Commonwealth v. Parker

59 Pa. Super. 74, 1915 Pa. Super. LEXIS 24
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 24, 1915
DocketAppeal, No. 88
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 59 Pa. Super. 74 (Commonwealth v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Parker, 59 Pa. Super. 74, 1915 Pa. Super. LEXIS 24 (Pa. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

The appellant filed his petition in the municipal court setting forth that, by virtue of a desertion proceeding theretofore begun by his former wife, the court of quarter sessions of the same county had made an order or decree directing him to pay a certain weekly sum for the support of his said wife. The petition further averred that for a considerable time after the entry of the said order he had paid the installments as they fell due, and he had then been awarded a decree of absolute divorce from his former wife, by virtue of which the marital relation theretofore existing between them had been severed and dissolved. Further alleging that he had discharged all of the payments imposed on him by the said order down to the date of the entry of the decree of divorce, he prayed that the said order directing the payment of the weekly sum to his former wife be vacated and set aside. Manifestly, if the averments of the petition were duly established, the prayer of it should have been granted.

In support of the important averment in his petition, the appellant attached thereto a duly exemplified copy of the record of the second judicial court of the state of Nevada, in an action for divorce, wherein the appellant was the plaintiff and the appellee the defendant. .The authenticity of this record is not in any way impeached. If there were nothing else in the case to prevent full faith and credit being given to its judgment, the case of the appellant would have been made out. The relator then came into the municipal court and filed her answer to the petition in which she avers she received through the mails a paper • purporting to be a notice of the institution by her husband of the action for divorce against her in the courts of Nevada. She further alleged that such court never had any jurisdiction of her person; that she had, at the time her husband left this st^te, a legal domicile therein which she had never changed; that her husband had never been a bona fide [77]*77resident of the state of Nevada; but that notwithstanding these facts she had prepared and filed in the Nevada court an answer denying all of the charges contained in the libel and asserting that her husband was not a bona fide resident of that state, etc. After hearing on the bill and answer, the learned court below determined the relator had never submitted herself to the jurisdiction of the Nevada court, and, as a consequence, the judgment or decree of that court could have no extraterritorial effect. The prayer of the petition was therefore refused.

There appears to be no dispute about the facts that the parties were citizens of PennsylvariiaTat the ’time of their marriage and the only common domicile they ever had was within that state; that while both were still residents therein it had been judicially determined the husband had neglected or refused to maintain and support his wife, and an order had been made determining the amount he must thereafter weekly pay for the purposes named. When, with the record in this condition, he left this jurisdiction, he could not by his own act bring about a change in the domicile of his wife. Such cases are exceptions to the general rule that the domicile of the wife follows that of her husband. This being true, it is also clear the court of Nevada acquired no jurisdiction of her person because of the service upon her in Pennsylvania, of a notice of the beginning of a suit against her in Nevada, together with a copy of the libel that had been there filed. No service on her in Pennsylvania of the process of the court of a foreign state could import her into the jurisdiction of such court. Necessarily then no judgment or decree of such court, resting on such service only, could have the extraterritorial effect of impairing or destroying her status as a citizen of Pennsylvania.

In Colvin v. Reed, 55 Pa. 375, Mr. Justice Agnew said: “But the law of domicile implies that it is the actual domicile of both of the parties, or was, when the [78]*78offending party left it. In a proceeding to dissolve a-marriage the parties stand upon a level of rights. When the injured party seeks a new domicile, and the domicils are, therefore, actually different, there is no greater reason why the husband’s new domicile should prevail over the wife’s, than that hers should prevail over his. In this aspect justice requires that neither should draw the other within the folds of a foreign jurisdiction.” So in Reel v. Elder, 62 Pa. 308, Mr. Justice Sharswood, citing with approval the language we have just quoted, goes on to say: “Clearly, when it is once determined that a court has not jurisdiction, notice, or even process duly served, cannot give vitality to the judgment it may pronounce. It is null and void, at least, as to any extraterritorial effect.” The doctrine of these cases has been uniformly followed hi a long line of later ones and is now firmly established as the law of this commonwealth. It is clear then that if the wife had chosen to ignore the proceeding in Nevada, the judgment of that court would have been without power to disturb her personal or property rights as a citizen of Pennsylvania.

But it has always been true that one sued in a foreign jurisdiction may voluntarily bring himself within that jurisdiction, and if he does so and the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter litigated, the resulting judgment will be conclusive; and full faith and credit must be given to such judgment in other states by reason of the provision of the federal constitution on that subject. What then was the nature of the answer filed by the wife in the Nevada court and to what extent, if at all, did she by that act submit herself to its jurisdiction? She was under no compulsion to file any answer, but having chosen to do so, she must accept the consequences which the law attaches to such an act. Her answer covers four and one-half printed pages of the paper-book. It begins as follows: “And now comes Sarah E. Parker, the above named defendant, who, [79]*79reserving unto herself all rights, because of the imperfections, deficiencies and uncertainties contained in the bill of complaint filed in the above case, makes answer in the following manner, to wit:” She then proceeds to answer each particular paragraph of the libel. She first denies that the plaintiff was a bona fide resident of Nevada and affirms that he was a fugitive from justice of the state of Pennsylvania where a warrant for his arrest was outstanding, and that he was using his residence in Nevada for the sole purpose of prosecuting the action of divorce. She admits in the next paragraph the averments of fact in the second paragraph of the bill of complaint, to wit, the marriage in Pennsylvania, the fact that no children had been bom, and that there was no community property. She then proceeds through a number of paragraphs to traverse, separately and distinctly, each and every averment of fact asserted in the libel on which the libelant based his application for a decree. Not content with this, she brings forward certain counter charges against her husband, alleging that he was the cause of the various difficulties referred to in the libel. She concludes her answer thus: “Wherefore the defendant prays that this case be dismissed and that no decree be entered annulling the marriage contract between plaintiff and defendant and restoring each to the status of single persons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Pa. Super. 74, 1915 Pa. Super. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-parker-pasuperct-1915.