142 P. 230 | Nev. | 1914
Lead Opinion
By the Court,
Petitioner applies for a writ of mandate commanding the Honorable T. F. Moran, judge of the Second judicial district court, to issue an order for the publication of summons in the action of Alfred Worthington, Plaintiff, v. Cecelia Worthington, Defendant, for divorce, which was brought in that court on the 11th day of February, 1914.
It is alleged that the petitioner filed his verified complaint in that case, stating two causes of action, in conformity with the laws of this state relating to marriage and divorce; that the summons and certified copy of complaint could not be served personally upon the defendant because she resides, and for a long time has resided, in the city of Daly, San Mateo County, State of California, and is not now, and never has been, a resident of the State of Nevada. Petitioner made and presented to the district judge an affidavit setting forth these fácts, and stating that on the 20th day of July, 1913, he became,
The district judge refused to make the order for publication and service of summons, upon the ground that the petitioner had not been a resident of the county of Washoe, State of Nevada, for the full period of one year before the commencement of the action, and based his refusal upon section 22 of the act relating to marriage and divorce, as amended at the last session of the legislature by an act approved February 20, 1913, under the title: “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act to amend an act entitled “An act relating to marriage and divorce,” approved November 28, 1861/ as approved February 15, 1875.”
This act provides:
“Section 1. Section twentyrtwo of said act is amended so as to read as follows:
“Sec. 22. Divorce from the bonds of matrimony may be obtained, by complaint under oath, to the district court of the county in which the cause therefor shall have accrued, or in which the defendant shall reside or be found, or in which the plaintiff shall reside, if the latter be either the county in which the phrties last cohabited, or in which the plaintiff shall have resided six months before suit be brought, for the following causes: First— Impotency at the time of the marriage continuing to the time of the divorce. Second — Adultery since the marriage, remaining unforgiven. Third — Wilful desertion, at any time, of either party by the other, for the period of one year. Fourth — Conviction of felony or infamous crime. Fifth — Habitual gross drunkenness, contracted since marriage, of either party, which shall incapacitate*217 such party from contributing his or her share to the support of the family. Sixth — Extreme cruelty in either party. Seventh — Neglect of the husband, for a period of one year, to provide the common necessaries of life, when such neglect is not the result of poverty on the part of the husband which he could not avoid by ordinary industry. Provided, that when at the time the cause of divorce accrues, the parties shall not both be bona fide residents of the state, no court shall have jurisdiction to grant a divorce, unless either the plaintiff or the defendant shall have been a bona fide resident of the state for a period of not less than one year next preceding the commencement of the action.
“Sec. 2. All acts or parts of acts in conflict with this act are hereby repealed.
“Sec. 3. This act shall be in effect from and after the first day of January, 1914.”
(Stats. 1913, c. 10.)
The only change made by this amendment is the addition of the last sentence quoted in section 22, which begins with the word “Provided.” Otherwise the section is the same as the amendment of 1875, which was the same as section 22 of the act as originally passed by the first territorial session of the legislature in 1861 (Stats. 1861, c. 33), excepting that the amendment of 1875 (Stats. 1875, c. 22) shortened from two years to one year the time required for desertion and failure to provide.
Petitioner makes no objection to the act of 1875, but directs his batteries against the last amendment. It is said that there was no section 22 to amend in 1913, and that the legislature cannot inject into the statutes by the last amendment the jurisdiction of the court, not germane to the title.
Also, it is claimed that this act is in violation of the following provisions of the state constitution:
“All men are, by nature free and equal and have certain inalienable rights among which are those of enjoying*218 and defending life and liberty; acquiring, possessing, and protecting property and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness.” (Section 1, art. 1.)
“Each law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject, and matter properly connected therewith, which subject shall be briefly expressed in the title; and no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title only; but, in such case, the act as revised, or section as amended, shall be reenacted and published at length.” (Section 17, art. 4.)
“The legislature shall not pass local or special laws * * * granting divorce.” (Section 20, art. 4.)
“In all cases enumerated in the preceding -section, and in all other cases, where a general law can be made applicable, all laws shall be made general and of uniform operation throughout the state.” (Section 21, art. 4.)
