Stratton v. Stratton

Foster, J.

In 1860, at the March term of this court for the county of Kennebec, cross libels for divorce were pending between this plaintiff and her husband. During the pendency of the husband’s libel, and prior to said term of coui’t, the parties thereto entered into an agreement in writing, signed by each of them, that in case a divorce should be decreed upon said libel, two referees named in said agreement, should determine what the libelee should receive from the libelant, in what way and manner, how it should be secured to her, and how she should receive it. It was also agreed that the report of the referees should be made a part of the decree of the court, and should be binding on the parties, and enforced as such. The referees, accordingly, heard the parties, and made their report to the court. Their award, which, together with said agreement, was extended upon the records and made a part of the proceedings in said action, provided, among other things, that the said libelant should pay to the libelee — the present plaintiff— " during her natural life, an annuity of two hundred and fifty *376dollars, to be‘paid quarterly in advance, ” etc. Upon the same day of the said March term, a divorce was decreed to each libelant in each of said actions ; in that wherein the husband was libelant, the court "ordered that alimony, according to the award of Nathan Western and Lot M. Morrill on file, be received and paid as therein provided. ”

From that time forward, till April 2, 1881, the plaintiff received the sum .thus awarded, and ordered by the court to be paid ; since which time, nothing has been paid to her. William M. Stratton died August 6, 1883, and this action of debt upon judgment, is brought against the administrator of his estate, to recover the installments accruing since the last payment, both prior to and since the death of said William M. Stratton.

The defence set up is two fold ; first, that the court had no> jurisdiction to grant alimony, and, therefore, that the judgment is void; and second, that the court had no authority to grant alimony beyond the lifetime of said William M. Stratton, and that said judgment became inoperative and void at his decease.

I. We are not satisfied that the defence here set up, should prevail. Both parties were in court as petitioners in separate proceedings, and, from anything that appears to the contrary, the court entered its decrees in each case, not only on the same day, but at the same time. While the libel of the husband was pending, and before proceedings commenced on the part of the wife, the parties voluntarily entered into the agreement herein-before named, submitting to referees the question of what sum the libelee should receive from the libelant, and agreeing that their award should be made a part of the decree of the court, and should be binding on the parties.

Such agreements, where there is no collusion for procuring a divorce, have been sanctioned by the courts, not only in this, but in other states. Snow v. Gould, 74 Maine, 544; Carter v. Carter, 109 Mass. 309. The agreement and award related to the proceedings in which the husband was libelant and the wife was libelee. The court, as well as the parties, must have so understood it, and acted upon it, as it has been spread upon the records of the court in that action, and in express terms refers *377to it. Was the judgment of the court rendered void by incorporating into it the award of referees, mutually agreed upon by the parties, and which, by that agreement, was to be made a part of its decree ?

The objection raised is, that it was beyond the jurisdiction of the court to allow alimony to the wife on the libel .of the husband.

This is undoubtedly true in cases where there is no waiver by the husband of his strict legal rights, and the decree is made in opposition to his will. It may be conceded to be settled in this state that the jurisdiction and authority of the court, in matters pertaining to divorce, are derived from the provisions of the statute, Henderson v. Henderson, 64 Maine, 419. But the court, being invested with jurisdiction in reference to alimony, there is nothing whereby parties are prohibited from entering into a proper agreement in reference thereto, or the court from rendering judgment in accordance with the agreement of the parties, which they have seen fit to make, as in other cases. In relation to such judgments, the court, in Fletcher v. Holmes, 25 Ind. 458, says: "It is well settled that a judgment by agreement of a court of general jurisdiction, having power in a proper case to render such judgment, and having the parties before it, will bind the parties, notwithstanding proceedings in a contested case would not authorize such judgment. ”

And by this, it should not be understood that we mean to hold that the consent of parties can give the court jurisdiction of the subject matter in controversy, wThere no jurisdiction has been conferred upon it by the legislature. But that when the court has jurisdiction of the general subject matter in controversy, — " power to adjudge concerning the general question involved, ” as said by Forger, J., in Hunt v. Hunt, 72 N. Y. 217, then the consent of the parties may authorize the court to render a valid judgment, in accordance wfith such agreement.

