30 N.W.2d 415 | Mich. | 1948
The parties to this case were first married in April, 1934. They were divorced in Missouri in 1940 and remarried in 1942. Thereafter they lived together until their separation early in 1943. Subsequent to such separation the defendant enlisted in the armed forces of the United States. After his discharge he instituted suit for divorce in the circuit court for the county of Madison, State of Missouri, and was granted a decree on January 21, 1946. The parties have three children, aged 11, 9, and 4 years, respectively, at the present time. Plaintiff instituted the present suit in the circuit court of Wayne county on March 10, 1947. In her bill of complaint she asked for a divorce, custody of minor children, support and maintenance of plaintiff and said children, a property settlement, and attorney fees. The right to relief was predicated on the fact that defendant had obtained the decree in Missouri in 1946. The validity of such decree was not questioned by plaintiff, although the bill of complaint alleged that it was "obtained fraudulently, without legal evidence and on untrue fictitious claims of injury."
Defendant filed a motion to dismiss, supported by affidavit in accordance with Court Rule No. 18, § 1 (1945), alleging therein that the Michigan court had *18 no jurisdiction over the subject matter because of the Missouri decree, that plaintiff had submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the Missouri court, having appeared personally and by attorney, that she contested the suit, that the question of residence was raised in the case, that it was judicially determined in his favor, that a property settlement was entered into providing for the support of the plaintiff and the minor children, and that payments pursuant to said property settlement had been made by him and accepted by plaintiff. No counter affidavits were filed in plaintiff's behalf. Following a hearing the trial court granted the motion to dismiss, presumably on the ground that under the facts the Michigan court was without jurisdiction. It does not appear that testimony was taken. After the entry of the order counsel filed an agreed statement of facts which appears in the record and in effect substantiates the claims of defendant as set forth in his motion to dismiss and his supporting affidavit.
It is the claim of plaintiff in substance that she is entitled to invoke the jurisdiction of the Michigan court by virtue of 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12728, subd. 6 (Stat. Ann. § 25.86), which reads as follows:
"6. And the circuit courts may, in their discretion, upon application, as in other cases, divorce from the bonds of matrimony any party who is a resident of this State, and whose husband or wife shall have obtained a divorce in any other State."
The question of jurisdiction to grant a decree of divorce under the provision quoted has not been considered by this Court in any prior case in which the facts were analogous to those in the case at bar. In Wright v. Wright,
A somewhat similar situation was involved in Van Inwagen v.Van Inwagen,
In the case at bar the factual situation is quite different from that involved in either of the prior decisions above discussed. Plaintiff here was subject to the jurisdiction of the Missouri court. She filed her appearance and answer and contested the husband's right to relief. Further, she took advantage of the provisions made for her benefit, and the benefit of the minor children, in the property settlement. In effect, she is now asking that the matters submitted to the jurisdiction of the Missouri court shall be relitigated in the courts of Michigan.
The supreme court of Florida in Keener v. Keener,
152 Fla. 13 (11 South. [2d] 180), had before it a question analogous to the issue here. The pertinent provision of the Florida statute (Florida Statutes 1941, § 65.04, par. 8) authorized the granting of a decree of divorce on proof "that the defendant *20 has obtained a divorce from complainant in any other State or country." In 1936 the parties were divorced in North Carolina, the decree being granted to the husband. Thereafter both removed to Florida, and in 1941 Mrs. Keener started suit for divorce, asking alimony for herself and payments for the support of children. The question of jurisdiction was certified to the supreme court and determined adversely to plaintiff. In reaching the conclusion indicated it was said:
"We have not before been called on to define the scope of the statute brought in question though it was before us in Givens
v. Givens,
"We do not think such an interpretation comports with reason and justice. It would sanction the relitigation of divorce proceedings long settled by final decrees of courts of competent jurisdiction; it would permit one to be harrassed for suit money in more than one State; there would be no end to divorce litigation; and the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution (U.S. Const. art. 4, § 1) would for that case be set at naught.
"If the foreign divorce is valid in the State where secured, it will be recognized under the full faith and credit provision of the Federal Constitution and may not be basis for divorce in this State. If on the other hand, jurisdiction of the defendant was not acquired or the divorce is not effective as to both parties or is for other reasons invalid, then a complainant here would not be bound by it and would be in position to invoke the provisions of the statute in question to *21 be relieved from it. O.B. Williams and Lillie Shaver Hendricks v. State of North Carolina, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States December 21, 1942.* The validity of the North Carolina divorce is not questioned here."
In Gilbert v. Gilbert,
"Mrs. Gilbert appeared in person and with counsel in the case in South Dakota. She filed her answer in that case, resisted the application for divorce and prayed for the allowance of permanent alimony. By these acts she voluntarily submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the South Dakota court, consented to and invoked the consideration and adjudication by that court of all the marital rights and relations between the parties, and is bound by its decree."
It was further held that the order for alimony made by the Ohio court, on which plaintiff's cause of *22
action was based, was terminated by the decree rendered in the suit in South Dakota. It may be noted in passing that after this decision plaintiff filed a reply to the answer, denying that she had submitted to the South Dakota court the question as to the amount of alimony that had accrued under the order of the Ohio court prior to the decree of divorce. On further hearing it was held that she was entitled to have this question litigated in the trial court. The prior opinion was not otherwise modified.Gilbert v. Gilbert,
A similar question was before the Supreme Court of the United States in Esenwein v. Commonwealth,
The binding force and effect of a decree of divorce entered by a court in another State having jurisdiction over both parties and the subject matter was *23
recognized in Pratt v. Miedema,
"On that issue defendant is bound by the decree in the Nevada case wherein he appeared. It is res judicata; and, under the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution (art. 4, § 1), must be respected in Michigan courts.
"As to both its factual and legal aspects the case of Davis
v. Davis,
"`Considered in its entirety, the record shows that she (defendant-wife) submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the Virginia court and is bound (in the District of Columbia courts) by its determination that it had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties.'
"Adjudicated cases relied upon by appellant in this appeal are to be distinguished from the instant case in that either there was no appearance by the defendant in the court of foreign jurisdiction (Reed v. Reed,
As before noted, plaintiff in the case at bar does not assert the invalidity of the Missouri decree. Had she done so the question could not properly be relitigated by the courts of Michigan, she having appeared in the Missouri court and having contested the right of the plaintiff in that case to a decree of divorce on jurisdictional, as well as factual, grounds. The provision of the statute on which plaintiff relies cannot be given the scope and interpretation contended for in her behalf without infringing on both the spirit and the letter of article 4, § 1, of the Federal Constitution. The language of the Court inPratt v. Miedema, above quoted, is squarely in point. We hold that, under the facts here involved, plaintiff is not entitled to maintain her suit.
The order of the trial court is affirmed. In view of the nature of the question involved, no costs are allowed.
BUSHNELL, C.J., and SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, NORTH, DETHMERS, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred.