Baker v. People

22 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 256
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
DocketNo. 2; No. 3
StatusPublished

This text of 22 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 256 (Baker v. People) 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
Baker v. People, 22 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 256 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinions

Talcott, P. J.:

The three several writs, of error in these cases each, brings up; the record- of a.conviction of the- plaintiff'in error, before the-General Session of Cayuga county, for bigamy.

The case distinguished as No. 1. brings up, as a part of the record, an indictment against the plaintiff in error, by the grand-jury of- the county of Cayuga, which; charges that the plaintiff in error on the Sth day of February, in the year 1871, at the-town-of Fremont, in.the State of Ohio, married.one Sallie West,, and that afterwards, on the- 14th day of November, 1,874, and-while he was so married to the said Sallie West, he did feloniously and unlawfully marry and take to wife one Eunice- Nelson,. while the said Sallie West, his former wife,.was then living.-

To this indictment the defendant plead not guilty, and-the case calne on-to be tried, before the said General Sessions of' Cayuga-. [260]*260■county, oil the 23d day of February, in the year 1877.. The bill of exceptions taken on the said trial shows the marriage of the plaintiff in error to the said Sallie West, at Fremont, in the State of Ohio (where the said Sallie West at all times before the said marriage had resided), on the 8th day of February, 1871, and that the said Sallie West had continuouslyresided in the State of Ohio aforesaid, from 1872 until her death, 'which occurred in December, 1876, and that she married one C. H. Murray, about a year before her death, and had a child after her marriage to Murray. That on the 14th day of November, 1874, the plaintiff in error was married to Eunice Nelson, as charged in the indictment.

, The counsel for the plaintiff in error gave evidence tending to-prove that, before the marriage to Eunice Nelson, the plaintiff in error had been informed and.believed that the said Sallie West, to whom he was first married, had obtained a divorce from him, and that the marriage contract between him and the said Sallie (otherwise known as Sarah N.) had been annulled;, and the said plaintiff in error then offered in evidence an exemplified copy of the. proceedings and the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Seneca, in. the State of Ohio, the same being a court of record of that State, showing that .the said Sallie. (or Sarah), on the 30th day of March, 1874, had filed, in the clerk’s office of the said court, her petition, in which she represented that she had been a resident of tlie State of Ohio for a year then last past, and was then a bona fide resident of said county of Seneca, and setting forth her said marriage to the plaintiff in error, then stated in the said petition to be “of parts unknown;” that she cohabited with him at Brooklyn and at Rochester, New York, until 1872, when, in view of. approaching child-birth,, she, at the request of her husband, left Rochester, N. Y.rfor the purpose of remaining with her relatiyes until after her child should be born, and that the plaintiff in error promised ,to follow soon after, so as to be with her in her said confinement; that, in fact, he .has never followed her, nor asked her to return to him, nor has he.advise4 her of his whereabouts, or contributed one cent to her support. The said, petition then charges that her said husband had been guilty-of gross neglect of duty, and has. greatly wronged, the, peü-, [261]*261turner, and prays that the said marriage contract be annulled and set aside, and that she may be divorced from her said husband;; that the care and custody of her child be decreed to her, and that she- may have alimony awarded to. her.

Afterwards, on the 8th day of January, 1874, proof of publication of notice was filed in the clerk's office of said court, which notice is fully set out in the said record, together with the proof of the publication thereof, which shows that it was published, for six weeks successively, immediately prior to the 1st day of June,-1874, in the “ Seneca Advertiser,” a weekly newspaper printed and-of general circulation in the said county of Seneca; and afterwards,: at the June term of said court, in the year 1874, as appears by the said record, the cause came on and was heard ‘upon the petition and testimony, “ upon consideration whereof the court fincl that due notice of the filing and pendency of said petition was given to the said defendant, Francis M. Baker, according to law,” and that the said defendant, Baker, has been guilty of gross neglect of duty to the said plaintiff, as in said petition alleged; and it was, “therefore, adjudged and decreed that the marriage contract heretofore (theretofore) existing between the said parties be, and the same is, hereby set aside and wholly annulled, and the said parties wholly released from the obligations of the same,” etc.

The counsel for the plaintiff in error also offered in evidence the Revised Statutes of Ohio, showing that the proceedings mem tioiied in the said record were regular, and in all respects sufficient to annul the marriage contract between the plaintiff in error and the said Sallie, and that the court had jurisdiction to pronounce such judgment, and that the same was valid and binding between the parties under the laws of Ohio. Parts of the statute are set forth in the record. It appears from an examination of its provisions that the several courts of Common Pleas of said State have the cognizance of granting divorces for various causes, among others, for “ gross neglect of duty,” and authorizing the court to proceed upon publication of the summons, in the manner and for the time shown by the said record of judgment, and providing that all applications for divorce shall be made in the county where the complainant bona fide resides1 at the time of the application, and that he or she must have been a resident of the [262]*262State of Ohio .at least one year next before the filing of his .or her petition.

On this judgment record, accompanied by the statute of said State being offered in evidence, the district attorney objected to their reception, upon the ground that the court in which the judgment was pronounced had no jurisdiction over the defendant in that suit, the plaintiff in error .and the .subject-matter of the action; and the said court thereupon decided that -the evidence was incompetent for any purpose, except .as showing the intent of the defendant, .and received the evidence for that purpose only, to which ruling the counsel for the defendant excepted. At the close of .the .evidence, the .court charged the jury, among other things, “that the divorce obtained by Sallie West, his first wife, fogainst the defendant in the .State of Ohio, will not protect him in this State, although it would protect him in the State of Ohio, and that said Sallie, notwithstanding .such divorce, was still his lawful wife, and the defendant was her husband.” To which charge the defendant, by his counsel, excepted.

There seem to be no question but that, under the laws of Ohio, the court of Common Pleas of Seneca county had jurisdiction of the subject-matter. As to jurisdiction of the person of the plaintiff in error, in an- action of this character, obtained without the Services of process, we are relieved from a minute examination of the numerous cases that have been decided in this State, and elsewhere, by the recent decision of the Court of Appeals, in Hunt v. Hunt (MSS. Court of Appeals; Albany Law Journal, June '22, 1878, p. 421), in which case this whole subject has been Very elaborately considered, and in which that court holds a divorce obtained in Louisana, without service of the process on or voluntary appearance of the defendant, but by the appointment of a curator ad

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22 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-people-nysupct-1878.