186 Mich. 324 | Mich. | 1915
Complainant and defendant (he is now deceased) were married in Allegan, Mich., April 9, 1912, she having been previously married and having been, by a decree of the circuit court, in chancery, for Allegan county, made December 5, 1911, divorced from her former husband. Complainant filed her bill in this cause in April, 1913, praying that the marriage with defendant be dissolved. Defendant answered, but not upon oath, and in his answer he set up, among other matters, that complainant perpetrated upon him a fraud in marrying him because she had not been legally divorced from her former husband. In August, 1913, he filed his bill in the circuit court, in chancery, for the county of Van Burén, Mich., charging, among other things, with respect to the Allegan divorce:
That complainant was not a resident of Michigan when she filed her bill for divorce. •
“That the said Rose Ellen Dibler, just prior to the filing of her said bill of complaint against her said husband to dissolve the marriage between them, was informed that she could not obtain a divorce because she was a resident of the State of Indiana. That the laws of this State required her to be a resident of this State and the county in which she filed her bill for two full years prior to the filing of the bill when the cause for which she sought relief was based upon acts that occurred outside of the State of Michigan. That after being so told she went to other counsel and to him, your orator is informed and believes and therefore charges the truth to be, falsely represented that she was then a resident of Allegan county, had been for over a year last past a resident of the State of Michigan, and because of such false and fraudulent representations persuaded and induced her said solicitor to file her said bill of complaint in said county*326 of Allegan, State of Michigan, and thereafter she falsely and wickedly pretended to the said circuit court of Allegan county that she was then a resident of said Allegan county, and theretofore had been for one full year prior to the filing of her said bill of complaint a resident of the State of Michigan, and by reason thereof obtained a decree purporting to dissolve their said marriage”
—and setting up a copy of 'the bill for divorce, the testimony, report of the commissioner, and decree of divorce, and setting up, also, the pendency of the Washtenaw county (the instant) case. Complainant here, defendant in that suit, answered the bill, asserting that the Allegan divorce was regular and valid, and in her answer admits that she married Jacob A. Dibler February 29, 1888; that they lived in Michigan about two years, removing to Indiana, in which State they lived until September, 1909, when she, taking her son, went to live with her mother in Branch county, Mich.; that while she has been out of the State of Michigan since that time for different periods of time, she has at no time gone with the intention of removing or making her residence other than with her mother until she went to the city of Allegan, Allegan county, Mich., in the summer of 1911, with the full intention of entering into business and remaining there.
In this Van Burén county suit proofs were taken and a decree entered dismissing the bill. The trial judge found that the Allegan court did not have jurisdiction to render the decree of divorce, that the complainant in that suit and in the instant suit had not been a resident of this State the required period of time to enable her to invoke the aid of the Michigan court in the dissolution of the Dibler marriage. But he found, further, that the complainant in that suit, defendant here, was aware of all the facts and circumstances and aided her in procuring her decree of
By the death of defendant, since the decree was entered and the appeal taken, the personal relations of the parties are ended. In view of the nature of the testimony given by complainant, whether true or false, no continuance of marital relations would have been tolerable. We have occasion to consider the testimony only for the purpose of determining whether the award of alimony ought to be sustained. Most of the material testimony was given by the parties, that on the part of complainant being an alleged revelation of the intimate personal relations of husband and wife. We have not the advantage, a considerable one in such a case, which the trial judge had, of seeing the bearing and appearance of the parties in court. The conflict of testimony was sharp, and while we view that of complainant with some suspicion of its exact truth, we are not so well convinced of its falsity as to disregard it and set aside the decree.
We come then to consider the proposition that the complainant could not, legally, intermarry with defendant. It is to be noticed, first, that, conceding that the Washtenaw court had jurisdiction to determine
“Where the judgment is only voidable and not void, it cannot be attacked by strangers to the record. And where it is absolutely void it needs no proceedings to set it aside.”
Vide Campbell, J., in Baugh v. Baugh, 37 Mich. 59, 62 (26 Am. Rep. 495).
There is no doubt of the power of a court of equity to set aside its own decree of divorce for fraud in its procurement, or for want of jurisdiction, on the application of the party against whom the decree was obtained, and this although the other party may have remarried. But the decree cannot be avoided by the party guilty of the fraud. Simons v. Simons, 47 Mich. 253 (10 N. W. 360), nor at the instance of third parties, nor can a party who obtains the divorce and accepts its benefits afterwards question the jurisdiction of the court granting it. Carlisle v. Carlisle, 96 Mich. 128 (55 N. W. 673), and cases cited in opinion.
Was the decree of the Allegan county court in the Dibler divorce case absolutely void? The jurisdiction of equity courts in divorce proceedings is purely statutory. The applicable statute is Act No. 210, Pub. Acts 1899 (4 How. Stat. [2d Ed.] §11461),
Rut we think the award of alimony is excessive. Complainant brought nothing to defendant, and their life together was short. At the most, defendant’s property was worth not more than $6,000. The award should be considered as if he were now alive, and we think the decree of the court below ought to be and it is affirmed in all respects, excepting that the award of permanent alimony will be reduced to $750. Appellee will recover her costs of this appeal, and may tax a solicitor’s fee of $100.