It is further contended that the statute is in conflict with section 2, article 4, of the constitution of the United States, which provides that:
“The citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states”
—and of the fourteenth amendment, which specified that:
“No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
We had occasion to examine similar objections to the sufficiency of titles to legislative acts in the cases of State v. State Bank and Trust Co., 31 Nev. 456, 103 Pac. 407, 105 Pac. 567, and Ex Parte Ah Pah, 34 Nev. 283, 119 Pac. 770. In the former case we said:
“The main principles controlling these questions have been well-nigh settled by this and other courts. That section-17, article 4, of the constitution, providing that ‘each law enacted by the legislature shall embrace but one subject and matters properly connected therewith,’ is mandatory must be conceded. In regard to this objection, we need only determine whether this action and the decree of the district court relate to matters germane to the subj ect expressed in the title of the act, or to what is properly connected therewith.”
In that case we held that “An act creating a board of bank commissioners, defining their duties, providing for the appointment of a bank examiner, prescribing his duties, fixing his compensation, providing penalties for the violation of the provisions of this act, and other matters relating thereto” (Stats. 1907, c. 119), although providing by section 10 for an action by the attorney-general against a banking corporation on the decision by the bank examiner and commissioners that it is unsafe for it to continue business, and that, if the court shall find it unsafe, it shall appoint a receiver, does not contravene the above constitutional provision.
In the Tiedemann case, 36 Nev. 494, 500, 137 Pac. 824, this court treated the amendment of 1875 of section 22 of the marriage and" divorce act as a part of the act of 1861, and not as a separate act, and referred to the act of 1913 as amendatory of section 22 of the original act. While the question was not specifically presented for consideration in that case, this view of considering amendatory statutes is well supported by the authorities.
In New York, an act of 1883 (Laws 1883, c. 414) purported to amend section 16 of the act of 1856 (Laws 1856, c. 179), which, it was claimed, had been repealed by an act of 1864 (Laws 1864, c. 555). The court in People v. Canvassers, 143 N. Y. 84, 37 N. E. 649, held a different opinion as to the repeal, but concluded that, even if the act of 1856 was repealed as claimed, the amendatory act of 1883 was nevertheless valid. The court said:
“The enactment of this law is put into the form of an amendment of a law, which was standing upon the statute books, and whether that earlier law, by force of subsequent legislation, had become inoperative is wholly immaterial. The only question is: Has the legislature, in the enactment complained of, expressed its purpose intelligently and provided fully upon the subject? If it has, then its act is valid and must be upheld. That is the case here. The act of 1883 contains all that is provided for in the particular section of the act of 1856, and gives full power to the boards of supervisors with respect to the formation of school commissioners’ districts. A law thus explicit and complete may not be disregarded or invalidated because of a possible mistake of the legislature with respect to the existence of the statute in amendment of which the act is passed. It is an enactment of a law, in any view.”
The Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in Commonwealth v. Kenneson, 143 Mass. 419, 9 N. E. 763, said:
“The defendant contends that Stats. 1886, c. 318, sec. 2, is inoperative, because it purports to be an amendment of the Pub. Stats. c. 57, secs. 5, 9, and he says that said section 9 was repealed by Stats. 1885, c. 352, sec. 6. The argument is that an amendment of a repealed statute is a nullity. * * * The intention of the legislature is plain that, after Stats. 1885, c. 352, took effect, instead of Pub. Stats. c. 57, sec. 9, the sixth section of Stats. 1885, c. 352, should be in force, and that after Stats. 1886, c.*223 318, took effect, section 2 of this statute should be in force, instead of section 6 of Stats. 1885, c. 352. The sections in each statute are complete in themselves, and, being substitutes for each other, stand like independent enactments. The only defect in the statute is that Stats. 1886, c. 318, sec. 2, refers to Pub. Stats. c. 57, sec. 9, and not to this section as amended; but the intention is evident.”
In Fletcher v. Prather, 102 Cal. 414, 36 Pac. 658, under a constitutional provision similar to ours, it was held that the amended section of an act takes the place of the original section by its appropriate number in the original act, and that portions not altered are to be considered as having been the law from the time they were enacted, and the new provisions are to be considered as having been enacted at the time of the amendment.
“The slight variance in reciting the title of the act amended will be immaterial if the act intended is clearly identified.”
“An act entitled ‘An act to amend section 1733 of chapter 11 of title 11 of the original code of Oregon’ was held good, although there was no such chapter or title; there being but one section with the number given.”
“The intent of the legislature was held to be plain, and effect was given to the act, so that, while the title and act purported to amend section 202 of article 8 of a specified statute, they were given effect as an amendment of section 1 of article 8.”
