179 A. 5 | Conn. | 1935
The plaintiff married the defendant Winfield S. Mills in 1908 at Greenwich and lived with him there as his wife until October, 1931. She brought the present action by writ dated March 22d 1933, against the defendants, Winfield S. Mills and Madeline Hulse Mills, and asked for a declaratory judgment decreeing that the divorce obtained in Nevada by the defendant Winfield S. Mills from the plaintiff on January 9th, 1932, be declared a colorable one, and that it did not dissolve the marriage relation between the plaintiff and Mills, and that they are still husband and wife. The case was tried to the court, and judgment entered that the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief prayed for.
The conclusion of the court was based upon four propositions: First, that the Nevada divorce obtained by the defendant Winfield S. Mills from the plaintiff was valid; second, that if it was not valid, the plaintiff could not attack it by reason of collusion in obtaining *615 it; third, that the plaintiff could not maintain the present action by reason of collusion between herself and her former husband in relation to the present action; and fourth, laches. These conclusions are attacked by the appellant in the present appeal.
The appellant has asked for certain corrections and additions to the finding. So far as is material to the determination of the questions of law involved upon this appeal, the finding of the court with such corrections as the appellant is entitled to, discloses the following pertinent facts: Florence Dean Davison and Winfield S. Mills married at Greenwich on October 29th, 1908, and continued to reside there until October, 1931, when he left his home and went, with Madeline Hulse, to Reno, Nevada. The latter was a nurse employed in a hospital at White Plains, New York. She became acquainted with Mills in 1917. He called on her regularly thereafter from 1918 to 1931. During this time, she was unaware of the fact that he was a married man. He became engaged to her in 1918 and in 1924 gave her an engagement ring. In 1931, he agreed to drive with her to the west coast, and marry her and settle wherever they could find work. He told her he had a sister in California and they would go there and be married and settle when they found a place where they wanted to live. The plaintiff did not know of the intimacy between her husband and Miss Hulse. Early in October, 1931, he told his wife that he was going to take a trip and would be back in two or three weeks, and left Greenwich in his automobile, joined the defendant Madeline Hulse at East Moriches, Long Island, and proceeded west. Shortly before his departure, Mills had talked with his wife with reference to a divorce and made a property settlement with her, wherein he deeded to her a half-interest in the house in which they were living, which had been inherited *616 by him from his foster father. His wife knew, or at least suspected, that he was going away with the intention of securing a divorce.
He took with him two bags of clothing. When he left the East with Miss Hulse, they had a definite intention of never returning to Connecticut to live. Mills had no intention of making a permanent abode in any particular place. Miss Hulse did not know that Mills was married until they were well across the continent, when he told her that they were on their way to Reno in order that he might obtain a divorce. They reached Reno about October 20th; while there Mills lived, for a period of six weeks, in a furnished room at the Young Men's Christian Association, and procured his meals at different places. Thereafter, and until he left Reno, he lived in a rooming house on a side street. Before departing from the East, he had packed some of his belongings and left them with a friend. While at Reno, he did not send for any of his packed goods. Miss Hulse hired and lived in an apartment. Mills found a little painting to do and earned a small amount of money, but could not find any work of a substantial nature although constantly seeking it. It was definitely agreed between them that if he found work, they would be married in Reno as soon as the divorce was granted, and would settle there and live in her apartment. He was unable to find work, so they decided to go on west, and left on the afternoon of the day the divorce was granted, January 9th, 1932. Mills, while stopping at the Young Men's Christian Association, bought no furniture or equipment for his room; he did not join it or any organization while there; he opened no credit accounts in any store; he did not apply to be made a voter; and he kept his wearing apparel in his two traveling bags. Neither he nor Miss Hulse ever returned to Nevada. *617
The trial court found that at the time of procuring the divorce, Mills' intention was to remain in Nevada for an indefinite period and to live there indefinitely if he could find work, and that he had no intention of making a home elsewhere and that Reno was his bona fide domicil; also that it was definitely agreed between Mills and Miss Hulse that if he found work, they would be married in Reno as soon as the divorce was granted and would settle there in her apartment, but that he was unable to find work and they decided to go on to the coast. These findings, except the last, are attacked in the assignments of error, and an examination of the evidence requires an interpretation of the finding as meaning no more than that when Mills and Miss Hulse went to Reno, the time of their departure was not fixed. It was their intention to remain there until he had secured a divorce and, thereafter, to marry and settle in her apartment in the event that he could secure employment. Domicil, on the part of the plaintiff, was a necessary condition precedent to the jurisdiction of the Nevada court. To constitute domicil, the residence at the place chosen for the domicil must be actual, and to the fact of residence there must be added the intention of remaining permanently; and that place is the domicil of the person in which he has voluntarily fixed his habitation, not for a mere temporary or special purpose, but with the present intention of making it his home, unless or until something which is uncertain or unexpected shall happen to induce him to adopt some other permanent home.Gildersleeve v. Gildersleeve,
When the parties left this State with the intention of never returning, their domicil in Connecticut was not thereby changed. The former domicil persists until *618
a new one is acquired. McDonald v. Hartford TrustCo.,
The court also found that there was collusion between the plaintiff and her husband in the procurement of the Nevada divorce. As employed in the law of divorce, collusion means an agreement between the parties to defraud or impose upon the court. This may be accomplished as well by agreeing to make up a false case as by agreeing to withhold from the court evidence which, if disclosed, might affect the court in its disposition of the case. Behrmann v. Behrmann,
The trial court found that there was collusion in the present action, but the plaintiff attacks this finding. The pertinent facts as found by the court with reference to this matter are: The defendant Winfield S. Mills married Madeline Hulse in California in February, 1932. They returned to Northport, Long Island, in the summer of 1932, where they lived on a boat until his funds became exhausted, when he deserted her; and after the desertion he began frequently to visit the plaintiff. They agreed to live together in case the plaintiff prevailed in this action. Mills, although made a party defendant, did not enter an appearance but, being summoned as a witness and examined by the counsel for the plaintiff, testified willingly and *621 eagerly in her behalf, and, though nominally a defendant, he was in reality a plaintiff.
The finding does not contain any statement that Mills did in fact testify falsely or that he agreed with the plaintiff to so testify, or that there was any agreement between the plaintiff and Mills to testify falsely or impose upon the court in any particular. The fact that Mills desired the plaintiff to recover judgment, that he interposed no defense in the action, and, when summoned as a witness, testified in her favor, does not establish collusion between those persons in the present case in the absence of any finding of an agreement between them to testify or impose upon the court in some manner. Pohlman v. Pohlman,
From the finding, it appears that the defendant married Miss Hulse within a month of the divorce decree at Reno, and that the marriage occurred in California. The plaintiff could not have reasonably been expected to have followed the parties to California and institute a proceeding to test the validity of the divorce within that period of time. Laches in legal significance is not mere delay but delay that works a disadvantage to another. Chase v. Chase,
There is error; the case is remanded to the Superior Court with direction to enter judgment in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.