47 Vt. 667 | Vt. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this case the plaintiffs seek to recover the amount of a decree of alimony granted to the plaintiff wile by the supreme court of New York, in June, 1868, in proceedings commenced by her to obtain a divorce from the defendant. The action is debt upon that judgment. The defendant having obtained oyer of the record of the proceedings in the supreme court of New York, and spread them upon the record in this case, by his plea insists that the same are insufficient in law to enable the plaintiffs to maintain their action. From the record of the proceedings in the supreme court of New York, it appears that the plaintiff, Sarah, was married in 1831, to the defendant, at Gorham, in the state of New York, and continued to live with him in that relation till November, 1863, when he left her. At the latter date, and for at least some six months prior thereto, they resided in Shelburne, in this state. The alleged cause for the divorce is the adultery of the defendant, committed within this state while they were resid
The regulation of the marriage relation, and of the acts or neglects that may amount to a good cause for sundering that relation, is a matter of internal police, important to,- and affecting, not only the parties to that relation, but the well-being of the state. It would seem it should be administered wholly by the courts of the state where the declared violations of the marriage relation occur, or where the parties are domiciled at the time. The acts relied upon for the cause of divorce, must have accrued while the parties were subject to the law of the forum where the divorce is granted. Otherwise the courts in one jurisdiction might determine and administer the marriage relation between citizens domiciled in another jurisdiction. This would allow one jurisdiction to pass laws, in the language of Lord Ellenborough in Buchanan v. Rucker, 9 East, 192, “to bind the rights of the whole world,” — a proposition too absurd to require refutation. In much the larger number of adjudged cases, and as we think of the better considered cases, it has been held that the judgment rendered in a suit for divorce, in a state where the cause of action did not accrue, and where the parties were not then living as husband and wife, and where the defendant in the proceeding never was served with process, nor voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the court, is wholly void in any other jurisdiction than the one in which it was rendered. Barber v. Root, 10 Mass. 260; Hanover v. Tanner, 14 Mass. 227; Lyon v. Lyon, 2 Gray, 369; Dorsey v. Dorsey, 7 Watts, 349; Maguire v. Maguire, 7 Dana, 181; Hull v. Hull, 2 Strabh. Eq. 174; Edwards v. Green, 9 Louisiana, 317; Irby v. Wilson, 1 Dev. & Batt. Eq. 568, 576; Barden v. Fitch, 15 Johns. 121; Bradshaw v. Hatch, 13 Wend. 407; Vischer v. Vischer, 12 Barb. 640; McGiffert v. McGiffert, 31 Barb. 69.
The courts of New York have gone quite as far as those of any state, in holding such judgments void. In the case of Fitch v. Borden, it was held, that such a judgment rendered by the supreme court of this state, was wholly void, and was not admis
Whatever may be the validity of such ex parte judgments upon the marriage relation of the parties named in the judgment, 'we have found no case which holds that the decree for the payment of money as alimony, stands any differently than any other ex parte judgment calling for satisfaction by the payment of money.
Judgment affirmed.