(Lewis’s Sutherland, Statutory Construction, 2d ed. sec. 138; Otis v. People, 196 Ill. 542, 63 N. E 1053; Northern Pacific Express Co. v. Metschan, 90 Fed. 80, 32 C. C. A. 530.)
Mr. Sutherland also says that where the title of the amendatory act recites the title of the act amended, and there is only one act with that title, error in referring to the date of the approval of the act amended will not vitiate the title. (American Surety Co. v. Great White Spirit Co., 58 N. J. Eq. 526, 43 Atl. 579; Citizens’ Street R. R. Co. v. Haugh, 142 Ind. 254, 41 N. E. 533; Alberson v. Mayor, 82 Ga. 30, 8 S. E. 869.)
“In the amendment or revision of a statute two things are required: First, the title of the act amended or revised should be referred to, and, secondly, the act as revised, or section as amended, should be set forth and published at full length. * * * It is not required that the amendatory act state that certain words of a specific section are stricken out and others inserted, and then set out in full the section as amended; it is sufficient if the section as amended be set out in full. * * * If the references to the act to be amended in the title and body of the amendatory act is sufficient for identification, it is all that is required, and slight errors will be disregarded.”
“By force of our constitutional provision, requiring the object of every law to be expressed in its title, the title limits the sphere within which the enacting clause can operate.”
“The constitutional requirement under discussion as applied to the acts of this character when they contain matter which might appropriately have been incorporated in the original act under its title is satisfied generally if the amendatory or supplemental act identifies the original act by its title, and declares the purpose to amend or supplement it. Under such a title, alterations by excision, addition, or substitution may be made, and any provisions may be enacted which might have been incorporated in the original act. A title which expresses a purpose to amend an earlier enactment, referring to the earlier enactment by its title, in which the subj ect of the proposed legislation is clearly expressed, is no more or less than the expression of a purpose to deal with the subject so expressed in the title of the earlier enactment.”
“There is a conflict of authority as to whether a section which has been repealed can be amended. The question usually arises where a section of an act is amended ‘to read as follows,’ and is then again amended in the same*225 manner and by the same description, ignoring the first amendment. Most of the older and some of the more recent cases hold that such an amendatory act, or the amendment of a repealed section, is a nullity. A repeal by implication is said to stand upon the same footing in this respect as a direct or express repeal. ‘While there is some conflict of opinion on the subject,’ says the United States Court of Appeals, ‘the decided weight of authority and the better opinion is that an amendatory statute is not invalid, though it purport to amend a statute which had previously been amended, or for any reason had been held invalid.’ This view, we believe, is sustained by the decisions.”
(Wilkerson v. Ketler, 59 Ala. 306; State v. Warford, 84 Ala. 15, 3 South. 911; Ex Parte Pierce, 87 Ala. 110, 6 South. 392; Harper v. State, 109 Ala. 28, 19 South. 857; Harper v. State, 109 Ala. 66, 19 South. 901; O’Rear v. Jackson, 124 Ala. 298, 26 South. 944; Reynolds v. Board of Education, 66 Kan. 672, 72 Pac. 274; Lewis v. Brandenburg, 105 Ky. 14, 47 S.W. 862, 48 S.W. 978; Lang v. Calloway, 68 Mo. App. 393; Parlin Orendorf Co. v. Hord, 78 Mo. App. 279; Fenton v. Yule, 27 Neb. 758, 43 N. W. 1140; State v. Babcock, 23 Neb. 128, 36 N. W. 348; Baird v. Todd, 27 Neb. 782, 43 N. W. 1143; State v. Partridge, 29 Neb. 158, 45 N. W. 290; State v. Bemis, 45 Neb. 724, 64 N.W. 348; State v. Kearney, 49 Neb. 325, 68 N. W. 533; State v. Kearney, 49 Neb. 337, 70 N. W. 255; State v. Wahoo, 62 Neb. 40, 86 N. W. 923; Van Clief v. Van Vechten, 55 Hun, 467, 8 N. Y. Supp. 760; White v. Boody, 74 Hun, 39, 26 N. Y. Supp. 294; People v. Canvassers, 77 Hun, 372, 28 N. Y. Supp. 871; People v. Upson, 79 Hun, 87, 29 N. Y. Supp. 615; Columbia Wire Co. v. Boyce, 104 Fed. 172, 44 C. C. A. 588; Heinz v. Butte M. Co., 107 Fed. 165, 46 C. C. A. 219; Minnesota & Mont. L. & I. Co. v. Billings, 111 Fed. 972, 50 C. C. A. 70.)
