Miller v. Miller
| Jurisdiction | Oregon |
| Decision Date | 20 September 1961 |
| Citation | Miller v. Miller, 365 P.2d 86, 228 Or. 301 (Or. 1961) |
| Parties | Leona S. MILLER, Appellant, v. Calvin C. MILLER, Respondent. |
| Court | Oregon Supreme Court |
John U. Yerkovich, Portland, for appellant. With him on the brief was John P. Ronchetto, Portland.
Ray F. Merry, Portland, argued the cause and filed a brief for respondent.
Before McALLISTER, C. J., and SLOAN, O'CONNELL, GOODWIN and LUSK, JJ.
Plaintiff wife appeals from an order vacating a decree and dismissing her divorce suit. The order appealed from leaves her married to one man while unlawfully living with another.
On April 8, 1960, the trial court granted the wife a divorce in a contested case in which the husband had resisted the divorce but had sought no affirmative relief.
An April 11, 1960, the victorious wife went on a romantic excursion with a man whose interest in the case previously had not been suspected either by the husband or by the trial court. After celebrating a marriage prohibited by ORS 107.110, the wife accompanied her new mate to California. The erstwhile husband on May 5, 1960, filed a motion for an order setting aside the decree on the ground that it had been obtained by fraud. The trial court, after hearing arguments of counsel, set aside the decree and dismissed the wife's complaint. The term of court in which the decree was entered had expired prior to the filing of the husband's motion. Consequently, we must first consider whether ORS 1.055 authorized the court to entertain the husband's motion.
We have recognized that a court of equity may in an appropriate case set aside its decree during the term in which the decree was rendered. Harris v. Harris, 192 Or. 361, 366, 232 P.2d 818; Zipper v. Zipper, 192 Or. 568, 574, 235 P.2d 866. This discretionary power gives the trial court a limited time in which to restore a suit to the status it enjoyed before the decree was entered. Waldow v. Waldow, 189 Or. 600, 605, 221 P.2d 576.
Prior to the enactment of ORS 1.055 in 1959, a long line of decisions held that trial courts could not set aside their decrees after the term of court had expired. Freytag v. Vitas, 213 Or. 462, 471, 326 P.2d 110; Belcher v. Pentecostal Church et al., 216 Or. 200, 338 P.2d 100; Zipper v. Zipper, supra, and cases cited therein.
The statute now provides:
'(2) Notwithstanding that an act is authorized or required to be done before, during or after the expiration of a term of court, it may be done within a reasonable time.'
Subsection (2) gives the court a reasonable time in which to set aside its decree notwithstanding the expiration of the term of court, provided the court could have done so upon the same facts within the term.
What is a reasonable time is ordinarily a matter within the discretion of the trial court. Whether or not there has been an abuse of discretion depends upon all of the facts of the case. In the case at bar, the motion for an order setting aside the decree was filed 27 days after the decree was entered and three days after the new term of court had commenced. We do not believe that the delay in filing the motion deprived the court of power to hear it. It remains to be seen whether it was a proper exercise of discretion in this case to dismiss the wife's suit.
In the case of Waldow v. Waldow, supra, decided prior to the enactment of ORS 1.055, a party sought to reopen a divorce on the basis of new evidence. The term of court having meanwhile expired, the effort failed for that reason. The affidavits in the Waldow case contained allegations of conduct which, if proven at the trial, might have influenced the trial court to reach a different result. The same may be said for the affidavits in the case at bar. We warned in the Waldow case that strong reasons of policy militate against reopening a case where there has been a lack of due diligence in producing all available evidence at the trial. In the analogous case of a motion for a new trial in an action at law under ORS 17.610(4), diligence is mandatory. Larson v. Heintz Construction Co., 219 Or. 25, 70-71, 74-75, 345 P.2d 835.
Nothing in the present record suggests that the husband exercised any diligence in preparing for trial. The husband now says fraud was conclusively demonstrated by the alacrity with which the wife exercised her freedom when it was granted on April 8, 1960. The court evidently believed from the husband's affidavits that some kind of fraud had been practiced. We have found no authority to support such a proposition, nor are we persuaded that the reproductive behavior of either the male or the female immediately after a divorce proves anything. A mere inference that the wife might have been indiscreet pending litigation does not justify restoring her to the condition from which she was seeking freedom.
Counsel have suggested that the wife's disdain for the statutory...
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Patrick v. State of Oregon
...the first instance); Morphet, 263 Or. at 318-19,502 P.2d 255 (deferring to trial court's assessment of good cause); Miller v. Miller, 228 Or. 301, 305, 365 P.2d 86 (1961) (reasonableness of time period ordinarily is for trial court to One of the few cases, and perhaps the only one, in which......
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Bailey v. Steele
...917 (1950). 1 In past years this inherent power of a court could be exercised only during the same term of court. Miller v. Miller, 228 Or. 301, 304, 365 P.2d 86 (1961), and Koennecke v. Koennecke, 239 Or. 274, 397 P.2d 203 (1964). In 1959, however, this limitation was removed by the adopti......
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Harder v. Harder
...her from alternatively choosing to file a motion to vacate or modify. Although the Supreme Court did indicate in Miller v. Miller, 228 Or. 301, 365 P.2d 86 (1961), that '(t)he appropriate procedure for attacking a (dissolution) decree obtained by fraud is a suit in equity' (228 Or. at 307, ......
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Aylett v. Mardis
...317, 502 P.2d 255. "Whether or not there has been an abuse of discretion depends upon all of the facts of the case." Miller v. Miller, 228 Or. 301, 305, 365 P.2d 86 (1961). In all of the cases cited, the party who sought to invoke the inherent power of the trial court was a party or represe......