Harris v. Harris
Harris v. Harris
Opinion of the Court
On August 31, 1916, Mrs. Susie Harris filed suit in the district court of Parker county for a divorce from her husband, L. O. Harris, and citation was served on appellant on September 13th, thereafter, while he was incarcerated in the county jail, charged with assault to murder. He was convicted of aggravated assault on October 17, 1916, and on the same day the divorce suit was tried, and the plaintiff was granted a divorce from the defendant. Subsequently, L. O. Harris was tried and convicted of insanity and was taken to the asylum and confined there until October 12, 1917, when he returned to Parker county. On August 22, 1919, he filed this suit, in'the nature of a bill of review, to set .aside the judgment granting his wife a divorce on October 17, 1916. He alleged that at the .time of service of citation in the divorce suit he was confined in the county jail and requested the jailer, who served the citation, to inform him when his suit was to be tried, but that the jailer refused to so inform him, and that he did not know when said cause was tried until his release from the asylum on October 12, 1917. He further pleaded that his wife had no just grounds to sustain her suit for divorce, and that said suit was the result of a conspiracy between J. G. Hardin, the father of Mrs. Harris, and others, wherefore he prayed that the judgment in the divorce case be set aside. 1
On the trial of this suit, Mrs. Harris filed an answer, consisting of a general demurrer and a general denial, and certain special answers, and pleaded that in case the court should set aside the judgment theretofore granted, by the terms of which she was granted a divorce and custody of the two minor children, that in this suit she be granted a divorce. The judgment rendered was a denial of plaintiff’s plea for a new trial.
“A plaintiff calling a defendant into court for the purpose of obtaining relief against him invites him to set up all the defenses which may defeat the cause of action sued on, or any other appropriate and germane to the subject-matter of the suit, which should be settled between the parties before a proper adjudication of the merits of the case can be obtained. He grants him the privilege of setting up all such counterclaims and cross-actions as he holds against the plaintiff which may legally be pleaded in such suit. This is particularly the case in our state, where a multiplicity of suits is abhorred, and a leading object is to settle all disputes between the parties pertinent to the cause of action in the same suit.”
All assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
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Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.