155 P. 988 | Cal. | 1916
The plaintiff began this action against the defendant for permanent support and maintenance. The court below sustained a demurrer to her complaint and thereupon gave judgment for the defendant from which plaintiff appeals.
The plaintiff and defendant intermarried in Reno, Nevada, on December 20, 1902. They were both residents of San Francisco at that time and had gone to Nevada solely for the purpose of having such marriage ceremony performed. They immediately returned to San Francisco, where they lived together until July 24, 1904. In the meantime the child Peder S. Bruguiere, Jr., was born to them. On the day last stated the plaintiff left the residence of the defendant and has ever since remained separate and apart from him. According to the allegations of the complaint, she was compelled to leave him by his extreme cruelty toward her. In *201 February, 1905, the defendant went to Nevada for the purpose of establishing a residence there for a sufficient length of time to enable him to obtain a divorce from the plaintiff in the courts of Nevada. He never in good faith resided in that state, but remained there only for the purpose of acquiring a pretended residence for the purpose of maintaining such action for divorce. His real residence during the entire period was in San Francisco, California. On June 28, 1906, under said fraudulent claim of residence in Nevada, the defendant obtained in said state a decree of divorce from the plaintiff. This decree was based on constructive service upon the plaintiff. She received no actual notice of the proceedings and did not appear in the action. The ground of the divorce was the alleged desertion of the defendant by the plaintiff, which, it is alleged, was not true. The custody of the child aforesaid was given by the said decree to the plaintiff herein. Immediately thereafter the defendant returned to San Francisco, again married, and has there remained continuously ever since. The plaintiff never resided in the state of Nevada. The plaintiff, learning of the divorce decree and of defendant's subsequent marriage, and supposing that she had been legally divorced by the Nevada decree, and being ignorant of the law on the subject, entered into a marriage with Stewart Denning in July, 1907, said marriage taking place in New Jersey. She continued to live with Denning as his wife thereafter until the year 1910, when she learned for the first time that the Nevada divorce was invalid, because of the lack of a bona fide residence in Nevada on the part of the husband. Thereupon she obtained in the state of New York, where she then resided with Denning, a decree declaring her marriage with Denning annulled on the ground that she had not been lawfully divorced from Bruguiere. This decree was entered in July, 1910. Thereafter the plaintiff began this action to obtain maintenance and support for herself and child, claiming to be the wife of the defendant, notwithstanding the said Nevada decree of divorce. All these facts are admitted by the demurrer, for the purposes of the case.
The subject of the effect of a decree of divorce in a state other than that of the matrimonial domicile of the spouses was elaborately discussed by the supreme court of the United States in Haddock v. Haddock,
It is a well-established proposition that where one spouse goes to a state other than that of the matrimonial domicile and there obtains a divorce under a residence simulated for that purpose and not in good faith, the judgment is not binding upon the courts of other states of the Union, and upon proof of the fraudulent residence and of the fact that the divorce is obtained by substituted service only, it may be held void in any other state than that in which it was rendered. (Estate ofJames,
So far the facts stated by the plaintiff appear to establish a case in her favor. Notwithstanding that decree, if nothing more appeared, she would have the right to be considered here as the lawful wife of Bruguiere.
The case presented, however, does not depend wholly upon the action or policy of the state of California with reference to decrees of divorce given in other states to citizens and residents of California. The wife herself, when informed of the Nevada decree, acquiesced therein and proceeded to act thereon by herself entering into another marriage contract and living with the new husband for several years in accordance therewith. The vital question in this case is whether she is estopped by her conduct from now questioning the validity of the Nevada decree; whether she has not, by her conduct, accepted it as a satisfactory solution of the controversies between herself and her husband, Bruguiere, and thereby ratified and affirmed the irregularities upon which the decree was obtained, and waived all right to attack it. She alleges that she was ignorant of the law governing such matters. But she does not allege that she was not aware of the decree purporting to dissolve the marriage relation and of the fact that after a divorce she was free to contract another marriage. She admits and declares that she was. The invalidity of the Nevada decree is not due to any vice apparent upon the record, but to the policy of the state of California which refuses faith and credit to such a decree. *204 No reason suggests itself to us why the wife should consider herself bound by this state policy, or why she could not waive all questions of its effect upon her and accept the status given to her by the Nevada decree. We are of the opinion that, whether she had a right to do this or not, having done so and having, upon that theory, married another person, she is now precluded from setting up the invalidity of the Nevada decree and from claiming marital rights against her former husband.
The authorities are practically unanimous in favor of the proposition that a remarriage estops the party entering into it from denying the validity of the previous divorce. InMarvin v. Foster,
The appellant cites Norton v. Tufts, 19. Utah, 470, [57 P. 409], and Sammons v. Pike,
The judgment is affirmed.
Sloss, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.