Ammermuller v. Ammermuller

181 Misc. 98, 45 N.Y.S.2d 654
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 181 Misc. 98 (Ammermuller v. Ammermuller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammermuller v. Ammermuller, 181 Misc. 98, 45 N.Y.S.2d 654 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

Eder, J.

Action for absolute divorce. The parties were married in the city of New York on or about May 27, 1931, and continued to reside here until January 4,1943, when the defendant left for Nevada, arriving at Reno on January 8th. She thereupon instituted an action against this plaintiff for divorce in the Second Judicial District Court, Washoe County, and obtained a decree of divorce dated April 3, 1943, and left Reno two days later; she thereafter married one Walter A. Hansen in Connecticut on May 11, 1943, and has ever since cohabited with him as husband and wife, living with him in that relationship at their home on Park Avenue, Manhattan, New York City, and presently in the borough of Queens, New York City.

Plaintiff charges this relationship to be an adulterous one for which reason he seeks a decree of divorce. The defendant has answered denying the material allegations of the complaint and has interposed a separate defense that on April 3, 1943, she obtained in the Second Judicial District Court of Washoe County, Nevada, a judgment in her favor and against the plaintiff dissolving the marriage existing between them and that they were forever released from the duties and obligations thereof and restored to their original status of unmarried persons, and the dismissal of the complaint is prayed for.

In the Nevada suit brought by the defendant, the plaintiff here (as defendant there) was not served with any process in that State but in lieu of publication was personally served in this State; he neither appeared nor answered in the Nevada suit; judgment went for plaintiff in that action upon inquest.

It is the claim and contention of the defendant that under the full faith and credit clause of the national Constitution as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court in Williams v. North Carolina (317 U. S. 287) this court is obligated to recognize the judgment of divorce of the Nevada court obtained by the defendant as a fully valid judgment binding on this plaintiff and hence as a bar to plaintiff’s maintaining this action.

I do not share this view and for the reasons currently stated it is my opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to the decree of divorce sought against the defendant.

The Supreme Court of Nevada, in Latterner v. Latterner (51 Nev. 285) and Lamb v. Lamb (57 Nev. 421), held that where in an action for divorce it appears that the domicile was acquired by the plaintiff for the sole purpose of instituting such suit the District Court is without jurisdiction to render a valid judgment of divorce; that in acquiring a domicile the party must do so with the intent that it shall be permanent in char[100]*100acter or for an indefinite time, but it must not and cannot be acquired solely for the purpose of instituting suit for divorce. If in such circumstances the District Court of Nevada is without jurisdiction to render a valid decree of divorce, it would seem to follow, indubitably, that the judgment rendered by such tribunal is null and void and of no effect.

Section 1 of article IV of the United States Constitution declares that ‘ ‘ Full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State.” It is upon this mandate that the defendant relies to vitalize the Nevada decree of divorce and under which she seeks to compel its recognition as a valid judgment by the courts of this State. This provision obviously relates to and means a valid judgment only; for in the construction and interpretation of this provision of our Federal organic law the settled and now elementary rule is that a judgment obtained without jurisdiction in the court to render it, or which is procured by fraud, does not come within this provision and need not be given recognition by the courts of another State when such fact appears or is made to appear to their satisfaction.

Unless the decision made in Williams v. North Carolina (317 U. S. 287, supra) has departed from this firmly imbedded and uniformly followed rule and has accomplished a revolutionary change, then it is my view that the judgment of divorce rendered by the District Court of Washoe County, Nevada, may be collaterally assailed and shown to be the result of fraud or that it is void for lack of jurisdiction of said court to render the judgment, and this without offending or violating the aforementioned provision of the national Constitution.

Upon examination of the Williams case I find nothing in the prevailing opinion of the court which overrides the existing rule that the full faith and credit clause does not estop the court in which it is sought to assert the judgment of the foreign court from inquiring into and investigating its validity to ascertain and determine if it is entitled to be given valid recognition under that provision. Whatever sweeping change the majority ruling in the Williams case may have made, I interpret that it left unimpaired and unaffected the previously existing rule to which I have alluded.

The action of the Supreme Court in the Williams case was revolutionary in pointedly discarding the rule which it had proclaimed in Haddock v. Haddock (201 U. S. 562) to the effect that mere domicile within the State of one party to a marriage does not give the courts of that State jurisdiction to render [101]*101a decree of divorce enforcible in all the other States by virtue of the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution against a nonresident who did not appear and was only constructively served with notice of the pendency of the action and which granted a divorce upon grounds not recognized in such other State.

In the instant case the bona fides of the defendant’s domicile in Nevada as bearing on the jurisdiction of the District Court to render a valid decree of divorce has been put directly in issue by virtue of the separate defense which the defendant has interposed to this action and her testimony respecting her purported domicile there; but the defendant’s position with respect thereto is that the decision in the Williams case precludes this court from inquiring into that feature. It is to be noted that the bona fides of the defendant’s domicile in Nevada was not an issue litigated in her divorce suit there, for, as I have said, the plaintiff here neither appeared nor answered in that action.

In the Williams case it was assumed by the Supreme Court that the petitioners had a bona fide domicile in Nevada, not that such domicile was a sham; no proof of fraud m the acquisition of domicile in Nevada was adduced and though suspicion was present it was not enough to rise to the dignity of proof of fraud. The opinion of the court makes the following significant and circumspect observation (page 302): But the question for us is a limited one. In the first place, we repeat that in this case we must assume that petitioners had a bona fide domicil in Nevada, not that the Nevada domicil was a sham. We thus have no question on the present record whether a divorce decree granted by the courts of one state to a resident, as distinguished, from a domiciliary, is entitled to full faith and credit in another state.

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Bluebook (online)
181 Misc. 98, 45 N.Y.S.2d 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammermuller-v-ammermuller-nysupct-1943.