25 S.D. 471 | S.D. | 1910
Plaintiff brought an action in the circuit court of Lincoln county for -annulment of marriage. The complaint states in substance, that plaintiff -had been a bona fide resident in good faith of the state of South Dakota for a period of more than six months next preceding the commencement of the action, and at the time of the commencement .thereof was a citizen and elector of the state of South Dakota; that plaintiff and defendant
The question presented hy the record is whether a residence of one year in the state is a jurisdictional prerequisite to maintaining an action for the annulment of a marriage. No other question is presented. Section 1, chapter J32, Sess. Laws 1907, provides: “Section 1. Plaintiff in an action for a divorce must 'have been an actual resident in good faith of this state for one year, and of the county where such action is commenced for three months, next preceding the commencement of said action except as herein otherwise provided.” The other provisions of the statute have no relevancy to the question presented here. There is no statute of this state specifically prescribing a period of residence in actions for annulment of marriage. The marriage contract and the annulment of marriage are treated under article x of part 3 of the Civil Code, while divorce is treated in article 2 of the same chapter 'as a distinct action. The fundamental distinction between the annulment' of a marriage contract and its dissolution by divorce is very well stated in section 556, Nelson on Divorce and Separation: “The term ‘divorce’ in its accurate sense denotes dissolution or suspension by law of the marital relation. As a legal term and unaided by context it means a dissolution of the
In the case of Avakian v. Avakian, 69 N. J. Eq. 89, 60 Atl. 521, an action to annul a marriag'e for duress, the court says: "But another important consideration intervenes. The jurisdiction of this court over the subject-matter of this cause is not based upon or derived from the divorce statute. Hence it is not limited by any of the terms of that statute as to residence, etc. It is based on -the original, inherent, and general jurisdiction of this court over questions arising out of contracts inter parties, and is exercised over contracts of marriage in which is found some vice inherent ,in their origin, precisely as in cases arising out of ordinary contract. * * * I shall add the suggestion that this action is not properly classified as a suit for a divorce, which is almost universally based upon some cause of action arising after ■the marriage, and which dissolves a valid marriage.” In 1907 the New Jersey Legislature passed an act requiring a residence in the state for one year in actions for annulment, while in divorce actions it requires a residence of two years. In some states as in Minnesota and Washington the statutes regulating divorce and annulment actions are contained in a single act. The statute in
In view of these well-settled rules, in the light of which the act of the legislative assembly must be construed, and which act in its terms applies only to actions for divorce, we are clearly of opinion that the act was not intended to, and does not apply to actions for annulment of marriage. The order and judgment of the trial court are reversed.