Richard Thomas Yery brings this appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Oklahoma County, the Honorable Homer Smith, presiding, dated November 28, 1978. This appealed order awarded judgment against Mr. Yery for unpaid child support from September 1976 to October, 1978 in the amount of $15,600.00, in addition to an arrearage of $10,400.00 for alimony due and unpaid on a principal judgment of $48,- *359 000.00 in favor of the former wife, Ella Katherine Yery. The selfsame order denied appellant’s motion to vacate or modify the original divorce judgment, alleged to be void as issued in absence of jurisdiction over the person of the defendant.
The plaintiff, Ella Katherine Yery, was an Oklahoma resident for three years prior to a trip to Weisbaden, Germany, at which time she married the defendant, Col. Richard Thomas Yery, in June of 1964. The children had been born of the marriage prior to 1972, when the couple were traveling from previous East Coast duty station of Colonel Yery to the West Coast in preparation for a transfer to Taipei, Taiwan. The couple stopped over in Oklahoma and after considering the past difficulties of the parties, plaintiff decided to remain in Oklahoma rather than continue on overseas. At that time, an agreed order for separate maintenance was entered in the District Court of Oklahoma County providing for a total sum of $500.00 per month to be paid to plaintiff. No issue was then raised pertaining to an infirmity in jurisdictional facts or venue.
The plaintiff rented an apartment in Oklahoma City and enrolled the children in a local school, obtained a job within the county, obtained a driver’s license, and registered to vote within Oklahoma County. Appellant regularly paid the above mentioned separate maintenance funds to the plaintiff for thirteen months. In August of 1973, appellant returned to Oklahoma for four or five weeks and lived with the appel-lee as husband and wife for half of that period. The appellant husband was at the time enroute to his next duty station, Van-denberg Air Force Base. The couple decided to go to California and continue to attempt a reconciliation; failing that they agreed the wife would return to Oklahoma and the appellee would continue to provide the separate maintenance funds he had previously contributed. The return to California was made in September of 1973. The reconciliation attempt did not accomplish its goal and the plaintiff then removed herself to Oklahoma City.
The plaintiff thereafter filed her petition for divorce on November 8, 1974, alleging the statutory ground of incompatibility. The record demonstrates clearly that the defendant, Col. Yery, failed to claim the first summons issued. It is included in the record, as yet unopened, correctly addressed and stamped “unclaimed”. Thereafter ensued an unusually complicated effort to effect service upon the Colonel. The difficulties in obtaining service are attested to by affidavits included in the record. While service of process under Calif. Civ. Procedure, T. 5 § 415.20(b) in the normal circumstances would be expeditious, the record compels the conclusion that Col. Yery utilized his position as a legal officer of the Armed Forces of the United States and his rank as full Colonel to evade service of process. The record demonstrates the Colonel instructed his subordinates to threaten process servers with incarceration, and issued an “opinion” that civil process could not be served upon Vandenberg Air Force Base. Despite these difficulties, plaintiff’s counsel obtained service on the Colonel under CCP 415.20(b), providing for service by leaving copies at the usual place of business of the person served in the presence of a person apparently in charge of his office or place of business, at least 18 years of age, who was informed of the general nature of the papers. This service was made by sending a student to the office with a package containing the service papers. An affidavit of plaintiff counsel’s California associate attests to this service, stating the provision of the California Civil Procedure requiring the service agent to notify the party served at the place of business of the general nature of the papers was accomplished in the best available manner, by attaching a written notice to the outside of the package. The attorney’s affidavit states defendant’s threat of incarceration of process servers foreclosed the verbal notification. The California attorney states that under the circumstances of this proceeding, given its surroundings, the written note conveyed the actual knowledge required by the statute.
Once service was accomplished, the case proceeded in the normal manner, the de *360 fendant appeared specially and made a motion to quash the summons, order and purported service on two grounds, those being defective service of process and lack of jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and this cause of action. This motion also alleged venue to be improper. The trial court overruled the motion to quash and plea to jurisdiction in October of 1975. The defendant then applied to this Court for a writ of prohibition, Cause No. 49,007, arguing the method of service in California was improper and there was no subject matter jurisdiction in the District Court of Oklahoma County, in a addition to the absence of jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. The Oklahoma Supreme Court, at that time, assumed jurisdiction over the cause and denied the petitioner’s writ. Thereafter, the defendant demurred to the divorce petition after plaintiff filed a motion for default judgment. Nearly two months later, the defendant’s attorney withdrew from the cause, at the request of the defendant.
Two months later, the trial court issued the decree of divorce which recites that the defendant did not appear for trial and had dismissed his attorney. The date of the decree is the third day of September, 1976.