As seen, our law in its present form, except that six months’ instead of one year’s residence and two instead of one year’s desertion or failure to provide are required, was passed at the first session of the territorial legislature for the people here before there was any railroad in this state or modern means of transportation, when the laws of some other states did not require as long a residence; and when there was no anticipation that people would come to this state for the purpose of obtaining divorces. Long after the enactment of our law requiring six months’ residence Indiana allowed divorce actions to be instituted in the county in which the plaintiff was a bona fide resident, without requiring any specified period.
It could be contended with as much force that the six months’ requirement in the original act is void as that the classification requiring one year under certain circumstances is unconstitutional. Classifications similar in principle are common in other states. Under certain circumstances one year’s residence is required before filing suit for divorce in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, NewMexico, NewYork, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, unless personal service is made, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and Nevada — 33 states — and Porto Rico. Two years is required in Florida, Indiana, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Vermont — 8 states — and in Hawaii. Three years’ residence is required in Alabama, Connecticut, and the District of Columbia. In Massachusetts a residence of five years is required, unless the parties were inhabitants at the time of marriage, and libelant has lived in the state three years. A residence of six months is required in Idaho. Louisiana has a provision in relation to marriages having been solemnized in the state. . In Delaware bona ficle residence is required, and divorces are not granted if the cause accrued in another state, and petitioner was a nonresident at the time, unless for limited causes recognized by the laws of the state.
The constitution of South Carolina of 1868 provides that: “Divorces from the bonds of matrimony shall not be allowed but by the judgment of a court, as shall be prescribed by law.” (Article 14, sec. 5.)
In 1895 the constitution of that state was amended so as to provide that: “Divorces from the bonds of matri
In Texas formerly only six months’ residence was required; but an amendment approved April 1, 1913, provides that no suit for divorce shall be maintained in the courts of that state, unless the petitioner shall: “Be an actual, bona fide inhabitant of the state for a period of twelve months, and shall reside in the county where the suit is filed six months; provided, that such suit shall not be heard or divorce granted before the expiration of thirty days after the same is filed; * * * provided further, that in addition to the grounds for divorce now provided by statute, that where any husband and wife have lived without-cohabitation for as long as ten years, the same shall be sufficient grounds for divorce.”
In South Carolina, where divorce is not allowed for any cause, and in New York, where it may be obtained only for adultery, if the husband is about to kill his wife, and does kill another person who intercedes to defend her, and is sent to prison for life, she can obtain no relief .from the bonds of matrimony.
A few of the states have passed eugenic laws prohibiting the marriage of persons afflicted with certain incurable, contagious, or transmissible diseases.
Similarly to ours, many of the states have classifications based on alternative conditions which in certain instances make the one year’s residence unnecessary. For instance, a residence of one year is required in Colorado, unless the act was committed in the state, or one of the parties resided in the state at the time; three years in Connecticut, unless the cause arose after removal to the state; in Illinois one year, unless the offense was committed in the state; in Kentucky one year, unless the act was committed while the plaintiff was a resident of the state; in Maine one year, unless the plaintiff resided in the state when the cause accrued, or the parties were married in the state; in Michigan there must, be a residence of two years, if the cause arose out of the state; in Minnesota one year, except where adultery was committed in the
In most of the states causes for divorce are substantially the same as in Nevada. The draft of an act to make uniform the law regulating divorce and' the annulment of marriage, prepared by the committee of the American Bar Association, and recommended to the commissioners on uniform state laws, designates causes' for the dissolution of marriage substantially the same as the ones contained in our statute, excepting that our clause relating to the neglect of the husband to provide for the wife is omitted, and two years’ desertion, instead of one, and habitual drunkenness for two years, instead of drunkenness which incapacitates from contributing the proper share to the support of the family, are required. In the proposed uniform act it is provided that two years’ residence is necessary in order to give jurisdiction, except when the cause is adultery or bigamy, or there are certain other classified circumstances. That the various states may make such classifications and require this or any desired length of residence does not appear to have been questioned by the eminent lawyers and jurists constituting the committee preparing and recommending the act and composing the American Bar Association.
As there were no ecclesiastical courts in this country, divorces were granted by special act of the legislature, and later in most states under general statutory provisions. As Congress has only such powers as are specifically granted or implied under the provisions of the constitution of the United States, and as these do not embrace divorce, and all legislative powers not granted to Congress are reserved to the legislatures of the various states, except as inhibited by some provision of the state constitution, and as there is no inherent or inherited power in the courts of this country to grant divorces, it follows that our tribunals have no jurisdiction or authority in regard to divorces, except such as may be conferred upon them by the legislature, which has power to pass general and special laws, except as prohibited by some constitutional provisions. The law favors marriage as the most important of the domestic relations, but allows its dissolution only under such restrictions as the legislature may deem best for the public welfare.
