Court Opinion

ID: 7291025
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:33:59.210052+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:19:20.367285
License: Public Domain

Pitney, V. C.
The admitted facts are that the defendant, for more than a year prior to the time of the commencement of the suit against his wife in Utah, was an actual and bona fide resident of and domiciled in that territory, and that the suit was brought in a court which had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and conducted according to the law and practice of that court. The jurisdiction of the defendant’s person in that suit was obtained in three ways — first, by publication in a newspaper; second, by mailing a copy of the summons and complaint to her at her residence in New Jersey, and third, by personal service upon her of those documents in this state.
It appears sufficiently, for present purposes, that the complainant herein has always lived in New Jersey.
A learned and elaborate argument was made in her behalf to support the position that a decree of divorce could not be rendered against her in another state which would be valid and binding in this state, without actual service of process upon her, made within the territorial limits of that state, or her voluntary appearance therein. The ground of this position was that the courts of another state could not obtain jurisdiction of her *104person for the purpose of a suit for divorce by publication or service upon her out of that jurisdiction, and hence the decree was a nullity in this state.
I am unable to adopt that view. I think it not only fairly covered by authority in this state, but that it has no foundation in reason.
Chancellor Zabriskie, in Coddington v. Coddington, 5 C. E. Gr. 264, held that proceedings with regard to the validity or dissolution of marriage are proceedings in rem, and actually operate upon the matter, and that the power of the court to deal with the marriage relation depends upon the fact of the domicile of one or both of the parties being within its territorial limits ; and that to enable the court to obtain jurisdiction one at least of the parties must be domiciled within the jurisdiction. Such domicile gave jurisdiction to proceed and determine the status of the parties.
In this case it is an admitted fact that the defendant herein was domiciled in the Territory of Utah for one year before and at the time the suit was commenced by him and the decree rendered against the wife. The power of the court of that territory to determine his status as to marriage was complete, and its action must be respected by us, provided it has been based upon grounds recognized as sufficient by civilized peoples, and reasonable notice and opportunity to appear and be heard has been given to the other party interested.
The mere residence of the wife in another state cannot affect the jurisdiction in that behalf of the court in which the husband is domiciled.
To hold otherwise, as has been done by the courts of New York in the cases cited by counsel, is, in effect, to deny relief to an injured spouse, provided the guilty party is able to escape beyond the jurisdiction of the court before service of process upon him or her.
This vexed question, in all its aspects, has been the subject of much diversity of judicial judgment in the various states of the Union, but I think it may now be considered as settled by the great weight of authority in conformity with the view just expressed.
*105The whole subject is discussed by Mr. Bishop in the second volume of his recent treatise on “ Marriage, Divorce and Separation,” sections 1 to 152 inclusive, and particularly sections 142 to 152. In the earlier sections of that volume he calls attention to the distinction between jurisdiction for the purpose of a pecuniary decree against the person, and jurisdiction for the purpose of declaring a status, holds with Chancellor Zabriskie that a suit for divorce is a proceeding in rem, and shows that a decree of divorce may be valid for the purpose of ending a marriage status, while it would not be valid for the purpose of enforcing a personal decree for alimony in the foreign jurisdiction. This distinction has not always been kept in mind.
The New York cases referred to, as I read them, go upon the basis that the marriage status may be held to have come to an end in the state in which the decree is declared, and still to exist in all the other states of the Union. I confess I am unable to see how that solution of the difficulty accords with reason. If one state in the Union has power to declare, and in a suit brought by one spouse against the other, in which the best notice practicable has been given to that other, does declare, upon grounds recognized by civilized men to be sufficient, that a once husband is no longer a husband and has no wife, I do not see how it can be held in any other state that such person is still the husband of his former wife, and that she is still his wife. Moreover, such a doctrine seems to me to be contrary to public policy. Its noxious tendency was well exemplified in the leading New York case of People v. Baker, 76 N. Y. 78. There the defendant, Baker, while living in New York, had been sued by his former wife, in a court of Ohio, for divorce; and a decree of divorce rendered against him by the Ohio court based upon substituted service. Relying upon that decree he contracted a marriage in New York, was indicted for bigamy based on such second marriage, aud convicted and sentenced to state prison.
IVe have not here to deal with a case where the ground of the divorce, as found by the foreign tribunal, was frivolous or not in accordance with recognized principles underlying the marriage state, or with a case where any imposition, fraud or *106concealment was practiced upon either court or party. On the contrary, actual notice was given and time to appear and defend allowed. Nor is it alleged that the wife was, for any cause, unable to defend, or that she had a defence which she now seeks to set up. "We are bound to presume that the finding of the court of Utah was based upon sufficient and unassailable evidence. Hence it appears that no injustice was done the wife.
I find nothing in our own decisions which contravenes the result at which I have arrived, and I think that it is fully sustained by the reasoning of Chief-Justice Beasley in Doughty v. Doughty, 1 Stew. Eq. 586. The decree of the court of chancery granting a divorce in that case, which was somewhat similar to this, was sustained on appeal distinctly on the ground that the decree of the State of Illinois, there set up as a defence, was not a decree in a suit for divorce, but was one in a suit of jactitation of marriage, and also on the ground that notice of it failed to reach the defendant by reason of designed neglect on the part of the plaintiff in the foreign decree to take proper pains to give her actual notice. The learned chief-justice, in dealing with the question, distinctly declared that it would be necessary for our courts, on the ground of comity, to recognize the validity of foreign divorces, obtained by substituted service upon fair proceedings and proper grounds, against residents of this state. He held that, as our system provided for the procuration of divorces against absent spouses, and expected every foreign jurisdiction to recognize the validity of such divorces, we must accord the same validity to the foreign divorces obtained under the same circumstances.
But the present case is within the authority-of the recent decision of Vice-Chancellor Reed in Magowan v. Magowan, 39 Atl. Rep. 364.* There the wife sued the husband for maintenance, and he pleaded a decree of divorce granted by the court of the Territory of Oklahoma, and the decree in that case recited that Magowan was a resident of that territory. The wife, in answer to it, replied that he was not a resident of that territory; that *107he had imposed upon the court in that respect. But the learned vice-chancellor held that the recital in the decree was conclusive against the defendant in that suit, who had notice of it. That case goes much farther than it is necessary to go here, because it is an admitted fact in the ease that the husband was a bona fide domiciled resident in the Territory of Utah at the time the suit was brought and for more than a year prior thereto.
I will advise a decree in favor of defendant.

 Since the foregoing opinion was prepared, the decree in Magowan v. Magowan has been reversed. 12 Dick. Ch. Rep. 322.