This is аn appeal by a resident of Massachusetts from a decree of the family court denying and dismissing her petition which was instituted pursuant to the pertinent provisions of the reciprocal enforcement of support act.
The parties to this proceeding were married in Chelsea, Massachusetts on Valentine’s Day, February 14, 1953. They resided together in that city for almost nine years. No children were born of this marriage. The respondent was a member of the United States Navy being stationed during most of this time at various installations in the New England area. In 1962 he left the marital domicile and moved into quarters furnished him by the Navy at the air station at Quonset Point, Rhode Island. On August 14, 1962, respondent commenced divorce proceedings against petitioner in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The recоrd discloses that on April 3, 1963, a decree was entered in the probate court of Suffolk County which denied respondent’s prayer for divorce and directed him to pay his wife $180 a month for her support.
*92 In 1964 respondent commenced another effort to sever his marital bond. While assigned to Quonset Point, Mr. Rymanowski returned to his native state of Minnesota and there filed a second petition for divorce from his wife. He discontinued this petition in the late summer of 1964.
The respondent retired from the Navy in May 1965 with the rating of a chief petty officer. At the time of his retirement, respondent was still stationed at Quonset Point. He returned to Minnesota to seek employment in some endeavor in which he could use the skills he had acquired during his 18 years of service. From Minnesota respondent traveled to Massachusetts where he filed a motion to reduce the monthly amount due his wife according to the April 1963 decree. His efforts were successful. A new decree was entered in the probate court on May 20, 1965, which reduced the amount to be paid to petitioner to $100 a month.
The respondent returned to Minnesota for a brief sojourn and then headed west. He arrived in Las Vegas, Nevada, on June 7, 1965. While in that city, he worked at various jobs and on July 20, 1965, filed his third petition for divorce. Mary received notice of the Nevada proceedings but neither she, nor any attorney on her behalf, participated in this litigation. On August 17, 1965, the district court for the Eighth Judicial District for the State of Nevada entered a default judgment against petitioner, granting Joseph’s petition for divorce on the grounds that the parties had lived separate and apart for three years. The Nevada decree made no provision for petitioner’s support.
Mr. Rymanowski remained in Nevada until November 1965 when he returned to Rhode Island to assume a civilian position at Quonset Point. In January 1966, he remarried. One child has been born of this marriage.
Shortly after the Nevada proceedings ended, petitioner invoked the aid of the Massachusetts courts. She filed a petition in the Suffolk County Probate Court asking for a declaratory judgment regarding her marital status with *93 respondent. Notice of the pendency of the suit was given by publication. The respondent did not participate in the Massachusetts action. On December 6, 1965, the probate court entered a decree which held that respondent’s Nevada divorce was “invalid and void,” and that he was still married to petitioner, and that her living separate and apart from respondent was justifiable.
Thereafter, petitioner went to the Chelsea District Court and began the present support proceedings. Under Massachusetts law, the district court is the designated tribunal in which to institute a petition under the reciprocal support act. Due and legal service of the petition was made upon Joseph in Rhode Island. Both he and Mary testified in the family court. It is respondent’s position that Mary cannot prevail on her petition because he owes her no duty of support, since according to the Nevada decree she is no longer his wife.
Hearings in the family court were restricted to the validity of Joseph’s Nevada divorce. The trial justice found that at the time of the institution of his Nevada suit, Joseph was a bona fide domiciliary of Nevada and accordingly he gave full faith and credit to the August 17, 1965 divorce decree and thereupon denied and dismissed the instant petition.
This appeal raises two issues. They are the correctness of the trial court’s finding as to Joseph’s Nevada domicile and secondly, if the Nevаda decree severed the litigants’ matrimonial ties, did it also effectively terminate Joseph’s duty to support Mary.
Marital Status
The Nevada divorce decree was wholly ex parte. According to the well-established rule in
Williams
v.
North Carolina,
The petitioner urges that the Massachusetts declaratory judgment which described the Nevada decree as a nullity is binding on us on the question of Joseph’s domicile. We do not agree with this contention. To -dispel petitioner’s argument we need look only to the words of Mr. Justice Frankfurter in the second Williams case where he stated, “In short, the decree of divorce is a conclusive adjudication of everything except the jurisdictional facts upon which it is founded, and dоmicil is a jurisdictional fact. To permit the necessary finding of domicil by one State to foreclose all States in the protection of their social institutions would be intolerable.” Thus, under Williams each state is permitted to make its own inquiry as to a party’s domicile and no state’s determination can bind another on this issue.
In
Nevin
v.
Nevin,
88 R. I. 426,
At the hearing in the family court Joseph testified as to the circumstances surrounding his journey to Nevada. He maintained that his residencе in that state was primarily due to his efforts to obtain suitable employment. He described certain advertisements in the Minneapolis newspapers which sought to induce skilled workers to come to Nevada. He also pointed out that even if he did not obtain employment, the unemployment compensation benefits available to him in Nevada were superior to those afforded by the state of Minnesota. He testified that it was only after he had been in Las Yegas for about two weeks that a conversation with his landlady, whose brother was a local attorney, led to his filing for divorce. He left Nevada, he said, because he received an offer of a better position at Quonset Point.
The petitioner directs our attention to the degree of proof needеd to establish a domicile here in this state by a person instituting divorce proceedings in Rhode Island. Citing our ruling in
Parker
v.
Parker,
103 R. I. 435,
However, when a dоmiciliary of this state relies upon a foreign divorce decree for a determination by this jurisdiction of his lawful marital status, a different situation arises. Certainly a decree of a sister state enjoys a presumption of validity in the courts of Rhode Island. See 3 Nelson, (2d ed.)