In Hood v. State, 56 Ind. 263, 26 Am. Rep. 21, it was held that a decree of divorce rendered in a state where neither of the parties lived at the time of rendition is
“And this decision of the Supreme Court of Indiana is in accordance with the unbroken current of authority. (2 Bishop’s Marriage & Divorce, sec. 144.) And where the judgment granting the divorce does not appear to be void upon its face, it may be shown to be void by evidence aliunde. (Hoffman v. Hoffman, 46 N. Y. 30, 33, 7 Am. Rep. 299; Kerr v. Kerr, 41 N. Y. 272; Borden v. Fitch, 15 Johns. N. Y. 121, 141, 8 Am. Dec. 225; Leith v. Leith, 39 N. H. 20; Pollard v. Wegener, 13 Wis. 569, 576.) And indeed any judgment from a sister state, void for want of j urisdiction, may be shown to be void in any proceeding, direct or collateral, and by evidence dehors the record, provided that the record itself does not show the invalidity of the judgment upon its face. (Thompson v. Whitman, 18 Wall. 457, 21 L. Ed. 897; Knowles v. Gaslight Co., 19 Wall. 58, 22 L. Ed. 70; Rape v. Heaton, 9 Wis. 328, 76 Am. Dec. 269; Ward v. Price, 25 N. J. Law, 225; Aldrich v. Kinney, 4 Conn. 380, 10 Am. Dec. 151; Starbuck v. Murray, 5 Wend. N. Y. 148, 156, 21 Am. Dec. 172; Shumway v. Stillman, 6 Wend. N. Y. 447, 452; Hall v, Williams, 6 Pick. Mass. 232, 237, 17 Am. Dec. 356; Carleton v. Bickford, 13 Gray, Mass. 591, 74 Am. Dec. 652; Pollard v. Baldwin, 22 Iowa, 328; Norwood v. Cobb, 15 Tex. 500, 24 Tex. 551.)”
In Howell v. Howell, 87 Kan. 389, 124 Pac. 168, Ann. Cas. 1913e, 429, the court said: “Under these sections a party asking a divorce must, in any event, have been an actual resident, in good faith, of the state one year preceding the filing of his petition. The Howells, it seems, had not resided in Kansas the required time, and hence the court had no jurisdiction of the divorce proceeding.”
In Nicholas v. Maddox, 52 La. Ann. 1493, 27 South. 966, cases are cited supporting the statement of the court that it has always been held in Louisiana that a husband or wife who acquires a domicile in that state
In McConnell v. McConnell, 167 Mo. App. 680, 151 S.W. 175, it was held that under an act providing that an action for divorce should be had in the county where the plaintiff resides, and declaring that no person shall be entitled to a divorce who has not resided in the state for a year next before the filing of the petition, unless the offense complained of is committed within the state, the court had no jurisdiction of a suit for divorce by a nonresident husband for an act committed by the wife in the state while residing there.
In Bechtel v. Bechtel, 101 Minn. 511, 112 N. W. 883, 12 L. R. A. n. s. 1100, it was held that actual residence is necessary to give jurisdiction; and the note reviews numerous cases so holding.
In Rumping v. Rumping, 36 Mont. 39, 91 Pac. 1057, 12 L. R. A. n. s. 1197, 12 Ann. Cas. 1090, it was held that residence must be shown to give the court jurisdiction.
In Andrews v. Andrews, 188 U. S. 14, 23 Sup. Ct. 237, 47 L. Ed. 366, it was held that the state has .exclusive j urisdiction over its citizens concerning the marriage tie and its dissolution, that the appearance of a nonresident defendant does not invest the court with jurisdiction of a suit for divorce instituted by a person who has no bona fide domicile within the state, and that the state may forbid the enforcement within its borders of a decree of divorce procured by its own citizens in another state while retaining their domicile in the prohibiting state. (Haddock v. Haddock, 201 U. S. 562, 26 Sup. Ct. 525, 50 L. Ed. 867, 5 Ann. Cas. 1; Bell v. Bell, 181 U. S. 175, 21 Sup. Ct. 551, and note under this case in 45 L. Ed. 804.)
