after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The question in this case is of the validity of the divorce obtained by the husband in Pennsylvania. No valid divorce from the bond of matrimony can - be decreed on constructive service by the courts of a State in which neither party is domiciled. And by the law of Pennsylvania every petitioner for a divorce
*178
must have had a
bona fide
residence within, the State for one year next before the filing of the petition. Penn. Stats. March 13, 1815, c. 109, §11; May 8, 1854, c. 629, § 2;
Hollister
v.
Hollister,
6 Penn. St. 449. The recital in the proceedings in Pennsylvania of the facts necessary to show jurisdiction may be contradicted.
Thompson
v.
Whitman,
The death of the husband, since this case was argued, of itself terminates the marriage relation, and, if nothing more had been involved in the judgment below, would have abated the writ of error, because the whole subject of litigation would be at an end, and no, power can dissolve a marriage which has already been dissolved by act of God.
Stanhope
v.
Stanhope,
(1886) 11 Prob. Div. 103, 111. But the judgment below, rendered after appearance and answer of the husband, is not only for a divorce, but for a large sum of alimony, and for costs. The wife’s rights to such alimony and costs, though depending on the same grounds as the divorce, are not impaired by the husband’s death, should not be affected by the delay in entering judgment here
*179
while this court has held the case under advisement, and may be preserved by entering judgment
nunc pro tuno,
as of the day when it was argued.
Downer
v.
Howard,
(1878) 44 Wisconsin, 82;
Francis
v.
Francis,
(1879) 31 Grattan, 283;
Danforth
v.
Danforth,
(1884) 111 Illinois, 236;
Mitchell
v.
Overman,
(1880)
Judgment affirmed nunc pro tunc, as of April 26, 1900.'
