On its face the libel for divorce showed that the libellant had been a resident of Vermont for about three months at the time the action was brought. 15 V.S.A. § 592 required that a libellant be a resident for six months before a libel could be brought. The libellee moved to dismiss on that ground below, and the motion was granted. However, the lower court did not enter a judgment of dismissal based on its ruling, but certified the question here prior to judgment, and issued a temporary order providing for support of the libellant, and support and custody of the minor child. The question certified is:
Whether 15 V.S.A. section 592 requiring six months residency prior to filing a divorce libel denies the Libellant due process and equal protection of the law as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
*328
The state, through the attorney general, as
amicus curiae,
has undertaken the response to this question. First, it contends, since her residency would now permit the libellant to file a libel in conformity with the statute, the constitutional issue has been mooted. Furthermore, the state questions the appropriateness of the constitutional issue underlying
Shapiro
v.
Thompson,
The problem of “mootness” always seems to center on its applicability to the case at hand. The Supreme Court of the United States recently wrestled with it in
Hall
v.
Beals,
We are mindful of the stricture that constitutional questions ought not to be unnecessarily dealt with.
State
v.
Laplaca,
The case of
Shapiro
v.
Thompson, supra,
deals with preliminary waiting period or residence requirements for otherwise eligible welfare recipients newly moved to a state. Such requirements are held to be unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause unless they promote a compelling state interest. The particular right held to be infringed by the residency requirement is the “right of free interstate travel”, a right not expressly stated in the Constitution, but determined to be an implicit part of it.
Shapiro
v.
Thompson, supra,
*329 This is desperately thin guidance. A number of interstate differentials spring to mind that quite certainly chill change of residence, such as, for example, the presence of a state income tax, the measure of unemployment benefits, the extent of public supported education, to name but a few. Indeed, the Supreme Court itself footnoted a number of like issues on which it implied no view, such as eligibility to vote, or for tuition-free education, to be licensed to practice a profession, or to hunt and fish. Clearly the nature of the privilege or right being withheld during the qualifying period is of prime significance, together with the “compelling” nature of the state’s interest in that right or privilege.
We are here dealing with the marriage relationship. In
Pennoyer
v.
Neff,
The certified question is answered in the negative and the cause is remanded.
