Ditson v. Ditson

4 R.I. 87
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 6, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 4 R.I. 87 (Ditson v. Ditson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ditson v. Ditson, 4 R.I. 87 (R.I. 1856).

Opinion

Ames, C. J.

The Act regulating marriage and divorce ” in this state, requires, in words, no other jurisdiction in this court over the parties to a petition for divorce, than that the petitioner should have resided in the state for three years next before the preferring'of the petition; with a discretionary power in the court to dispense with that particular term, as it has been construed, of residence or domicil. Dig. 1844, p. 265, § 11. Public Laws since Dig. 1844, p. 670. This dispensing power has, however, been very sparingly’exercised by the court, and never, unless indeed the court may have been misled by false testimony, except in cases where a long previous residence, and especially by natives of the state, had been interrupted but a short time *91 within the three years preceding the petition, or, in which some peculiar circumstances loudly invoked the aid of the court, such as an open adulterous marriage by the wife, the petitioning husband having resided in the state for a long portion of the three years, and the court being satisfied that he came to the state, not for the purpose of divorce, but bond fide to reside here, as a domiciled or settled inhabitant. Of late years, it has never been dispensed with where the alleged cause of divorce, occurring in another state, was not a cause for the species of divorce asked, in that state. There is nothing, however, in the statute, as we regard it, which obliges the court to take jurisdiction of such a petition merely because one of the parties only, the petitioner, is a resident of the state, though he or she may have been such for the period of three years next preceding the petition ; although, it must be admitted, that the practice under the statute has proceeded upon that supposition. By the 10th section of the act of this state “ regulating marriage and divorce,” this court is authorized “ by rule or otherwise to prescribe the notice to be given on petitions for divorce, alimony, separate maintenance, and custody of children, and may issue such process as may be necessary to carry into effect the powers conferred on them by this act.” Dig. 1844, pp. 264, 265. By the 14th rule of the court, made by the authority of this act, “ On all petitions for divorce, the adverse party, if resident within this state, or within fifty miles of the place of trial, shall be notified and served with a copy of such petition, three weeks at least before the sitting of the court; and if resident without the state, and more than fifty miles from the place of trial, notice shall be given in some one of the public newspapers, printed in Newport or Providence, six weeks before the sitting of the court; and such petitions as contain an allegation that the adverse party is not resident in this state, or within fifty miles of the place of trial, shall be accompanied with an affidavit of the petitioner, stating his or her knowledge and belief of the place of residence of such adverse party.” Rules of Sup. Ct. of R. I. prefixed to Yol. I. R. I. Reports, pp. xii and xiii. Under this rule, this court has acted in giving constructive notice to non-resident defendants to petitions for divorce, in cases where relief of this kind *92 has been asked by resident citizens, and has, upon proper proof, afforded that relief, even though the defendants have never resided within this state or subjected themselves in any way to its jurisdiction. If, however, it appeared from the affidavit of the petitioner or otherwise, in the course of the hearing, that'the petitioner knew of the place of residence of the other party,' and that place was within the United States,, the practice has for many years been to continue the petition, and order personal notice of the pendency 'thereof to be given to such party through the mail. In the case at bar, under this rule, upon affidavit of the petitioner that according to her best knowledge and belief, the defendant, her husband, doth not reside in this state, or within fifty miles of the town of Newport, but is in parts unknown, he being a foreigner, the notice prescribed by the rule has been given, by publication of the same, for the space of six weeks before the sitting of the court, in the Newport Mercury, a paper printed in the city of Newport. If, however, by the general law pertaining to this subject, a decree of divorce a vinculo, made here, be void elsewhere, unless both parties to the marriage are resident in this state at the time of the application, or the respondent has been served with notice in the state, or being served without notice out of it, has appeared and submitted himself to Qur jurisdiction, so far from feeling ’compelled by the language of our statute, as it stands at present, to pass such decrees, we should feel compelled to refuse to pass them, lest they should bring upon the resident petitioner, in such cases, greater evils than those that our statute was designed to remedy.

When, therefore, this question presented itself to the court for the first time since I had the honor of presiding over it, in the case at bar, my brethren on the bench, though less doubtful with regard to our jurisdiction in such a case than myself, consented, at my request, to reserve the question for mature consideration and deliberate decision, in order that the course now adopted might for the future guide ourselves as well as those subject to our jurisdiction. Every case, during our recent circuit, in which it has since arisen, has also b.een reserved; and the question having been argued before us by the counsel in *93 this ease, was already under consideration, when our attention was attracted by a remark of the learned chief justice of Massachusetts, in delivering the judgment-of his court in the recently reported case of Lyon v. Lyon, 2 Gray, 367, decided in 1854, that this court, in its decree of divorce, reviewed and considered in that case, had violated, upon this subject, principles of general law. Such a remark, coming from a quarter • entitled to so much respect, has only induced us more carefully to scrutinize by the light of the general law the true grounds of jurisdiction in such cases; so that however, in ex parte hearings of them, we may be occasionally misled as to facts, it may not be supposed that we are careless of, or would deliberately violate in this respect settled principles of law.

In the case of Lyon v. Lyon, supra, which was an application for divorce on the part of a husband residing in Massachusetts, a former decree of this court divorcing the same parties a vinculo on the application of the wife, was declared void; partly on the ground, that it was obtained here by a domiciled inhabitant of Massachusetts in fraud of a statute of that state, which avoids divorces obtained out of the state for causes occurring in it, or for any cause which would not authorize a divorce by its laws, when obtained by a citizen of Massachusetts who goes into any other state or country iii order

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Bluebook (online)
4 R.I. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditson-v-ditson-ri-1856.