In Barber v. Barber, 21 How. (62 U. S.) 582, 16 L. Ed. 226, the United States Supreme Court disclaimed any jurisdiction in the courts of the United States upon the subject of divorce, but held that the parties to a decree of divorce are bound by the state court.having jurisdiction over the parties.
In Pugh v. Pugh, 25 S. D. 7, 124 N. W. 959, 32 L. R. A. n. s. 954, it was held that an act requiring the plaintiff in a divorce case to have been an actual resident of the state for one year and the county within which the action was commenced for three months next preceding the commencement of the action is within the powers reserved by the state, and not in conflict with any provision of the constitution of the United States or of the state. The law was held not in conflict with the provision in the constitution of the State of South Dakota that: “No law shall be passed granting to any citizen, class of citizens, or corporation, privileges or immunities which upon the same terms shall not equally apply to all citizens or corporations.”
In Tiffany’s Persons and Domestic Relations (2d ed.), sec. 98, it is said: “Our courts have jurisdiction to entertain and grant suits for divorce only where such j urisdiction has been expressly conferred upon them by statute. It is a general rule that the jurisdiction of proceedings for a divorce depends on the domicile of the parties, irrespective of the place of marriage, and without reference to the place where the offense for which the divorce is sought was committed. To give the court jurisdiction, at least one of the parties must be domiciled in the state or territory where the action is brought, and, if neither party is domiciled in the state, the court has in fact no jurisdiction.”
In an article on control of marriage and divorce in a law publication for June, 1914, it is said: “Jurisdiction and power to dissolve the marriage relation by divorce is purely statutory, throughout all portions of the United States, and the statutory power to enact statutes specifying causes or ground, procedure, and length of domicile required to confer jurisdiction, rests with the legislative bodies of each state.”
The case of Maynard v. Hill, 125 U. S. 190, 8 Sup. Ct. 723, 31 L. Ed. 654, on appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Washington, determined in 1888 by the Supreme Court of the United States, which is the final arbiter of questions relating to the federal constitution, is conclusive against the contention that a special legislative divorce act infringes rights guaranteed by that instrument. The question involved was the validity of an act of the territorial legislature which simply provided; “That the bonds of matrimony heretofore existing between D. S. Maynard and Lydia A. Maynard be, and the same are hereby, dissolved.”
It was alleged in the complaint that no cause existed for the divorce; that no notice was given to the wife of any application by the husband for a divorce or pendency of the bill in the legislature; that she had no knowledge of the passage of the act until July, 1853; that at the time she was not within, and that she never became a resident of, the territory, and never acquiesced in or consented to the act; that the legislative assembly was without authority to pass the act; and that the same was void, and did not divorce the parties. Although such a
"Marriage, as creating the most important relation in life, as having more to do with the morals and civilization of a people than any other institution, has always been subject to the control of the legislature. That body prescribes the age at which parties may contract to marry, the procedure or form essential to constitute marriage, the duties and obligations it creates, its effects upon the property rights of both, present and prospective, and the acts which may constitute grounds for its dissolution.
" * * * Says Bishop, in his Treatise on Marriage and Divorce: 'The fact that at the time of the settlement of this country legislative divorces were common, competent, and valid in England, whence our jurisprudence was derived, makes them conclusively so here, except where an invalidity is directly or indirectly created by a written constitution binding the legislative power.’ (Section 664.) Says Cooley, in his Treatise on Constitutional Limitations: 'The granting of divorces from the bonds of matrimony was not confided to the courts in England, and from the earliest days the colonial and state legislatures in this country have assumed to possess the same power over the subject which was possessed by the parliament, and from time to time they have passed special laws declaring a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony in special cases. ’ (Page 110.) Says Kent, in his Commentaries: 'During the period of our colonial government, for more than one hundred years preceding the Revolution, no divorce took place in the colony of New York, and for many years after New York became an independent state there was not any lawful*237 mode of dissolving a marriage in the lifetime of the parties but by a special act of the legislature. ’ (Volume 2, 97.) The same fact is stated in numerous decisions of the highest courts of the states. Thus in Cronise v. Cronise, 54 Pa. 260, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said: 'Special divorce laws are legislative acts. This power has been exercised from the earliest period by the legislature of the province, and by that of the state, under the constitutions of 1776 and 1790. The continued exercise of the power, after the adoption of the constitution of 1790, cannot be accounted for, except on the ground that all men, learned and unlearned, believed it to be a legitimate exercise of legislative power. This belief is further strengthened by the fact that no judicial decision has been made against it. Communis error facit jus would be sufficient to support it; but it stands upon the higher ground of contemporaneous and continued construction of the people of their own instrument. ’
"In Crane v. Meginnis, 1 Gill & J. (Md.) 474, 19 Am. Dec. 237, the Supreme Court of Maryland said: 'Divorces in this state from the earliest times have emanated from the general assembly, and can now be viewed in no other light than as regular exertions of the legislative power. ’
