126 N.E. 508 | NY | 1920
The action is to obtain the judgment annulling the marriage of the plaintiff and defendant. The judgment of the Special Term dismissing the complaint was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division.
The cardinal facts as found by the decision of the Special Term are: July 8, 1896, the parties intermarried at Bismarck, North Dakota. The plaintiff, the husband, seeks to annul this marriage upon the ground that the defendant was not then legally and validly divorced from her former husband who was then living. Each of the plaintiff and defendant was at the time of the marriage, and for several years last theretofore had been, a resident of and domiciled in the state of Massachusetts. In 1874 the defendant and John A. Murphy, then residents of the state of Pennsylvania, intermarried at the city of Philadelphia in that state. In Pennsylvania they separated. In 1876 the defendant became a resident of the state of Massachusetts. John A. Murphy became a resident of the state of New York prior to August, 1892, and was such resident until his death in July, 1912. August 11, 1892, the defendant began in a court of competent jurisdiction of the state of Massachusetts a proceeding to obtain a decree divorcing from the bonds of marriage John A. Murphy and herself, upon the ground of desertion. Murphy was not served in that proceeding with any process within the state of Massachusetts, did not appear in the proceeding and made default therein. The court duly ordered, and pursuant there was, constructive service of process upon him. November 4, 1893, the court rendered a decree absolutely divorcing *84 the defendant from John A. Murphy. It is this divorce which the plaintiff here alleges was invalid. In 1900 the plaintiff became and in 1902, prior to the commencement of this action, the defendant became, and each since becoming has been, a resident of the state of New York.
The claim of the appellant, supported by earnest argument, is that the decree divorcing the defendant from John A. Murphy is void as to the courts of the state of New York in virtue of the adjudged policy of this state to refuse to recognize as binding a decree of divorce obtained in a court of a sister state, not the matrimonial domicile, upon grounds insufficient for that purpose in this state, when the divorced defendant resided in this state and was not personally served with process and did not appear in the action. (Olmsted v. Olmsted,
The reason for the stated policy of this state is its statutory adoption of the rule that there may be of right but one sufficient cause, to wit, adultery, for absolute divorce. (People v. Baker,
Under the statutes the plaintiff had a cause of action to annul the marriage between the parties in case John A. Murphy was when they intermarried the husband of the *86
defendant. (Code of Civil Procedure, sections 1743, 1745; Domestic Relations Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 14], § 6.) Whether or not Murphy was then the defendant's husband depends upon the operation or non-operation of the decree of the court of Massachusetts absolutely divorcing them. Under the facts of the case judicial discretion may rightfully and wisely be exercised in permitting to it the full operation to which it was entitled in the state of Massachusetts. Those facts are peculiar and unlike those presented in any case judicially decided known to us. The state of New York was not a party to any of the marital transactions of the parties involved in this action. The matrimonial domicile of the defendant and her former husband, Murphy, was the state of Pennsylvania, in which state they resided until they separated as husband and wife. As husband and wife they did not at any time reside in or become citizens of the state of New York Into this state Murphy came as an abandoned or abandoning husband and acquired the residence existing at the rendition of the Massachusetts decree, but which ceased to exist, by reason of his death, years prior to the trial of this action. During the residence he did not assert the rights or seek to enter into the obligations of the marriage between the defendant and himself. At the trial of this action the marriage between him and the defendant was by his death absolutely and forever dissolved. It was beyond the power of this state to consider or hold it then binding as to the defendant or any person, or for any purpose. The matrimonial domicile of the defendant and the plaintiff was the state of Massachusetts, where they resided and were domiciled and remained until they respectively became, as we have stated, residents of the state of New York. Prior thereto neither had been a citizen of this state. As to each of them the decree of divorce was valid. Their marriage was under the laws of that state rightful and valid and created for them the status
of husband and wife. That *87 status they had when they for the first time became residents of this state. That status must, undoubtedly, yield in case it was created through means hostile to the law of this state. "The rule that the status of the domicile is the status everywhere must yield when the status is constructed on principles which are contrary to those which are generally recognized, or which can be admitted by the law of the forum resorted to." (Adams v.Adams,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., HOGAN, POUND, McLAUGHLIN, ANDREWS and ELKUS, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *88