginning of this term; that the cause of this bill for divorce occurred in the State of Arkansas, and within five years before the beginning of this suit, and that the plaintiff has been a bona fide resident of this State for more than one year prior to the bringing of this suit; that the plaintiff and defendant were legally married in said State, and that the defendant had wilfully abandoned said plaintiff for more than one year prior to the filing of this complaint herein."

A certified copy of the following proceedings had in said cause was read in evidence. 1st. Affidavit of H. A. Stuart that Sarah Stuart is a nonresident of the State of Arkansas. 2d. Order of the clerk of *481 Boone County, Arkansas, appointing N. B. Crump, a practicing attorney, to represent the nonresident defendant. 3d. Warning order issued by the clerk of said Boone County Circuit Court in said divorce case, as follows: Warning Order. — H. A. Stuart, plaintiff, v. Sarah Stuart, defendant, Boone County Circuit Court. "The defendant, Sarah Stuart, is warned to appear in this court within thirty days and answer the complaint of plaintiff, H. A. Stuart." 4th. Certificate of Publication: "I hereby certify that the annexed advertisement was inserted in the 'Harrison Times,' a weekly newspaper, published at Harrison, Boone County, Arkansas, for six consecutive weeks, commencing on the 18th day of April, 1891, and ending on the 23d day of May, 1891. J. R. Newman, Publisher. Sworn to and subscribed before me this the 28th day of July, 1891. W. F. Mitchell, Clerk." 5th. Report of attorney N. B. Crump: Boone County Circuit Court. H. A. Stuart, plaintiff, v. Sarah Stuart, defendant: "Now on this day comes N. B. Crump, attorney for the nonresident defendant, and reports to the court, after inquiry he has been unable to find defendant's whereabouts."

It was shown that Mrs. Sarah Stuart had never lived in the State of Arkansas, and that no personal service was had upon her, nor did she have notice of the divorce suit. Were the steps required by the statute of Arkansas, in order to confer upon the Circuit Court of Boone County power to render the decree in the proceedings, taken? If so, jurisdiction attached and the decree was binding upon the defendant in that case, the appellant here, notwithstanding she was at the time a resident of Texas, and no personal service was had upon her and she did not enter an appearance in the case.

Plaintiff in the divorce suit, when he filed his suit, made an affidavit that Sarah Stuart, defendant, was a nonresident of the State of Arkansas. The statute of Arkansas provides where it appears by the affidavit of the plaintiff, filed in the clerk's office at or before the commencement of the action, that the defendant is a nonresident of the State, the clerk shall make, upon the complaint, a warning order, warning such defendant to appear in the action within thirty days from the time of making the order. Warning orders are required to be published weekly in a newspaper for at least four weeks. A defendant against whom a warning order has been made and published is deemed to have been constructively summoned on the thirtieth day after the making of the order and the action may proceed accordingly. The publication of the warning order is shown by the affidavit of the editor, proprietor, manager or chief accountant with a copy of said advertisement annexed, stating the number of times and the date of the papers in which the same are published. It is further provided that all writs and other judicial process shall run in the name of the State of Arkansas.

It is insisted that the warning order did not run in the name of "The State of Arkansas," and did not issue by virtue of an order of the judge of said Circuit Court, and the affidavit of publication of the warning order did not state the number of times it was published, nor the dates of the papers in which it was published, and said affidavit did not state that the party making said affidavit was the editor, manager, proprietor, or chief accountant of said newspaper, and for this reason the court did *482 not have jurisdiction to render the divorce decree. It is clear that the clerk under the statute of Arkansas was authorized to make the warning order and that it was not necessary that the same should be made by the court. There was no statute of Arkansas introduced in evidence requiring a warning order to run in the name of the State. It is argued that the warning order is "a writ or judicial process" and that the statute requires all writs and other judicial process to run in the name of the State. No decision of that State has been cited holding such order to be a writ or judicial process. In the absence of authority we are of the opinion that such warning order is not a writ or judicial process within the meaning of the statute of that State, but simply an order endorsed on the complaint directing how service on the defendant shall be made. The affidavit attached to the publication was made by the publisher of the newspaper, and does not state the number of times and the date of the papers in which it was published. The affidavit states that the order was published in a weekly newspaper for six consecutive weeks, commencing the 18th day of April, 1891, and ending the 23d day of May, 1891. The only construction to be placed on this language is that it was published six times in a weekly newspaper for six consecutive weeks, between the dates mentioned. It being a weekly newspaper would necessarily imply that it was published once each week on the dates of the publication of such paper. The fact that the party making the affidavit signs himself publisher instead of editor, proprietor or manager does not, we think, make the return defective. If the word publisher, as used in the affidavit, was used in the sense of proprietor or manager, then an affidavit made by a publisher of a newspaper meets the requirements of the statute. The definition of that word is so nearly synonomous to that of the words proprietor and manager that when used in the sense of a publisher of a newspaper it means the same as manager or proprietor and is sufficient.

Again, the decree in the divorce proceedings recites all the material steps necessary to be taken under the Arkansas statute to cite a nonresident of that State by publication. The decree shows that the court in effect passed upon these facts and found that service had been made in accordance with the statute. Under the statute and decisions of that State such recitations in the judgment are evidence of the facts recited. (Sec. 2191 of Stats.; Borden v. State, 11 Ark. 519; Boyd v. Roane, 49 Ark. 409.) The recitals in the judgment are evidence of the facts recited and in a collateral attack upon the judgment, such as is here made, are conclusive as to the matters here claimed to show want of service. (Henry v. Allen,82 Tex. 38; Clay v. Clay, 13 Tex. 196 [13 Tex. 196]; Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U.S. 714; Hardy v. Hardy, 84 Tex. 562; Milburn v. Smith, 11 Texas Civ. App. 683[11 Tex. Civ. App. 683].)

We conclude that the Circuit Court of Boone County had the power to render the decree of divorce and it being shown that the land sued for was the separate property of H. A. Stuart and not the homestead of H. A. Stuart and Sarah Stuart, at the time such decree was pronounced, the court did not err in instructing a verdict for plaintiffs below, appellees here. The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed. *483

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