272 A.D.2d 60 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1947
Lead Opinion
The facts alleged in the complaint are that the infant plaintiff is the child of the appellant John A. Urquhart and Vivien Costello Urquhart, born more than three years after a decree of divorce of tl^e parents was entered in Arkansas. The action is for a declaratory judgment establishing his legitimacy on the ground that the Arkansas divorce was void in that neither parent was domiciled in Arkansas. Plaintiff contends that at the time of his birth they were still husband and wife. The father was remarried to another woman soon after the
The Arkansas divorce was obtained by the wife on the appearance of the husband. The question on this appeal is whether his appearance gave validity to the Arkansas decree so as to make it binding upon their child conceived thereafter.
Since the sufficiency of the complaint is challenged, the court must assume the truth of all of the facts alleged including that both of plaintiff’s parents were domiciled in New York State while the Arkansas divorce action was being commenced and prosecuted to judgment. It must, therefore, be assumed that the Arkansas decree was obtained by fraud on the court in falsely laying before it the fact of domicil of at least one of the spouses which was essential to its jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action (Williams v. North Carolina, 325 U. S. 226, 229).
It may well be true that where jurisdiction of the subject matter depends, as in this instance, upon a fact that could have been placed in issue in the court of the other State and which has been adjudged there in favor of the party who avers jurisdiction, it cannot be contested here by a party to the other action regularly before the court therein (O’Donoghue v. Boies, 159 N. Y. 87, 99, cited in Shea v. Shea, 270 App. Div. 527, 529). Thus in Glaser v. Glaser (276 N. Y. 296) it was indicated that a wife was precluded from suing her husband for a separation in this State in consequence of having appeared in a divorce action previously instituted and carried to a conclusion by him in another State. The Court of Appeals distinguished Andrews v. Andrews (188 U. S. 14) on the ground that it involved a statute of Massachusetts proclaiming the nullity of divorces in other State courts lacking jurisdiction of the subject matter even where they possessed jurisdiction of the person. In drawing this distinction, our Court of Appeals recognized that the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution (art. IV", § 1) does not compel the recognition of such a judgment, but that its recognition is based on comity, depending on the public policy of the particular State. Only thus could the Massachusetts statute, declaring the public policy of that State, have been important, since that statute would have been void as unconstitutional if the full faith and credit clause had controlled.
The Federal Constitution does not compel recognition of judgments that would not have been rendered in other States unless the parties had stipulated, in effect, that the court of the other State had jurisdiction of the subject matter which it did not
Matter of Lindgren (293 N. Y. 18) requires an affirmance of the order denying the motion to dismiss the complaint. The decision therein does not appear to have turned on the belated appearance of the defendant in the Florida action, but rather upon the circumstance that the child of the marriage had not been a party to the divorce action notwithstanding the contention that neither of the “ two parties could thereafter challenge the validity of the foreign court’s degree ” (p. 22, citing Krause v. Krause, 282 N. Y. 355, supra, decided under the quasi-estoppel doctrine).
Hynes v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. (273 N. Y. 612), relied on by appellant herein, is distinguishable in that there the adopted daughter of Edward W. Browning, deceased, was in privity of estate with him in contesting a dower right which would otherwise have been a lien upon real estate inherited by her from Browning. The Hynes case was distinguished on this ground in Matter of Lindgren where the child’s right to letters of administration was regarded as having its origin in her personal status as child and not as involving privity of estate with the decedent whereby she would have been subject to the estoppel against him. The same principle applies a fortiori to a child conceived after divorce who is seeking to establish legitimacy. To reverse the order appealed from would sanction the perpetration of fraud on the courts of other States, and would be an invitation to persons desiring divorces to go to other States where neither is domiciled. It would remove entirely whatever wholesome restraint now arises from fear of the invalidation of divorces so obtained when challenged by innocent third parties.
The order should be affirmed, with $20 costs and disbursements.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part). I concur in the conclusion of the court at Special Term and in the conclusion of this court that Matter of Lindgren (293 N. Y. 18) requires an affirmance of the order in this case. I prefer not to join in the opinion of the court insofar as it' discusses the question of estoppel to challenge a void foreign decree of divorce as between the parties thereto who have purported to submit themselves to the jurisdiction of the court granting the decree. Suffice it to say that,
Mabtin, P. J., Cohn and Callahan, JJ., concur with Van Voobhis, J.; Peck, J., concurs in part in opinion.
Order unanimously affirmed, with $20 costs and disbursements. [See post, p. 757.]