159 P. 235 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1916
Action for divorce. Judgment went for plaintiff, from which, and an order of court granting plaintiff alimony pendente lite, defendant appeals.
As disclosed by the record and argument in appellant's brief, the only ground upon which he based his defense to the action was a decree of the court of common pleas of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, together with an exemplified copy of the record therein, all of which were duly presented at the trial, showing that at a time antedating the commencement of this action, the bonds of matrimony theretofore contracted between plaintiff and defendant, as alleged herein, had been dissolved and a divorce granted him from said plaintiff by said decree so rendered by the common pleas court of Crawford County, Pennsylvania. *674
As to this defense, however, the court found that, under the laws of Pennsylvania existing at the time, it was necessary in order to vest the court with jurisdiction to entertain an action for divorce, that the applicant therefor be at the time of commencing the suit a bona fide resident of such state, as well as such resident for a period of one year immediately preceding the bringing of such action; that defendant herein, who was plaintiff in the action so instituted in the Pennsylvania court, was at the time of the institution thereof, and for more than a year immediately preceding its commencement had been, a resident of the state of California, in which state defendant also resided. No attack is made upon this finding; indeed, we understand the facts so found to be conceded by appellant. As a conclusion of law, the court found that the decree so rendered and entered by the common pleas court of Pennsylvania granting defendant a decree of divorce from plaintiff, was null and void for want of jurisdiction.
Appellant's sole contention is that, since the judgment rendered by the court of common pleas was regular on its face, it was not subject to collateral attack. In support of this claim he cites numerous authorities to the effect that "a divorce by a court having jurisdiction, valid and conclusive in state where rendered, is conclusive everywhere, and a finding of residence by the state court is prima facie proof and sufficient until overcome to support the jurisdiction." (Cheever v. Wilson, 9 Wall. 123, [19 L.Ed. 604].) Undoubtedly this is true, provided the court has, as stated in the text,jurisdiction; but that is the very question here involved and as to which, as said, the decree presented is "prima facie
proof and sufficient until overcome to support the jurisdiction." Since the evidence is not brought up, we must assume that it was ample to support the finding made by the court that there was a want of jurisdiction in the court rendering the decree, and this overcomes the prima facie
showing made by its presentation. Mr. Black, in his work on Judgments, section 822, says: "In America it is generally held, and indeed almost universally, that as a proceeding in divorce is intended to affect the status of the parties, and is therefore essentially in rem, the judgment pronounced, whether in a foreign country or in a sister state, by a court havinglawful jurisdiction of the cause, and in *675
the absence of fraud, is valid and binding everywhere and in all subsequent controversies, provided the applicant wasbona fide domiciled within the territorial jurisdiction of the court, although the other party, being a nonresident, was notified only by advertisement or some other species of constructive service" (italics are ours); the theory being that the marriage relation is a status transitory in its nature and attached to the person of each of the contracting parties, so that a court, having jurisdiction over the one may dissolve it as to both, notwithstanding the other is beyond such jurisdiction. In Dunham v. Dunham,
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.