In the case at bar, so much of the judgment or decree as relates to the question of alimony was rendered in accordance with the agreement and consent of the parties, upon the award and report of the referees mutually chosen by them. A divorce *378was decreed in favor of the wife on her libel as well as in favor of the husband on his, and at the same time. The court had jurisdiction to award alimony on the wife’s libel; but if the husband preferred that such decree should be made on his libel instead of hers, it was perfectly competent for him to so agree as a condition on which a divorce should be decreed to him, and having so agreed, and the court having so decreed, it is binding upon him and his legal representatives. If the defence relied upon is to prevail, then the plaintiff was prejudiced by the action of her husband in entering into that agreement with her relating to the amount he was to pay her, in case adivorce should be obtained upon his libel. She desired a decree for alimony. Divorce was decreed to her — as well as to her husband — and for his fault. She might have obtained such a decree in the case in which she was plaintiff, where its validity would not have been questioned, had not the husband agreed that such decree should be made in the action commenced by himself, and be "binding on the parties.” Relying upon that agreement, she accepted the decree as made. The husband’s rights were not violated; nor was he in any way prejudiced by the entry of the decree for alimony, in strict accordance with his own agreement, in the one case rather than in the other. His acts in accordance with that decree for more than twenty-one years thereafter are strongly indicative of this fact.

And the facts in this case clearly distinguish it from those in which it is held that alimony can be granted only upon a libel in favor of the wife, as in Stilphen v. Stilphen, 58 Maine, 515; Stilphen v. Houdlette, 60 Maine, 447 and Henderson v. Henderson, 64 Maine, 419. In those cases the court was called upon to decide as to the strict legal rights of the parties and where there had been no waiver, or agreement, as in the case at bar.

But assuming that the decree was irregular, it was at most but error, and the husband being in court and represented by counsel might have excepted, and not having excepted, he may be considered as having waived the error or irregularity. Conway Ins. Co. v. Sewall, 54 Maine, 357; Prescott v. Prescott, 59 Maine, 153.

*379Furthermore, whenever from the record a want of jurisdiction is not apparent, and a judgment remains unreversed, it is conclusive upon the parties and those in privity with them whenever any question arises in reference to it before any judicial tribunal. And " where a want of jurisdiction actually exists in a domestic tribunal of general jurisdiction,” says Whitman, C. J., in Granger v. Clark, 22 Maine, 130, "and is not apparent upon the record, there must be some appropriate mode of ascertaining it. This mode is by writ of error. And until such appropriate mode has been resorted to, and has proved effectual, the judgment must bo considered as conclusive, and importing absolute verity.”

II. The court, in adopting the award of the referees as a part of its decree, gave alimony to the wife "during her natural life.” That the court has the power so to do, where it may be granted at all, seems to be very strongly implied by the terms of the statute which provide that the court may order so much of the husband’s real estate, or the rents and profits thereof as is necessary, to be assigned and set out to the wife for life. Moreover, where the language of the decree expressly states that it is to continue after the death of the husband, the authorities hold that it will so continue, Miller v. Miller, 64 Maine, 489 ; Bishop, Mar. and Div. § 601. In Burr v. Burr, 10 Paige, 20, in the chancellor’s court, and afterwards affirmed in the court of errors, 7 Hill, 207, it was held that alimony could be decreed to continue after the husband’s death, during the entire life of the wife. And in Carson v. Murray, 3 Paige, 483, the husband and wife agreed to separate, and in the agreement was a provision for the payment of an annuity of one hundred and seventy-five dollars to the ivife yearly, as alimony, during her life, and the court hold that it did not cease at the death of the husband.

The Supreme Court of Iowa in O'Hagan v. O'Hagan, 4 Iowa, 509, say : "In decreeing her sums of money in the first instance, or in making the proper and equitable order in relation to this property and her maintenance, the decree may provide for the payment thereof from year to year for a specific period, or may provide even that it shall continue during her life.”

*380The authorities cited by the defendant’s counsel do not support the position claimed by him. When examined they will be found to relate to cases wherein the court did not in express terms provide for the payment of alimony during the life of the wife. Thus in the case of Lennahan v. O’Keefe, 107 Ill. 620, the court, referring to O’Hagan v. O’Hagan, supra, hold that in the absence of language in the decree, showing an intention to bind the heir of the husband after his death, the allowance of alimony will terminate with the life of the husband.

In Knapp v. Knapp, 134 Mass. 353, there was no provision in the decree that the alimony should continue during the life of the wife ; the decree was for alimony, with no words expressive of any intention for its continuance beyond the life of the husband.

III. But in the decree in the case before us, even adopting the language of the award, there is no sufficient designation of the real estate upon which any lien for alimony can attach. The estate is not set out or described in terms that give sufficient identification. Hills v. Hills, 76 Maine, 488.

In accordance with the stipulation in the report of the case, the decision of the court is that the action is maintainable, not only for the installments due before, but subsequent to, the death of William M. Stratton.

Peters, C. J., Walton, Daneorth, Libbey and Emery, JJ., concurred.