173 N.E. 680 | NY | 1930
At New York city, plaintiff and Bernard Dolinsky, both domiciled and resident in this State, intermarried. Always since that time she has remained domiciled and resident in New York. For the sole purpose of instituting an action for divorce against Dolinsky on grounds other than adultery, she went to Nevada. She intended, after the rendition of a decree, immediately to return here and consequently she never became a resident of that State. She temporarily lived there merely to give some appearance of colorable right to maintain her action. In her suit in the District Court at Reno based upon cruelty and neglect, Dolinsky was personally served at New York but he did not appear nor was he represented by counsel. A decree purporting to dissolve the marriage was entered in Nevada and *466 plaintiff returned to New York. After the expiration of five months and during the lifetime of Dolinsky she went through the form of a marriage ceremony in New Jersey with defendant Fischer, who was and is domiciled and resident in New York. They lived together less than three months. In the present action, based upon desertion, she has recovered judgment against him for separation and alimony which has been unanimously affirmed. Appeal is by permission of this court.
The invalidity of the Nevada decree is not open to doubt in this State (Atherton v. Atherton,
Hubbard v. Hubbard (supra) does not help plaintiff. There the husband asked for affirmative relief in his demand for an annulment of a marriage which had been performed in North Dakota between parties both domiciled in Massachusetts. That marriage was valid under the law of Massachusetts. The wife while a resident of Pennsylvania had previously married a resident of that State and obtained a decree of divorce in Massachusetts. She and her former husband did not at any time as husband and wife reside here and he was no longer living when the annulment action by Hubbard was begun. The State of New York was not a party to any of the marital transactions of those parties and we held that the public policy of this State does not require the establishment of a forum for the resort of parties to a marriage which is valid in the State where they were domiciled when it was performed.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Special Term should be reversed and the complaint dismissed.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and HUBBS, JJ., concur.
Judgments reversed, etc. *468