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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Mrs Jane Ann Fraser or Walker v. William Walker [1871] ScotLR 8_328 (27 January 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0328.html Cite as: [1871] SLR 8_328, [1871] ScotLR 8_328 |
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Page: 328↓
After decree of divorce had been pronounced by the Lord Ordinary at the instance of a husband against his wife, and a reclaiming note had been lodged against the Lord Ordinary's judgment, but had not yet been disposed of, the wife raised a counter action of divorce against her husband, in which she alleged that the facts upon which her counter action was laid had only come to her knowledge since the date of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor in the action at her husband's instance against her. Held that, the action at the husband's instance being still in dependence in and under the control of this Court, the pronouncing of decree of divorce by the Lord Ordinary was no bar to the raising of a counter action at the wife's instance against the husband, if otherwise competent.
Observed, that it would have been different had final judgment been pronounced in the husband's action by this Court, and appeal been taken to the House of Lords, as in that case this Court would have lost control of the cause.
An action of divorce had been raised at the instance of Mr Walker against his wife, and decree of divorce had been pronounced against her by the Lord Ordinary ( Ormidale) on 28th July 1870. Against this judgment Mrs Walker reclaimed; and in November of the same year, before her reclaiming note was heard in the Inner House, she raised a counter action of divorce against Mr Walker, the summons in which was signeted on 19th November, or nearly four months after the date of the Lord Ordinary's decree. She alleged several specific acts of adultery, extending over more than fifteen years, and averred that they had only come to her knowledge during the said month of November.
Against this counter action Mr Walker stated the following preliminary plea:—“The pursuer having been divorced from the defender by decree pronounced by the Court of Session before the raising of the present action, has no right or title to sue for a divorce.”
Upon this plea the Lord Ordinary ( Ormidale) pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“ Edinburgh, 11 th January 1871.—The Lord Ordinary having heard counsel for the parties on the defender's first plea in law, and having considered the argument and proceedings, repels said plea in law, and appoints the case to be enrolled to be further proceeded with.
Note.—The defender's plea in law, now repelled, proceeds on the assumption that the pursuer had been divorced from her husband, the defender, before this action at her instance was raised. But this is scarcely a correct or well-founded assumption; for although an interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary divorcing the pursuer from her husband had been pronounced in July last, that interlocutor was in the November following—when the present action was raised and brought into Court—the subject of a reclaiming note to the Inner House. In truth and substance, therefore, the action of divorce at the instance of the defender against the pursuer was when the present action came into Court, and is still in dependence, the reclaiming note referred to not having been yet disposed of. In this state of matters it appears to the Lord Ordinary that the defender's first plea in law must, in conformity with the decision in Brodie v. Brodie, 11th June 1870, 8 Macph. 854, be repelled, and the cause allowed to be matured for judgment, so as to be ultimately taken up and disposed of at the same time with the reclaiming note in the counter action. The only distinction taken before the Lord Ordinary, between the present and the case of Brodie, was, that while in the latter the action at the wife's instance was raised and in Court a few days before the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor divorcing her in the action at her husband's instance was pronounced, the present action was not raised or brought into Court till after the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor divorcing her in the action at her husband's instance had been pronounced, although before judgment in the reclaiming note against that interlocutor. The Lord Ordinary does not think that this distinction is sufficient to render the case of Brodie inapplicable as a precedent in point of principle.”
Thereafter, on the 24th January 1871, the Lord Ordinary pronounced this farther interlocutor:—“The Lord Ordinary allows the parties a proof of the facts averred by them respectively, and to the defender a conjunct probation thereanent: Appoints the proof to be taken before the Lord Ordinary within the Parliament House, Edinburgh, on Thursday the 23d day of February next, at half-past ten o'clock forenoon; and grants diligence at
Page: 329↓
the instance of each of the parties for citing witnesses and havers: Farther, on the motion of the pursuer, and not objected to on the part of the defender, as to amount, decerns against the defender to make payment to the pursuer of the sum of one hundred pounds sterling, to meet the expenses of process.” Against both these interlocutors the defender, Mr Walker, reclaimed with the leave of the Lord Ordinary.
Lancaster and Macdonald, for him, pleaded—That though the case of Brodie v. Brodie, referred to by the Lord Ordinary, came very near to this one, it did not do so sufficiently. Though there was not much difference in point of time, there was a great distinction in point of fact and law. There must be some point of time at which a counter action of divorce becomes incompetent; the practical bearing of the question being this, that there must be a point of time at which the husband ceases to be liable for the expenses of an action raised by his wife against himself. That point of time, they submitted, was the date of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor; as a matter of principle it must be fixed at the date of pronouncing an interlocutor, which is final if not reclaimed against. The reasons for this will best be seen by considering certain practical results, which the application of this or of an opposite principle would have respectively. For, first, what is the position of a person against whom a decree of divorce has been pronounced, though that decree be still liable to be brought under review. Surely such party is in the position of a divorced person, for consider the result either of the reclaiming note being withdrawn or of the party reclaiming dying, or of the party holding the judgment dying. In any of these cases a result follows which must have its foundation in the previous state of matters. In the second place, consider this, Does any and what effect follow from the judgment of the Lord Ordinary though under review by reclaiming note in this Court—see the analogous case of Forster, 7 Macph. 546. Thirdly, could Mrs Walker have relevantly charged against her husband acts of adultery, alleged as committed after the date of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor, and before raising her own summons. Fourth, the question is brought to a practical test by the second interlocutor reclaimed against, pronounced by the Lord Ordinary on the 24th January as a consequence of that of the 11th. He therein orders the defender to pay a large sum to account, to meet the pursuer's expenses of process. Now, the Lord Ordinary's decree of divorce against her has taken away all absolute right to expenses of process even in reclaiming against that decree (see the cases of Stewart, 1 Macph. 449; Donald, 1 Macph. 741; and Craig, 14 D. 829). Much more so then where she is attempting to pursue a counter action of divorce after she has herself had decree pronounced against her. To hold that the Lord Ordinary's decree did not prevent her getting interim expenses in her own action, while it cut away her right to expenses in her husband's action, which before that decree was absolute, would be a most manifest absurdity, and proves practically the necessity of fixing the date of the Lord Ordinary's decree as the point of time at which this action of Mrs Walker became incompetent.
Solicitor-General and Balfour, for the respondent Mrs Walker, were not called upon.
At advising—
Page: 330↓
The farther question of expenses necessarily follows. The actions are to go on together, and it may be that the wife gets decree of divorce and the husband not. That is a quite possible result. And if that is the case, is the wife to be deprived of the means of going on with her case? I think not, for, even if she only succeeds in getting a mutual divorce, she will be entitled to her expenses. There may be hardships, but that is beyond our control.
The Court accordingly adhered to the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor, and sisted procedure in the action at the husband's instance, until that at the wife's should be ripe for judgment.
Solicitors: Agents for Pursuer— J. B. Douglas & Smith, W.S.
Agents for Defender— W. G. Roy, S.S.C.