The record in this appeal reflects no appeal or other post judgment actions were made by the defendant. The next 150 pages of the record reflect no matters other than garnishment proceedings by the former wife against the officer, Colonel Yery. The record reflects precious little success in collecting the funds owed the wife on the unappealed judgment for over two years; indeed until plaintiff filed a “motion to reduce child support arrearage to judgment and to verify alimony judgment arrearage,” the defendant was silent in the record. Then, on November 28,1978, more than two years after judgment, the defendant filed a motion to vacate or modify the District Court judgment of 3 September 1976, alleging exactly the same grounds of infirmity presented to this Court earlier in the petition for writ of prohibition of October, 1975. The District Court heard the motion to vacate and the motion to reduce arrearages to judgment and found that it had jurisdiction over the parties, and therefore denied the motion to vacate. The same journal entry enters judgment for unpaid alimony and child support.
The appellant’s petition in error realleges the same errors as noted at the trial court level in the defendant’s motion to vacate. Those grounds are: that the judgment is void for want of jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and over the subject of the action, and that the District Court erred in refusing to grant defendant’s motion to vacate.
The trial court properly considered the motion to vacate the judgment more than two years after rendition under the grounds listed in that motion. The grounds cited are: mistake of the clerk, irregularity in obtaining a judgment, fraud practiced by the successful party in obtaining the judgment or order. These are causes for vacation under
Appellant’s first proposition in error raised in this appeal from the denial of his motion to vacate relates to the jurisdiction of the Oklahoma court over the person of the defendant. Specifically, the defendant objects to the exercise of jurisdiction over his person, contending his contacts with this state are so minimal that exercise of personal jurisdiction over him in the absence of this minimal contact with the forum state offends the traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. Defendant refers the Court to
Kulko v. Supreme Court of California, etc.,
In
Kulko, supra,
the U. S. Supreme Court determined that the minimum contacts precept described in
International Shoe
was extended to a degree unwarranted by
International
by the Supreme Court of California. The facts of that case are indispensable in illustrating what minimum contact with a forum state is insufficient to allow in personam jurisdiction to be exercised over a defendant. There the husband and wife were married in California during the husband’s three day stopover there prior to overseas military duty in 1959. The wife returned to New York. The husband also returned to New York after his assignment was over, and the couple had two children in New York in 1961 and 1962, residing there until 1972. In the latter year a separation agreement was entered into by the couple in New York. That agreement specified the children were to remain with the father in New York except for a three month summer vacation in California with the mother and set child support to the wife in a yearly amount applicable to those periods which she had custody. Subsequently the wife procured a Haitian divorce incorporating the previously described terms. In 1973 the daughter remained in California on her own request, acquiesced in by the father. The mother arranged for the other child to stay in California two years later. At this point, the mother sought modification of the Haitian decree to award her full custody and to increase the support award accordingly. The appellant appeared specially claiming the state was not warranted
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in exercising in personam jurisdiction over him in the absence of minimal contacts with the forum. The California Supreme Court held the appellant had caused an effect within the state, and personal jurisdiction arising out of that effect was proper, if reasonable. The reasonableness of the action’s prosecution in California was determined to be established because the father had “purposely availed himself of the benefits and protection of California law” by sending the daughter to live with her mother in that jurisdiction. The United States Supreme Court held that under these facts the mere act of sending a child to California to live with its other parent connotes no intent to obtain or secure a benefit in that state that renders the assertion of jurisdiction over the defendant fair. In the course of that opinion the court quoted from
Hanson v. Denckla,
The facts of the case at bar, although similar, are materially different, and from the differences between the instant proceeding and
Kulko, supra,
it is concluded that Col. Yery had contacts with the forum state sufficient to allow in per-sonam jurisdiction to be exercised over him. In
Kulko, supra,
the Supreme Court stated that the controversy involves an agreement which had virtually no connection with the forum. The agreement mentioned was the New York separation agreement incorporated in a Haitian divorce decree which was sought to be entered as a California judgment with modification. In the proceeding before this Court the record demonstrates a voluntary submission to the felicity of the law of domestic relations of this state. The defendant has entered into a separation agreement in the state of Oklahoma prior to the institution of this action. This agreement was incorporated into a judgment of separate maintenance. A more clearly purposeful act indicating that the defendant-appellant has invoked the benefits and protection of the State law of Oklahoma is improbable. That act is in itself a sufficient connection between the defendant and the forum state to fairly require the defendant to defend an action in this forum over substantially the same issues and facts, and which action is itself the final resolution of a controversy foreshadowed by the earlier proceeding. Indeed, in Oklahoma a petition for separate maintenance has been held amendable to pray for a divorce. Thus it is determined here that the defendant has sought the solace of Oklahoma law in this matter and his contact with the forum cannot be said to be too attenuated to support jurisdiction of the Oklahoma Court over him. This single fact distinguishes this action from
Dunn v. Dunn,
Additionally, appellant contends that
Perdue v. Saied,
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The defendant additionally briefs the contention that the judgment of divorce is the product of abuse of the trial court’s legal discretion insofar as the amount of child support, alimony and division of property. As previously discussed, this action is here presented as an appeal from a motion to vacate under
Lastly, the defendant contends that certain provisions of the divorce decree are void on their face, citing
Kune v. Kune,
The judgment of the trial court denying the defendant’s motion to vacate a judgment not demonstrated to be void on its face nor subject to vacation as discussed is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