"In Starr v. Pease, 8 Conn. 451, decided in 1831, the question arose before the Supreme Court of Connecticut as to the validity of a legislative divorce under the constitution of 1818, which provided for an entire separation of the legislative and judicial departments. The court, after stating that there had been a law in force in that state on the subject of divorces, passed one hundred and thirty years before, which provided for divorces on four grounds, said, speaking by Mr. Justice Daggett: 'The law has remained in substance the same as it was when enacted in 1667. During all this period the legislature has interfered like the parliament of Great Britain, and passed special acts of divorce a vinculo matrimonii; and at almost every session since the constitution of the United States went into operation, now forty-two years,*238 and for thirteen years of the existence of the constitution of Connecticut, such acts have been, in multiplied cases, passed and sanctioned by the constituted authorities of our state. We are not at liberty to inquire into the wisdom of our existing law on this subject, nor into the expediency of such frequent interference by the legislature. We can only inquire into the constitutionality of the act under consideration. The power is not prohibited either by the constitution of the United States or by that of the state. ’ * * *
" The same doctrine is declared in numerous other cases, and positions similar to those taken against the validity of the act of the legislative assembly of the territory, that it was beyond the competency of a legislature to dissolve the bonds of matrimony, have been held untenable. These decisions justify the conclusion that the division of the government into three departments and the implied inhibition through that cause upon the legislative department to exercise judicial functions was neither intended nor understood to exclude legislative control over the marriage relation. In most of the states the same legislative practice on the subject has prevailed since the adoption of their constitutions as before, which, as Mr. Bishop observes, may be regarded as a contemporaneous construction that the power thus exercised for many years was rightly exercised. * * * We are therefore justified in holding — more, we are compelled to hold — that the granting of divorces was a rightful subject of legislation according to the prevailing judicial opinion of the country, and the understanding of the profession, at the time the organic act of Oregon was passed by Congress, when either of the parties divorced was at the time a resident within the territorial jurisdiction of the legislature.
"* * * As was said by Chief Justice Marshall in the Dartmouth College case, 17 U. S. (4 Wheat.) 519, 4 L. Ed. 629, not by way of judgment, but in answer to objections urged to positions taken: 'The provision of the constitution never has been understood to embrace other*239 contracts than those which respect property or some object of value, and confer rights which may be asserted in a court of justice. It never has been understood to restrict the general right of the legislature to legislate on the subject of divorces.’
" * * * When the contract to marry is executed by the marriage, a relation between the parties is created which they cannot change. Other contracts may be modified, restricted, or enlarged, or entirely released upon the consent of the parties. Not so with marriage. The relation once formed, the law steps in and holds the parties to various obligations and liabilities. It is an institution, in the maintenance of which in its purity the public is deeply interested, for it is the foundation of the family, and of society, without which there would be neither civilization nor progress. This view is well expressed by the Supreme Court of Maine in Adams v. Palmer, 51 Me. 481, 483. Said that court, speaking by Chief Justice Appleton: 'When the contracting parties have entered into the married state, they have not so much entered into a contract as into a new relation, the rights, duties, and obligations of which rest not upon their agreement, but upon the general law of the state, statutory or common, which defines and prescribes those rights, duties, and obligations. They are of law, not of contract. It was of contract that the relation should be established; but, being established, the power of the parties as to its extent or duration is at an end. Their rights under it are determined by the will of the sovereign as evidenced by law. They can neither be modified nor changed by any agreement of parties. It is a relation for life, and the parties cannot terminate it at any shorter period by virtue of any 'contract they may make. The reciprocal rights, arising from this relation, so long as it continues, are much as the law determines from time to time, and none other.’ And again: 'It is not, then, a contract within the meaning of the clause of the constitution which prohibits the impairing the obligation of contracts. It is, rather, a social relation, like that of parent and child,*240 the obligations of- which arise, not from the consent of concurring minds, but are the creation of the law itself; a relation the most important, as affecting the happiness of individuals, the first step from barbarism to incipient civilization, the purest tie of social life, and the true basis of human progress.’ * * * And the chief justice cites, in support of this view, the case of Maguire v. Maguire, 7 Dana(Ky.) 181, 183, and Ditson v. Ditson, 4 R. I. 101. In the first of these the Supreme Court of Kentucky said that marriage was more than a contract; that it was the most elementary and useful of all the social relations, was regulated and controlled by the sovereign power of the state, and could not, like mere contracts, be dissolved by thé mutual consent of the contracting parties, but might be abrogated by the sovereign will whenever the public good or justice to both parties, or either of the parties, would thereby be subserved; that being more than a contract, and depending especially upon the sovereign will, it was not embraced by the constitutional inhibition of legislative acts impairing the obligation of contracts.”
