118 N.Y. 549 | NY | 1890
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *551 Our Revised Statutes provide that "a widow shall be endowed of the third part of all the lands whereof her husband was seized of an estate of inheritance at any time during the marriage," (1 R.S. 740, § 1), but that "in case of divorce dissolving the marriage contract for the misconduct of the wife, she shall not be endowed." (Id. § 8.) It is further provided by the Code of Civil Procedure, that where final judgment is rendered dissolving the marriage in an action brought by the wife, her inchoate right of dower in any real property of which her husband then was or was theretofore seized shall not be affected by the judgment, but that when the action is brought by the husband, the wife shall not be entitled to dower in any of his real property, or to a distributive share in his personal property. (§§ 1759 and 1760.) These provisions of the Code replaced a section of the Revised Statutes which provided that "a wife being a defendant in a suit for a divorce brought by her husband, and convicted of adultery, shall not be entitled to dower in her husband's real estate, or any part thereof, nor to any distributive share of his personal estate." (2 R.S. 146, § 48, repealed L. 1880, ch. 245, § 1, sub. 4.)
An absolute divorce could be granted only on account of adultery, under either the Revised Statutes or the Code. (3 R.S. [6th ed.] 155, §§ 38-42; Code Civ. Pro. §§ 1756, 1761.) According to either, an action could be brought to annul, to dissolve or to partially suspend the operation of the marriage contract. A marriage may be annulled for causes existing before or at the time it was entered into, and the decree in such cases destroys the conjugal relation ab initio and operates as a sentence of nullity. (Code Civ. Pro. §§ 1742, 1754.) A marriage contract may be dissolved and an absolute divorce, or a divorce proper, granted for the single cause already mentioned. Such a judgment operates from the date of the decree *553
by relieving the parties from the obligations of the marriage, although the party adjudged to be guilty is forbidden to remarry until the death of the other. It has no retroactive effect except as expressly provided by statute. (Wait v. Wait,
The judgment appealed from, therefore, can be affirmed only upon the ground that a decree dissolving the marriage tie, *554 rendered in another state for a cause not regarded as adequate by our law, has the same effect upon dower rights in this state as if it had been rendered by our own courts adjudging the party proceeded against guilty of adultery. This would involve as a result, that the expression "misconduct of the wife" as used in the Revised Statutes, means any misconduct, however trifling, that by the law of any state is a ground for divorce. Thus it might happen that a wife, who resided in this state and lived in strict obedience to its laws, might be deprived of her right to dower in lands in this state by a foreign judgment of divorce based upon an act that was not a violation of any law of the state of her residence. It is important, therefore, to determine whether the provision that a wife shall not be endowed, in case of divorce dissolving the marriage contract for her misconduct, refers only to that act which is misconduct authorizing a divorce in this state, or to any act which may be termed misconduct and converted into a cause of divorce by the Legislature of any state.
In Shiffer v. Pruden (
When the Legislature said, in the chapter relating to dower, that a wife should not be endowed when divorced for her own misconduct, and, in the chapter relating to divorce, that she should not be entitled to dower when convicted of adultery, the sole ground for a divorce, we think that by misconduct adultery only was meant, or that kind of misconduct which our laws recognize as sufficient to authorize a divorce. The *555
sections relating to dower and to the effect of divorce upon dower are in pari materia and should be construed together, and when thus construed they lead to the result already indicated. (Beebe v. Estabrook,
The repealed section was pronounced in In re Ensign (
Our conclusion is that as nothing except adultery is, in this *556 state, regarded as misconduct with reference to the subject of absolute divorce, no other misconduct is here permitted to deprive a wife of existing dower rights, even if it is the basis of a judgment of divorce lawfully rendered in another state, unless it expressly appears that such judgment has that effect in the jurisdiction where it was rendered, and as to that we express no opinion.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur, except FOLLETT, Ch. J., dissenting.
Judgment reversed.