132 N.E. 106 | NY | 1921
The plaintiff is and always has been domiciled in this state. On April 30, 1917, he married *331 the defendant in Washington, D.C. A few days afterwards the parties separated and have never since lived together. They have had no children. This marriage is claimed to be void for the reason that at the time it was contracted the defendant already had a husband.
It appears that in 1914 the defendant and one Lescher were married in Missouri and lived and cohabited in that state. Later they moved to Texas, and Texas was their last matrimonial domicile. In 1916 Lescher left the defendant and went to Reno, Nevada. The defendant never went to Nevada, nor did she and Lescher ever there acquire a matrimonial domicile. Lescher began an action of divorce in Nevada founded on charges of cruelty. The summons was served by publication and the defendant neither answered nor appeared in the action. At this time it is found that she "was a resident of the State of Missouri and was then domiciled in and a citizen either of the State of Missouri or the State of Texas." The decree was granted. Lescher is still living. Under the circumstances is the judgment of the Nevada court to be recognized as valid in this state?
Had the defendant then been domiciled in and, therefore, a citizen of New York, as no matrimonial domicile was ever acquired in Nevada, the decree would be ignored by us. (Atherton v.Atherton,
We are told that the contrary is held in O'Dea v. O'Dea
(
Of what state, then, was the defendant a citizen at the time of the divorce obtained by her first husband? It is found that their last matrimonial domicile was Texas. That involves the proposition that at one time both husband and wife, actually or constructively, were domiciled in that state. Although Lescher went to Nevada, no matrimonial domicile was ever acquired there. That she gained an independent domicile in that state is negatived by the findings. But she did become a resident of Missouri. Yet the court fails to find that she also was there domiciled. "She was then domiciled in and a citizen of either the State of Missouri or the State of Texas."
Therefore at one time a citizen of Texas, with no finding of a change of citizenship, we must regard her as domiciled there when the divorce was decreed. And as to how Texas regards such a decree there is no evidence. In support of the judgment we might doubtless examine the statutes of Texas or the reports of its courts, as they are presumptive evidence of its written and unwritten law. (Code Civ. Pro. sec. 942.) No statute on the subject is called to our attention and while we have examined the Texas reports we do not find the rule adopted stated so clearly and finally as to justify us in holding in the absence of the testimony of some one learned in the law of Texas and of all discussion by counsel, that a definite decision has been reached. In Stuart v. Cole (42 Tex. App. 478[
The findings of the trial court justify a doubt whether the defendant was not in fact domiciled in Missouri, where the foreign divorce seems to be recognized. (Gould v. Crow,
The record before us is, therefore, imperfect. The findings of fact do not justify the conclusions of law. Once married, her former husband still living, it is not made to appear that she was ever validly divorced from him. The judgments appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CHASE, HOGAN, CARDOZO, MCLAUGHLIN and CRANE, JJ., concur.
Judgments reversed, etc. *335