Mary Belle WOODS v. Edwin P. WOODS, Jr.
84-260
Supreme Court of Arkansas
March 11, 1985
686 S.W.2d 387
175
Richard L. Smith, P.A., by: Daniel R. Carter, for appellee.
ROBERT H. DUDLEY, Justice. The issue on appeal is whether a former wife may maintain an action for alimony and marital property against her former husband, notwithstanding a valid absolute divorce previously procured by the wife in a foreign jurisdiction, solely upon constructive service.
Mary and Edwin Woods were married for 31 years. During the marriage Edwin retired from the Air Force after 20 years of service and moved to Faulkner County. Mary filed suit for divorce in Faulkner County on March 15, 1983. Edwin filed an answer and indicated that he would contest the action. Mary dismissed her complaint on August 12. Four days later, on August 16, she filed suit for divorce in New Mexico. Edwin made a special appearance and objected
The New Mexico decree granting a no-fault divorce is valid and entitled to full faith and credit recognition as terminating the marital status of the parties without a determination of fault. A division of marital property and an award of alimony were not at issue in the foreign jurisdiction. The foreign court did not have jurisdiction over both parties. See Knighton v. Knighton, 259 Ark. 399, 533 S.W.2d 215 (1976). No provision of the Federal Constitution compels this Court to recognize the foreign no-fault divorce as terminating the spouse‘s cause of action for marital property or alimony. Pawley v. Pawley, 46 So. 2d 464, (Fla. 1950), 28 A.L.R.2d 1358, reh‘g. den., 47 So. 2d 546, cert. den., 340 U.S. 866.
Mary voluntarily left the state of matrimonial domicile, Arkansas, and at the time of the divorce and at the time of the filing of this action was a resident of New Mexico. Edwin has been a resident of Arkansas at all material times. Neither party contests the application of the law of this forum. See Morris, Divisible Divorce, 64 Harv. L. Rev. 1287 (1951).
In Bowman v. Worthington, 24 Ark. 522 (1867), a case almost identical to the one at bar, this Court held that the right to maintain a proceeding for alimony cannot survive a dissolution of marriage. The rationale was that alimony after divorce was entirely dependent upon statutory law, and the “peculiar phraseology of our statute provides for alimony only “when a decree shall be entered.” That statute,
Appellant also contends that the trial court erroneously refused to compel answers to interrogatories. There is no merit in the argument. Rather, we note that
Reversed and remanded.
HICKMAN, J., dissents in part and concurs in part.
DARRELL HICKMAN, Justice, dissenting in part; concurring in part. This is not the first time Arkansas has recognized the concept of divisible divorce. In Rice v. Rice, 213 Ark. 981, 214 S.W.2d 235 (1948), we held that a husband who had obtained an Arkansas divorce upon constructive service and without provision for alimony was not allowed to assert the divorce as a bar to the wife‘s action for arrearages arising from a prior New York decree for separate maintenance of which the husband had had notice. The doctrine of divisible divorce was developed in Estin v. Estin, 334 U.S. 541 (1948), a case which had very close facts to the Rice case and which we used as precedent there.
Under these facts I do not believe that the concept of divisible divorce should be applied, because to do so would ignore the policy reason underlying the concept. The reason for the development of the rule, that a valid foreign ex parte divorce terminates the marital status but not the right to alimony, is that the state of the spouse entitled to support has a legitimate interest in protecting the abandoned spouse from being left impoverished and becoming a public charge. See Estin v. Estin, supra, at 547.
Mrs. Woods is not an abandoned spouse. She was in a state which had jurisdiction over both her and her husband, she filed the divorce action here, but then voluntarily chose to dismiss the action and obtain the divorce in another state. She sought a forum where she knew she could not get an in personam judgment against her husband without his consent. It was her right to obtain a divorce quickly and without having to prove fault. However, she should not be allowed to return and litigate the issue of alimony under the concept of divisible divorce. She had the chance and by her own action abandoned that opportunity.
Similar reasoning was relied upon in Glennan v. Glennan, 197 Misc. 899, 97 N.Y.S.2d 666 (Sup. Ct. 1950) where the court refused to apply the doctrine of divisible divorce, holding that a wife who changes her domicile to obtain a valid ex parte divorce in another state cannot enforce a prior New York support order because by her conduct she had forfeited her right to support. The court stated, “The plaintiff cannot avoid the effect of her divorce in Ohio which she brought about.” See also McFarlane v. McFarlane, 43 Or. 477, 73 P. 203 (1903).
Nor do I agree that the fact that Arkansas allows an
The majority cite those holdings to interpret
This is an opinion which will be relied upon to uphold forum shopping by divorce litigants and will cause some divorce proceedings to be endless. See Knighton v. Knighton, 259 Ark. 399, 533 S.W.2d 215 (1976).
I concur with that part of the opinion which allows the appellant to claim property rights.
