85 N.J. Eq. 338 | New York Court of Chancery | 1916
This suit has been brought by complainant to set aside a decree of divorce from the bonds of matrimony, which decree was entered in this court August 4th, 1913, against complainant herein, on the petition of her husband on the ground of adultery. The petitioner in the divorce suit has since died. The present
At final hearing in this suit the files in the divorce suit were produced, and by those files it appears that jurisdiction over the defendant as an absent defendant was entertained by this court by reason of affidavits which, if true, fully established that the residence of the defendant could not be ascertained; an order was accordingly made dispensing with service of process or notice, other than by publication, and the cause was then heard ex parte. Defendant in the divorce suit—complainant herein— first learned of .the divorce suit shortly before the present bill was filed by her.
The petition upon which the decree of divorce was entered charges adultery with one Peyser on August 13th, 1888, and at divers other times after that date until June 26th, 1891, and the decree entered is based upon proofs of acts' of adultery during that period and upon the testimony of the petitioner that he had not lived with his wife since the latter date. The affidavit on which exoneration from service of process or notice on the defendant was primarily based was an affidavit of the petitioner made September 11th, 1911, in which he stated that the last post-office address or residence of the defendant which was known to him was in the neighborhood of West- One hundred and fourth street, New York City, where he and defendant lived together prior to twenty years ago (that is, prior to September, 1891), and that he had exhausted every means to ascertain some subsequent post-office address or residence of the defendant and had not been able to ascertain tire same. In that affidavit the petitioner also stated that the only relatives of the defendant of whom he had ever known were the father, mother and brother of the defendant, and that he believed them to be dead.
Complainant herein was also permitted to testify that she had written letters to her husband regularly up to the time of his death and that her address was endorsed on all the envelopes. This testimony was received over the objection of defendants, based on the provisions of our Evidence act; but under the rule defined in Cowdrey v. Cowdrey, 71 N. J. Eq. 353; affirmed, in 72
From the testimony above reviewed, exclusive of that of complainant touching transactions with the deceased, I deem it clearly established in this suit, not only that the affidavit on which this court permitted the petitioner in the divorce suit to proceed to hearing ex parte without service of process or notice of the suit on the defendant therein was false, but necessarily was intentionally false and falsified to conceal the pendency of the divorce suit from the defendant therein, and was effective for that purpose. The mere existence of a substantial doubt Avhether the divorce decree was procured through fraud in the manner stated should lead this court to deny relief in a suit of this nature; but the evidence already referred to leaves no reasonable doubt. The petitioner obviously testified to what he knew to be false and made no honest effort to ascertain the address of his wife. It is reasonably certain that his wife’s address could have been ascertained had he disclosed the truth to his solicitors It is also certain that if petitioner had testified before the master that he had resided with his wife as late as 1903, instead of testifying that he last resided with her in 1891, -no decree of divorce could have been entered for an act of adultery which had been brought to his knowledge in 1891. That testimony would not only have demanded further inquiry for the address of the wife, but would have presented an issue of con-donation which would have barred a decree until the apparent condonation should have been overcome by evidence. Petitioner deceived the court and deceived his own solicitors. In such circumstances it follows that the decree of divorce was procured by fraud—by fraud imposed upon the court and the defendant.
At final hearing of this suit counsel of defendant made the following objection to procedure:
*343 “I wish also to make an objection to this manner of attacking a decree of the court of chancery. It seems to be a collateral attack upon the decree of the court of chancery rather than a direct attack. It seems to mei the proceeding should have been to apply in the suit itself, the divorce suit, Dyott v. Dyott, to open the decree rather than to attack it in an independent suit.”
The sufficiency of the bill had not been attacked in any manner prior to that time.
It seems clear that the relief sought by complainant could not have been had in the original divorce suit. The marriage status, which was the sole subject of litigation in the divorce suit, has been dissolved by death; there is no longer a marriage status to be dissolved by a decree of divorce; to open the decree is to abate the suit; there can accordingly be no rehearing of a divorce suit after the death of one of the parties. I am fully convinced that any relief to which complainant may be entitled is appropriately sought by an original bill for relief against the operation of the decree of divorce. Story Eq. PI. § 426. There are, however, forceful objections against entertaining a bill in which the sole object of the suit and the only relief to be granted is the setting aside of a fraudulent decree of divorce after the decease of the spouse who fraudulently procured the divorce decree. In Givernaud v. Givernaud, 81 N. J. Eq. 66, these objections are pointed out by Vice-Chancellor Stevenson. In Wright v. Wright, 8 N. J. Eq. 143, the bill was filed for dower, and in aid of the suit for dower sought to set aside a decree of divorce for fraud, which decree would have barred the dower if not set aside. In the present case, the bill asserts that complainant desires to recover her dower and is barred by the fraudulent divorce decree; but as no action or suit for dower is pending, the present bill cannot be said to be strictly a suit in aid of a pending litigation for dower or other rights as a widow. I incline to the view expressed in Givernaud v. Givernaud, that after the decease of a spouse the validity of a divorce decree should be tested in suits or in aid of suits actually pending which directly involve specific property rights which are affected by the divorce decree; but where, as in the present case, the bill sets forth that complainant claims and desires to recover her dower in the real estate of her