108 N.Y.S. 534 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment granting to the plaintiff a decree of absolute divorce on the ground of the defendant’s adul-. tery. The decree also awarded the plaintiff alimony. It appears the parties were married in the city of Brooklyn in 1889, where they continued to live until January, 1891, when the defendant left the State and went to Chicago because charged with the commission of a felony. He remained \there until October, 1891, when he returned to New Jersey and stayed a few days with his sister, where his wife visited him. From there he went to Florida where he was apprehended.. Later he appears to have been convicted and confined for three years in the Ohio penitentiary, and on his release wan dered to Florida. On the 30th of November, 1895, he tiled, a bill in the Circuit Court of St. Johns county, Fla., asking for an absolute divorce from the plaintiff on the ground of alleged desertion. An order'.for service of process by publication was issued the same, day, and in February, 1896, the decree pro confesso was made, assuming to dissolve the marriage between the parties. The record of the Florida decree, does not disclose any personal service of process upon this plaintiff either within or without the State of Florida, and she had no notice of tire commencement of the action or of the application for the decree until after it had been granted and entered. On the contrary, it appears that in October, 1896, the defendant wrote his wife advising her for the first time he'had procured the decree in question. . On October fourteenth of the same year he married the corespondent, Maud Ackerman,- in Florida, and it is for alleged adultery with this person that this action is brought, upon the theory that the Florida divorce is void as. against this plaintiff. The contention' that the decree of the Florida courts was without juris
If the defendant in this case had continued to be a resident of the State of Hew York and subject to the jurisdiction of its courts so that process could have been served upon him at any time, and he had again married and continued to live and cohabit with his second wife with the knowledge on the plaintiff’s part of that relation, and the plaintiff had acquiesced in such conduct without taking steps to obtain a divorce, there would be a natural justice in denying her the relief she now seeks. It appears, however, that the defendant absconded and for upwards of fifteen years has kept himself without the jurisdiction of the State, and his exact whereabouts unknown to the plaintiff, although she undoubtedly knew he was located somewhere in Florida. But in 1897 he left Florida and appears to have gone to the State of Maryland, and it was sometime in 1902 or 1903 the plaintiff’s brother-in-law located the defendant at Baltimore. Under such circumstances ought an innocent party be barred from obtaining a divorce from an absconding husband when he has left the State and kept liis whereabouts concealed, simply because she may have learned that at some time more than five years prior to the commencement of the action he had married .again ? A decree. of divorce obtained by substituted service of process upon the defendant would have been worthless for the purpose of getting an enforcible personal judgment for alimony, and it would be very doubtful under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Haddock v. Haddock (201 U. S. 562) whether such a divorce would have been valid for the purpose of dissolving" the marriage relation. We should hesitate to hold that under such circumstances the plaintiff is precluded from obtaining a divorce. The language of the Code does not in terms forbid the granting of a judgment in such cases. It simply declares that a judgment shall not be granted where “ the action was not commenced within five years after the discovery, hy the plaintiff, of the offence charged.” The offense charged in this complaint is the commission of adultery
It will be readily seen that these decisions are not necessarily conclusive as to the interpretation-fo be placed on section 1758 when applied, to a case like the one at bar, where the facts and circumstances are quite different. Wé do not think these cases cited preclude this court from holding that even though the plaintiff had
Hooker and Miller, JJ.j concurred; Gaynor, J., read for reversal, with whom Jenks, J., concurred.
See Code Civ. Proc. §§ 17, 18.— [Rep.
R. L. 1813, chap. 102, § 4; 2 R. L. 198, § 4.—Rep.
See 2 R. S. 139, § 6. See Dom. Rel. Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 272), §§ 3,4, —[Rep.
See 2 R. S. 145, § 42, subd. 3. See Code Civ. Proc §, 1758, subd.. 3.— [Rep.
Dissenting Opinion
It is provided by section 1758 of the Code of Civil Procedure that the plaintiff is not entitled to a divorce when “ the action was not commenced within five years after the discovery by the plaintiff of the offence charged”. Where the adulterous intercourse is continuous, as under a ceremony of marriage, for instance, the discovery thereof sets such limitation of five years running from that date, for otherwise there would be no limitation in such a case. This obvious interpretation is given to the said provision by Rule 72 of the General Rules of Practice, which in cases of defaults requires proof in 'such cases “ that five years have not elapsed since the commencement of such adulterous intercourse was discovered by the plaintiff ”.
In August, 1896, the defendant obtained a divorce in the State of Florida by publication of the summons on his wife, this plaintiff, she being a resident of the State of Hew York. The divorce was valid in Florida, and immediately thereafter the defendant married another woman in that State and has continuously cohabited with her as his wife ever since. Cohabitation between Hovember, 1904, and October, 1905, in the city of Baltimore, State of Maryland, where the defendant then resided and has continued to reside, is alleged as the adultery herein, and this action was begun in January, 1906.
The learned trial judge made a finding of fact in substance that the plaintiff knew of the defendant’s divorce, and was informed of the defendant’s re-marriage in October, 1896, by a letter from his mother ; that she had her brother investigate the matter, which he did; that he received letters that the defendant was re-married and living with bis now wife, and thereupon attempted to have the defendant indicted for bigamy in Florida; and that she often wrote and spoke to the defendant’s sisters of the said re-marriage.
The learned trial judge says in his opinion, however, that the
The plaintiff’s case is a hard one, but it is an old and true saying that hard cases make bad law, and that we have to avoid.
The judgment should be reversed.
Jenks, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.