If, contrary to the doctrine universally recognized in other states and in foreign civilized countries, citizens of other states, without obtaining a domicile here, were entitled to apply for divorce in our courts under the provisions of the federal constitution granting citizens of other states equal protection of the laws, the same condition would exist in all the other states, for the federal
There is a distinction between citizenship and residence, and the rights of citizens and residents are often different. Citizens of the United States are native-born and foreigners who have been naturalized according to the laws of the United States after five years’ residence. Even the rights of citizens are not always the same. Under the constitution, male persons over 21 years of age, who are citizens of the United States, and who have resided in this state six months, are entitled to vote and hold office, and females who have resided in the state one year are eligible to the offices of superintendent of schools and school trustee. In this and many other states females, although citizens and residents for the period required for males, are not allowed to vote, and in other states foreigners who were residents have been allowed the elective franchise. The qualifications prescribed by the state and federal constitutions relating to citizens and electors have no reference to divorce, a status pertaining to the internal affairs of the state and under the control of the lawmaking power, except as restricted or provided by the constitution. Under the rights assured to the citizen by the constitution, none in relation to divorce is guaranteed or specified.
No rights by implication follow from that document, except such as existed or were understood when it was adopted. For illustration, the constitution provides that "the right of trial by jury shall be secured to all, and remain inviolate forever.” This insures only the right of trial by jury in ordinary civil and criminal actions as it existed at the time the constitution was adopted, but does not guarantee the right of trial by jury in an equity case (Barton v. Barbour, 104 U. S. 126, 26 L. Ed.
As the amendment does not relate to the cause for divorce, but to the residence required before institution of suit, it may be considered as a matter of practice. Statutes extending or shortening the periods within which actions may be brought have often been held to apply, to contracts existing or executed prior to the passage of the statute, and not to be unconstitutional when they shorten the time if they allow a reasonable period for the commencement of suit.
Many religious people regard marriage as a sacrament. Our statute provides: "That marriage, so far as its validity in law is concerned, is a civil contract, to which the consent of the parties capable in law of contracting, is essential. ” (Rev. Laws, sec. 2338.)
In his work on Marriage and Divorce (6thed.),Mr. Bishop says: "An executed marriage contract, which is that whereon any divorce operates, is not a contract. It is
"Marriage, being much more than a contract, and depending essentially on the sovereign will, is, not, as we presume, embraced by the constitutional interdiction of legislative acts impairing the obligation of contracts. The obligation is created by the public law, subject to the public will, and not to that of the parties. That it is not within this constitutional provision may be deemed now to be settled doctrine.” (Section. 8.)
In his work on Marriage, Divorce, and Separation, he states:
" Competent parties have always the law’s approbation in marrying; but for divorce it requires a cause which itself has approved. If, therefore, a statute authorizes divorce for a dereliction specified, it should in reason be applied equally to- past as to future transactions; and so the courts will apply it, if nothing appears in the terms to forbid. For the same reason it is applicable to past marriages the same as to future ones; consequently, also, it is not an infringement of constitutional guaranties. In other words, the status of marriage, though it deeply affects the individual parties, is treated by the law as a public interest, to be molded, modified, or destroyed by the public demand.” (Section 1492.)
In Conner v. Elliot, 18 How. 591, 15 L. Ed. 497, the Supreme Court of the United States held that no privileges are secured to citizens in the several states by section 2, art. 4, of the federal constitution, except those which belong to citizenship, and that marital rights attached to the contract of marriage are not included in such privileges.
As the parties were not residents of the state at the time the cause for divorce accrued, and neither was a bona fide resident of the state for one full year next preceding the commencement of the action, as required by the statute, the court was without jurisdiction, and the learned district judge properly refused to make an order for publication of summons.
The application for the writ is denied.
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing
Rehearing denied.