The parties to this suit, formerly husband and wife, are residents of Louisiana, where their divorce was granted. The basic question in the case is whether the wife can, after the termination of the Louisiana divorce proceeding, obtain in a separate suit in Arkansas a statutory interest in land owned by the husband in this state. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1214 (Repl. 1962). The chancellor correctly held that the Louisiana divorce decree is a bar to such a suit in Arkansas.
Only a few facts are really pertinent. The couple were married in 1945. In July of 1973 the husband brought suit in Louisiana for separation from bed and board. In August the husband obtained such a decree, and the parties agreed upon a settlement of their Louisiana property, with no mention of the husband’s land in Arkansas. In June of 1974, while the couple were legally separated, the wife brought this suit in Arkansas to enjoin her husband from disposing of his Arkansas land until her marital interest in it should be determined. In November the Louisiana court granted the wife an absolute divorce, a step that appears to be merely formal and perfunctory after the separation from bed and board has continued for more than 12 months. Finally in April of 1975, the trial court entered its decree in the case at bar, denying the wife’s claim to an interest in her former husband’s Arkansas land.
If the parties had been residents of Arkansas and the divorce decree had been rendered here, it cannot be doubted that the wife’s present claim would not have been maintainable. It was held in Gwynn v. Rush,
The appellant argues two grounds for distinguishing this case from our earlier decisions. First, it is suggested that the rule adopted in Gwynn v. Rush, supra, was changed in 1953, when the legislature amended Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1214. As we read the amendment, however, it simply expanded the property rights of certain nonresident wives in Arkansas divorce cases. The statute is still, as it was in Gwynn, a rule to be applied in Arkansas divorce proceedings.
Second, the appellant argues that she could not have asserted in the Louisiana case her claim to an interest in her husband’s Arkansas property. That argument is without merit, because even though the Louisiana court could not by its decree directly affect the title to land in Arkansas, it could achieve the same result by requiring the husband to execute a deed to that land. Phillips v. Phillips,
Affirmed.
