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Kirschner v. Dietrich

Supreme Court of California
Dec 18, 1895
110 Cal. 502 (Cal. 1895)

Summary

In Kirschner v. Dietrich, 110 Cal. 502, [42 P. 1064], it was pointed out that the object of an action for divorce is to change the personal status of the plaintiff in relation to the defendant, and that upon the death of the plaintiff there was no personal status which a judgment could change.

Summary of this case from Gloyd v. Superior Court

Opinion

         Department One

         Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco. J. M. Seawell, Judge.

         COUNSEL:

         T. Z. Blakeman and Benjamin Healey, for Appellant.

          Otto Tum Suden, for Respondent.


         JUDGES: Harrison, J. Garoutte, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.

         OPINION

          HARRISON, Judge

         In an action for divorce against the appellant, brought by his wife, Filomen Dietrich, service of the summons was made by publication, and judgment of divorce was entered July 13, 1893. The plaintiff in the action died February 22, 1894, and [42 P. 1065] on June 8, 1894, upon an ex parte motion in behalf of the defendant, the court ordered that the administrator of the plaintiff be substituted as plaintiff in place of the deceased, and directed that the action be continued in his name. Thereafter the defendant, upon notice to the administrator, moved the court to vacate the judgment, and that he be allowed to answer the complaint upon the grounds that the summons had not been personally served upon him; that the judgment was void, and that it had been procured by false testimony. The court denied his motion, and the present appeal is from that order.

         It is difficult to understand upon what principle the court made the order substituting the administrator of the plaintiff in the place of his intestate, or directed a continuance of the action in his name after the death of the original plaintiff. But, as the respondent does not appear to have objected thereto, we are not required to determine the correctness of the order. The court, however, properly denied the defendant's motion to vacate the judgment, and allow him to answer the complaint. The action was solely for the purpose of procuring a judgment of divorce between the parties -- a purely personal action which would not survive the death of either party, and which, upon the death of the plaintiff, could not be further prosecuted or defended, whether her death was before or after judgment. If she had died prior to the entry of judgment, there could have been no judgment in the case, and her death subsequent to the entry of judgment deprived the court of all power to review its action, and determine her right to a divorce. The action having been brought to change the personal status of the plaintiff in her relations toward the defendant, it is evident that, upon the termination of her life, there was no personal status which a judgment could change.

         The provision of section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure, under which the appellant made the present motion, authorizing the court to allow a defendant, in case he has not been personally served with the summons, to answer to the merits of the original action within a year after the rendition of judgment therein, implies that at the time of his application there shall be an action still pending (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1049), to the merits of which there can be an answer. The section has no application to a case in which, by the death of the plaintiff, the action has abated, and all opportunity of controverting its merits has been removed.          The effect of the plaintiff's death upon the action is not changed by reason of the question of property which is suggested by the appellant. The complaint, as well as the judgment, is silent upon the subject of property, and, although there is an allegation in reference thereto in the answer which the appellant proposed to file, this did not prevent the abatement of the action, nor is it stated in his notice of motion as one of the grounds upon which he would make it. The primary and substantive subject of litigation in a suit for divorce is the personal relation of the parties, and their rights to the community property is but incidental thereto. If, before a decision upon that question is made, one of the parties dies, the action cannot be continued for the purpose of determining the rights of property; and, if there was originally no issue upon the subject, it cannot be revived in case of death after judgment for the purpose of having this question adjudicated. In the absence of any reference thereto in the decree, the parties to the suit became tenants in common of the community property, and the death of the plaintiff after the entry of judgment did not impair the appellant's right thereto, but this right must be enforced in an independent action (Godey v. Godey , 39 Cal. 157), in which all who may have any interest therein should be made parties.

         The order is affirmed.


Summaries of

Kirschner v. Dietrich

Supreme Court of California
Dec 18, 1895
110 Cal. 502 (Cal. 1895)

In Kirschner v. Dietrich, 110 Cal. 502, [42 P. 1064], it was pointed out that the object of an action for divorce is to change the personal status of the plaintiff in relation to the defendant, and that upon the death of the plaintiff there was no personal status which a judgment could change.

Summary of this case from Gloyd v. Superior Court
Case details for

Kirschner v. Dietrich

Case Details

Full title:CONRAD KIRSCHNER, Administrator, etc., Respondent, v. JOSEPH E. DIETRICH…

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Dec 18, 1895

Citations

110 Cal. 502 (Cal. 1895)
42 P. 1064

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