Divorce and Annulment,
§33.80, p. 597. In
Esenwein
v.
Commonwealth,
It is our belief that because our state has a substantial interest in upholding the marital status of its own dоmiciliarios and the legitimacy of any issue born of a subsequent marriage, 2 the quantum of proof necessary to invalidate such a foreign decree should be greater than the burden in the ordinary civil action. Accordingly, we feel that the degree of proof set forth in Parker v. Parker, supra, is applicable here, and that a party who comes from without *97 our state to attack the marital status of one domiciled here must sustain that attack by clear and convincing evidence. In so holding, we do no more than articulate the burden of proof which is required in such cases by the mandate of our supreme court. In the second Williams case the court stated “The burden of undermining the verity which the Nevada decrees import rests heavily upon the assailant.” See 3 Nelson, (2d ed.) Divorce and Annulment, §33.81, p. 599.
*96 “Marital status involves the regularity and integrity of the marriage relation. It affects the legitimacy of thе offspring of marriage. It is the basis of criminal laws, as the bigamy prosecution in Williams v. North Carolina dramatically illustrates. The State has a considerable interest in preventing bigamous marriages and in protecting the offspring of marriages from being bastardized. The interest of the State extends to its domiciliarles.”
*97 Fere the family court observed that while some of Joseph’s meanderings might tend to arouse suspicion, the unoontradicted testimony showed that he went to Nevada with the intention of becoming domiciled there and making that state his home and that he left only because of an opportunity for better employment.
From our review of the record, we believe that the trial justice’s finding that Joseph was a bona fide domiciliary of Nevada was correct. Furthermore, the burden was upon petitionеr to show the absence of any such domicile and her efforts in this regard fell far short of what is required. We will not, therefore, disturb the ruling of the lower court that Rhode Island should afford full faith and credit to respondent’s Nevada divorce decree.
Petitioner’s Right To Support
The sole issue presented in this portion of our opinion is whether or not, after affording full faith and credit to the ex parte decree obtained by respondent, our action in this regard necessitates a further finding that petitioner’s right to support has terminated. In reaching a conclusion on this query, we are guided both by pronouncements of the United States Supreme Court, and our view as to the intent of the legislature when it enacted the uniform reciprocal enforcement of support act.
The concept of “divisible divorce” initially foreshadowed by the Supreme Court in two concurring opinions in the
*98
case of
Esenwein
v.
Commonwealth, supra,
was first announced by a majority of that court in
Estin
v.
Estin, supra.
There it was decided that a Nevada court which had no personal jurisdiction over the wife had no power to terminate the husband’s obligation to provide for her support as required by a preexisting New York separation decree. This rule clearly founded upon well-established due process consideratiоns, announced in
Pennoyer
v.
Neff,
3
Since the “broad and novel”
4
declaration of the court in
Estin,
a steadily increasing number of states have brought their domiciliaries within the protection it affords by adopting the rule that a valid ex parte divorce does not opеrate to cut off the spouse’s right to support. See
Hudson
v.
Hudson,
Ordinarily, when a state is cast in a role of “third state,” as we are in the proceedings before us, the course to be followed is to determine the law of the wife’s domicile as to the survival of support rights and to utilize that law as the basis for decision. See:
Hudson
v.
Hudson, supra; Lewis
v.
Lewis,
In
Wilford
v.
Wilford,
38 R. I. 55,
[S] Throughout these proceedings respondent has maintained the reciprocal support statute is applicable only when there is continuing marital relationship between the parties. We disagree.
Today, we live in a society of remarkable mobility. A Rhode Islander, besieged with wanderlust may, upon payment of the proper fee, be jet-propelled across this vast continent within a mattеr of hours to one of our sister states bordering the Pacific Ocean. Whether by plane, train or automobile, this increased mobility of our population has given rise to another problem. Occasionally, one who is charged with the duty of support, finds the call of the road irresistible. Prior to reciprocal support legislation, the dejDendents of one so irresponsible were left in a woeful state to fend for themselves. In most instances they could not afford to pursue the slacker for whom sanctuary from the rightful demands of support was assured in another state. Accordingly, the primary purpose for enactment of this legislation was to provide a vehicle through which dependents might obtain support from those who seek to avoid their obligations by the simple expedient of crossing state lines. In our opinion, chap. 11 of title 15 is an act remedial in nature,
7
that should be liberally construed for the purposes for which it was enacted. As the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court said in
M.
v.
W.,
We believe that the petitioner in this case is entitled to prosecute her petition for supрort. To hold otherwise would nullify the legislature’s efforts to require a spouse domiciled in Rhode Island to discharge his obligations assumed on his wedding day.
The petitioner’s appeal is sustained, the decree appealed from is reversed and the cause is remanded to the family court for further proceedings.
Notes
That clause states:
“Full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. And the congress may by general laws prescribe the manner in which such acts, records and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof.”
In
Estin
v.
Estin,
That case stands as a landmark decision holding that no state can bind a defendant personally without lawful jurisdiction over his person.
Morris, Divisible Divorce, 64 Harv. L. Rev. 1287, 1291.
See, Currie, Selected Essays on the Conflict of Laxos, chap. 13, pp. 663-670 for an informative discussion on the effect of ex parte divorce decrees on the right to support and the correct law to be applied in such cases.
See G. L. 1956, §§15-11-23, as amended, and 15-11-31:
“15-11-23. Proceedings following course of equity.—All proceedings shall follow the course of equity so far as the same is applicable. * * *”
“15-11-31. Appeals.—Appeals from orders of the court of this state shall be to the supreme court and shall follow the course of equity * *
Section 15-11-3 provides that the remedies set forth in the act arc in addition to and not in substitution for any other remedies.
