Bustamante v. Camino
Bustamante v. Camino
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for divorce on the ground of abandonment. After a judgment sustaining the Complaint had been rendered the lower court, on motion by the defendant, vacated and set aside the said judgment and ordered that the answer exhibited be included in the record and that the case be proceeded with in the usual manner.
The summons was not served on the defendant personally. Her whereabouts being unknown, she was summoned by publication, her default was entered and after a trial of the case judgment was rendered dissolving the bonds of matrimony between the plaintiff and the defendant. That judgment was rendered on March 18,1921, and on July 5th the defendant moved the court, under section 140 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to set the said judgment aside and allow the answer accompanying the motion to be included in the record. The motion substantially averred: That the plaintiff and the defendant were subjects of Spain and had resided for thirty years in the Republic of Santo Domingo,
The said motion is sworn to by the attorney for the defendant because of her absence, she being in the Dominican Republic.
The plaintiff’s answer to the motion does not openly and positively contradict the allegations of the defendant. His principal objection is that the motion contains allegations which could have been corroborated by documentary evidence or affidavits. It is true that the plaintiff’s answer is accompanied by an affidavit of his attorney, but the said affidavit merely states that the defendant was summoned by publication and that all of the requirements of law were observed in accordance with the order of the lower court, but that no copy of the complaint was mailed to the defendant’s-address because the order of the lower court did not require it and the complaint was drafted according to the statement of the facts of the case made to him by the plaintiff, whom he knows to be an honorable man of unimpeachable conduct. Assuming also that it would be of material importance to show that he had married again 23 days after the last publication of the notice to the defendant of the divorce judgment, the plaintiff exhibited a certificate from the civil register to the effect that he had' married Maria de Jesús G-oméz y Guzmán in the city of Ponce on Mav 11, 1921.
The appellant’s brief makes out no stronger case than does his answer to the motion by the defendant. His argument combating the exercise of its discretion by the lower court in ruling on the defendant’s motion is So weak that we can hardly call it a brief, for the task of probing thé cáse is left to this Court. It is alleged only that the lower coiirt,
Personal service of the summons was not made on the defendant. Section 140 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the spirit of which is liberal and comprehensive in furtherance of the high ends of justice, authorizes the court below to exercise its discretion in the manner in which it did in setting aside the divorce judgment for reasons which it considered just. The pertinent part of said section 140 reads as follows:
< < « * When for any cause the summons in an action has not been personally, served on the defedant, the court may allow, on such terms as may be just, such defendant or his legal representative, at any time within one year after the rendition of any judgment in such action, to answer to the merits of the original action. # * * ”
~We have no doubt that the lower court properly found that the whereabouts of the defendant was not unknown,'and this fact having been concealed and suppressed by the plaintiff, it was natural that in ordering the service of the sum-' mons by publication the lower court should omit the. requirement that a Copy of the summons and of the complaint should be mailed to the defendant’s address, which was known to the plaintiff. * It‘ this had been done the law would have been complied .with strictly and the defendant would not have Tc»een surprised:-by a notice that a,'divorce judgment had been rendered, published in a newspaper which came casually into hqr hands. ;■
For these reasons the order of July 30, 1921, must he
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.