95 Tenn. 60 | Tenn. | 1895
The complainant, Josephine Thoms, a resident of Natchez, Miss., and claiming to be the widow of one H. A. Thoms, who died at Memphis while a resident of the State of Tennessee, hied this bill in the Chancery Court of Shelby County against certain heirs of said H. A. Thoms, for the purpose of recovering dower in his estate. The vendees of other heirs, who purchased the interests of the latter in realty inherited from the said H. A. Thoms, were
Complainant further charges that the dismissal by the said Thoms of his bill for divorce in the State of Mississippi was res adjvMcata,, and that the decree rendered in Illinois thereafter was an absolute nullity. Complainant further charges that the suppres
It is further charged that said decree, having been obtained in Illinois 'without personal service upon complainant, it can, at most, only affect her dower in lands in the State of Illinois, where the decree was pronounced.
The defendants all answered the amended bill, relying upon the Illinois decree in bar of complainant’s right of dower. Proof was taken, and upon the final hearing the Chancellor dismissed the bill. Complainant appealed, and has assigned errors.
The first assignment is that the Court erred in not holding the Illinois decree void, for the reason that H. A. Thoms was not a -bona fide resident of that State, but took up his residence there for the fraudulent purpose of procuring a decree of divorce.
The proof shows that H. A. Thoms rented a house and embarked in business in Cairo, Ill., on the fourth of June, 1871, and' his bill for divorce was tiled more than one year thereafter, to wit, on July 22, 1872.. Moreover, the proof shows that Thoms continued to reside in Illinois, purchasing real estate and transacting business there for four or five years. Wo think the weight of testimony is against this assignment, and shows that Thoms was a bona-fide resident of Illinois at the time his petition was filed.
The second assignment is, that the Court erred
It suffices to say, in answer to this assignment., that the averment is made upon the face*1 of the petition tiled by PI. A. Thoms, in Alexander County, for a divorce from the present complainant, “that, said Thoms is an actual resident of the county of Alexander, and has been for one whole year past a resident of the State of Illinois." The other branch of this assignment is, that there was no proof that H. A. Thoms was an actual resident of Illinois for one. year prior to the institution of his suit.
Complainant, for the purpose of showing that there was no proof of the residence of the petitioner, filed a transcript of the proceedings in the Chancery Court of Alexander County, Ill. The only proofs we find in this transcript are the affidavits of the petitioner and his brother, one L. 1). Thoms, who fully make out the case, excepting the proof of residence. The decree recites, . viz.: ‘ ‘ This day came the complainant, by his solicitors, and also came the Master in Chancery, who submitted his report and proofs taken herein, and the Court, having duly read and examined the same, finds the allegations of complainant’s bill of complaint to be true,'’ etc. It will be observed there is no recitation upon the face of this decree of the specific proofs taken by the Master
In the absence of an affirmation showing that the transcript contains all the evidence, it is to be presumed that the Illinois Court was fully warranted by competent proof in pronouncing its decree. The rule is, that when a Court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the person, its decrees cannot bo attacked in any collateral proceeding by a showing that the evidence on which it was based was illegal, improperly received, or insufficient to sustain the judgment. In the first place, an objection of that sort does not go to the jurisdiction, and, consequently, the judgment cannot be void, although it may be erroneous. ■
Again, 'the legality and sufficiency of the evidence is a question for the Court to determine, and its decision should be accepted as final and conclusive, unless in an Appellate Court. Black on Judgments, Vol. I., § 268; Martin v. Porter, 4 Heis., 416; 4 Sneed, 380.
The third assignment is, the Court erred in not holding said decree void, because said divorce bill was neither signed nor sworn to by said Thoms. We have carefully examined the statutes of Illinois'
The fourth assignment is, that the Court erred in not holding said decree void, for this, that the Illinois Court was fraudulently imposed upon, and jurisdiction fraudulently made to appear, and the decree fraudulently obtained, in this, that the said Thoms fraudulently suppressed the fact that he had instituted suit for the same purpose, and on the same grounds, in the State of Mississippi (excepting the charge of desertion), then the domicile of said Thoms and complainant, and that said bill had been dismissed in manner and form such as to have the effect of rex judicata, and as an estoppel against the Illinois proceedings.
We are unable to perceive the force of the assignment that the proceedings in Mississippi constituted either an estoppel against the said Thoms or a rex judicata- of any • suit in Illinois. It will be remembered, from the statement of the case, that the bill in Mississippi was voluntarily dismissed by. Thoms before there had been a hearing on the merits, oí-an adjudication of any question involved in the litigation. The dismissal was before answer filed or issue joined. The effect of such a dismissal was to leave the parties in the same attitude as if no such bill had ever been filed. The other position assumed by counsel, that the failure of Thoms to disclose
The sixth assignment is, that the Court erred in not holding that, inasmuch as said decree was not predicated upon personal service of process, but upon substituted process of publication as to Mrs. Thoms, a nonresident of Illinois, the decree would not bar her right of dower in realty situated in this State.
In considering this assignment of error, it is an immaterial consideration that the Illinois decree was based upon publication, and not upon personal service of process upon the defendant. Mr. Black, in his work on Judgments, Yol. II., ^ 932, says: “tío that now the rule may be regarded as settled by the great preponderance of authority, that a decree of divorce pronounced by a competent Court in favor of a bona jide domiciled citizen of the títate, and against a nonresident where service of process was made by a reasonable constructive notice, and in the absence of any fraud or collusion, is valid and binding both in that títate and in all other States.’’ tíee, also, £ 1)31. The author, in stating his text,
The remaining question is, whether this decree is a bar to complainant’s right of dower in realty owned by her former husband in this State. The provisions of our- Code in respect of the effect of a domestic divorce upon the widow’s dower, is, viz. 1^ 3330, M. & V.): “If the bonds of matrimony be dissolved at the suit of the. husband, the defendant shall not be entitled to dower in the complainant’s |husband's] real estate, nor to any part of his personal estate, in case of his intestacy, nor to alimony." The question is raised whether this statute is applicable to foreign as v'ell as domestic divorces. Says Mr. Bishop, in his work on Marriage and Divorce, Yol. II., £ 1640: “It is a principle in our system of laws that the tenure, transfer, and
These principles are so fundamental and well settled as that they may be called axioms of the law on this subject.
We are of opinion the decree of divorce pronounced in Illinois was valid, and it follows, both from our statute as well as the principles of the common law, that the widow's right of dower is barred.
Affirmed.