Tinsley v. Tinsley
Tinsley v. Tinsley
Opinion
This is an action to enforce an October, 1980, Texas judgment which had awarded to Mrs. Tinsley a portion of the military retirement benefits of Mr. Tinsley as community property.
For a better understanding of the issues here involved, it is essential to summarize all prior and present litigation between the parties.
On August 17, 1978, Mrs. Tinsley, a Texas resident, filed for a divorce in Lee County, Alabama, the then domicile of Mr. Tinsley. A divorce judgment ensued in July, 1979, which approved an agreement of the parties regarding a division of property, child custody, child support and the payment of debts. Mrs. Tinsley filed a petition in March, 1980, in a Texas district court seeking a partition of the military retirement benefits of Mr. Tinsley, who, by motion, sought a dismissal thereof for lack of jurisdiction. The Texas court overruled his motion and later, in October, 1980, entered a final judgment dividing such benefits between the parties. On May 19, 1981, Mrs. Tinsley filed the present proceedings in the Circuit Court of Lee County, Alabama. Therein, she prayed for the enforcement of the Texas judgment by the rendition of an Alabama judgment authorizing the recovery of delinquent retirement benefits and directing Mr. Tinsley to pay 11/23 of such *Page 1306 benefits to her pursuant to the October, 1980, Texas judgment.
The parties entered into the following stipulation of facts:
"1. Ben C. Tinsley entered active military duty on February 2, 1951.
"2. The parties were married on August 10, 1952.
"3. There were six (6) children born of the marriage, four (4) of whom had reached the age of majority at the time of the divorce of the parties.
"4. The parties purchased a home in El Paso, Texas in 1969. Marion D. Tinsley has resided in said home since said purchase.
"5. Ben C. Tinsley retired from active military duty in March, 1974 and moved back to his home State, Alabama, in May 1974.
"6. Ben C. Tinsley's military retirement pay and his military disability pay were forwarded directly to the checking account of Marion C. Tinsley for the support and maintenance of Marion D. Tinsley and two (2) minor children remaining with her. Said payments commenced when Ben C. Tinsley moved to Auburn, Alabama in 1974.
"7. The military retirement pay has continued to be forwarded to the checking account of Marion D. Tinsley, without exception, through this date. Which said retirement check is currently in the amount of $634.01. The disability check continued to be forwarded directly to the checking account of Marion D. Tinsley until 1980.
"8. On August 17, 1978 Marion D. Tinsley filed for divorce in Lee County, Alabama.
"9. On July 23, 1979 a Judgment of Divorce was granted on the pleadings by the Circuit Court of Lee County, Alabama. The Divorce Decree approved, ratified and incorporated an agreement of the parties dated July 10, 1979, setting out the division of property, responsibility for obligations and debts, child custody, and child support.
"10. On the date of the Judgment of Divorce there were two (2) minor children, twins, who were born on December 27, 1965. Ben C. Tinsley was ordered to pay child support in the amount of $458.00 per month for the minor children until they attained the age of twenty-two years, which date will be December 27, 1987.
"11. There was not specific reference to Ben C. Tinsley's military retirement benefits in the divorce decree. However, the amount of child support set out in the agreement of the parties was the same amount of Ben C. Tinsley's retirement benefits at the time of the divorce decree.
"12. On March 24, 1980, Marion D. Tinsley filed a Petition for Partition of Tenancy in Common in the District Court of El Paso, Texas where she still resided asking for partition of military retirement benefits of her former husband.
"13. On May 12, 1980 Ben C. Tinsley, through his attorney, H. Kenneth Wilkes of Opelika, Alabama, filed a Motion to Dismiss in the District Court of El Paso, Texas, alleging lack of jurisdiction. A copy of said motion is attached hereto as Exhibit A.
"14. H. Kenneth Wilkes was never notified by the Texas Court that his motion had been denied.
"15. On July 11, 1980, Marion D. Tinsley filed a Request for Admissions and Ben C. Tinsley failed to respond.
"16. On October 3, 1980, a Final Judgment Partitioning Tenancy in Common was entered in favor of the Plaintiff by default, the Texas Court finding that the Motion to Dismiss constituted a general appearance by Ben C. Tinsley.
"17. On May 19, 1981, a complaint was filed in Lee County District Court seeking a Judgment based upon the Texas decree."
In October, 1982, the Alabama circuit court denied the relief sought by Mrs. Tinsley and she duly appealed to this court. We affirm.
The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Lee County to render the 1979 divorce judgment *Page 1307 is not questioned. That court had jurisdiction over the parties and over the subject matter. A valid and binding domestic relations judgment was there rendered which, in fact, approved the written agreement of the parties. Mrs. Tinsley selected the divorce forum, that Alabama court.
We summarize some of the laws of the divorce forum, Alabama. The court rendering an Alabama divorce judgment cannot modify a property settlement, except to correct clerical errors, after a lapse of thirty days from the date of the entry of that final judgment approving such settlement. Culverhouse v. Culverhouse,
Mrs. Tinsley seeks to enforce in Alabama the 1980 Texas judgment which did that which an Alabama court is prohibited from doing. The Texas judgment is directly contrary to the 1979 Alabama judgment.
Pruitt v. Key,"The full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution does not compel a court to set aside a judgment rendered in an action involving the same issue which is subsequently adjudicated with a different result by a court of a sister state. To so conclude would result in giving greater faith and credit to the judgment of the other state than to the judgment duly entered in the court of the state rendering the first judgment. Hammell v. Britton,
19 Cal.2d 72 ,119 P.2d 333 ."
In McCarty v. McCarty,
In Elmer v. Elmer,
We do not construe the Elmer opinion to determine a lack of subject matter jurisdiction by the Texas court. Accordingly, that case may not be here used to collaterally attack the October, 1980, Texas judgment. The direct utilization of Elmer against that judgment lay in an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas, not in this court.
Neither the McCarty case nor the Elmer case are direct authority for the affirmance of this appeal for the reasons stated. However, the overall equity, fairness, reasonableness and correctness of the application to the present controversy of the quoted rule from Pruitt v. Key, supra, is buttressed and supported by those two opinions. This is especially true since the 1980 Texas judgment before us is diametrically contrary to both of those appellate opinions.
We affirm.
The foregoing opinion was prepared by Retired Circuit Judge EDWARD N. SCRUGGS while serving on active duty status as a judge of this court under the provisions of §
AFFIRMED.
All the judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Marion D. Tinsley v. Ben C. Tinsley.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published