Cox v. Cox

44 A.2d 92, 137 N.J. Eq. 241, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 27, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 92 (Cox v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Cox, 44 A.2d 92, 137 N.J. Eq. 241, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 429 (N.J. 1945).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brogan, Chief-Justice.

In this matrimonial case the defendant-husband appeals from a decree of the Court of Chancery which struck down a foreign divorce decree obtained by him as “null, void and of no force or effect in this state;” the appeal also challenges the decree for support and maintenance of a daughter of the marriage.

The complainant-wife, Yiola E. Cox, filed bill for separate maintenance in our Court of Chancery on September 12th, 1943. The husband, Wilbur Harry Cox, having left this state on July 20th, 1943, arrived at Beno, Nevada, on July 23d, 1943. After the expiration of about six weeks, i. e., on September 7th, 1943, he filed a complaint in Nevada, praying absolute divorce which was granted him on October 15th, 1943.

On December 8th, 1943, the wife filed a supplement to her bill, praying that the husband’s Nevada decree be adjudged to be of no force and effect in this state. Meanwhile the husband had married one Mildred Hamilton in the State of New York. In answer to the wife’s bill for maintenance the husband set up the Nevada decree. In answer to the wife’s supplement to her bill, Mr. Cox asserts that prior to his divorce action in Nevada he had been a "bona fide resident” of that state; that the complainant had notice by publication of his pending action and that his decree of divorce was in all particulars valid and effectual. Whether, in the facts and circumstances attending the matter, the foreign decree is valid is the principal question in the case.

These are the facts: Wilbur Harry Cox has been in the employ of the Board of Education of the Borough of Hillside *243 in Union County for twenty-three years and at the time this cause was heard was a high school principal in that district. The parties were married in 1925 and lived together as husband and wife until July, 1943. About 1935 he became very ill and had surgical attention. Thereafter he claims his wife’s attitude towards him changed. On her part this is denied, it is clear, however, that their home life was not peaceful. The details are not important here.. It is, however, not open to dispute that the husband, in 1943, had lost all regard for his wife and that he had developed a marked infatuation for another woman whom he married after his Nevada decree. The exhibits in the case remove all doubt as to the situation that really existed between these people. In the school vacation period of 1943, Mr. Cox made advance application to the supervising principal of Hillside for an additional three or four weeks of vacation. The request was granted. On September 18th, 1943, Mr. Cox again wrote to the supervising principal saying that he had had poor health during the summer and requested a leave of absence. This letter was mailed from East Roselle, New Jersey. Mr. Cox stated in the letter that he “returned” to Hillside to be assured “that school was opening successfully.” Thus it appears that he had been in Reno, Nevada, since July 23d, 1943; that his complaint for divorce in that state was filed on September 7th; that on September 12th he returned to New Jersey and on the following day resumed his duties at the high school, after which he made the request for sick leave mentioned above. Under the rules of the Board of Education Mr. Cox was entitled to a certain number of days off each year as “sick leaves;” these “leaves” are cumulative; and because of that circumstance it appears that he had a legal right to absent himself from school work until November 9th, 1943 (a matter of about forty days) upon supplying to the Board a doctor’s certificate to support the absence; but that for any leave beyond that he was required to make an appropriate application to the Board of Education. It appears then that Mr. Cox carried on his duties at the high school on September 14th and 15th; that he obtained his physician’s certificate of illness on September 20th or there *244 abouts; and that he returned to the State of Nevada on September 29th. The hearing on his petition for divorce at Reno, Nevada, took place on October 15th, when he obtained a favorable, final decree. Ten or eleven day's thereafter, according to his own testimony, he left the State of Nevada and on November 8th resumed his duties as principal of the high school.

In corroboration or support of the legitimacy of his alleged change of domicile to Nevada and his intention to remain there, Mr. Cox testified that while there he endeavored to find employment as a teacher in the school system of that state and that he sought employment in the International Correspondence School. As a matter of fact, there was no vacancy in any school in the particular district in which he made inquiry. He called on the Deputy State Superintendent of Schools but once, on October 25th, 1943, at which time he stated that he was on “sick leave” from his post in Hillside High School. The learned advisory master found that the domicile which Mr. Cox claimed to have established in Nevada was a mere pretense and therefore that his decree obtained in such fashion possessed no validity in this state.

This determination is attacked by the appellant on two grounds, first, as an unjustifiable fact conclusion and, second, as a denial of the full faith and credit to the judgment of another state, guaranteed by the federal constitution, article 4, section I.

In support of the first point — that Mr. Cox established a legal domicile in Nevada — the argument is that his wife had persistently “nagged” and “berated”' him and on one occasion had threatened him. These accusations were denied, but even if they were not they would have but little bearing on whether the husband went to Nevada with the intention of staying there permanently and with no intention whatever of returning to this state. Por the intention to effect a change in domicile must, of course, be unqualified and not subject to conditions of any kind. Sprague v. Sprague, 331 N. J. Eq. 104.

It is further pointed out as evidence of his intention to establish a domicile in Nevada that the defendant resigned his post in the Masonic Lodge, resigned as chairman on the com *245 mittee of the American Legion, resigned as president in the Union County Teachers’ Association, and that he told his friends that he was going to Nevada, never to return to New Jersey. The testimony, however, concerning his resignation from some of these offices suggests that he relinquished them for reasons of health. Whatever he said at various times about not returning to New Jersey finds no real corroboration in the testimony of any witness. It is not persuasive corroboration to make a self-serving declaration to another only to have that other repeat it at a time when it might be helpful. The course of conduct and the particular acts of Mr. Cox make better evidence of his intention — which is always an issue of fact — in the matter of his domicile than what he told others his intention was. The woman with whom he boarded in the Heno district testified that he lived in her home from July 24th to September 9th, 1943, when he left. On his return to Nevada, on September 29th, apparently he lived elsewhere.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 92, 137 N.J. Eq. 241, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-cox-nj-1945.