Doyle v. Doyle

522 P.2d 906, 17 Or. App. 529, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 1115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 28, 1974
Docket250729
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 522 P.2d 906 (Doyle v. Doyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. Doyle, 522 P.2d 906, 17 Or. App. 529, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 1115 (Or. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinions

LANGTRY, P. J.

In 1958 plaintiff-wife filed a complaint in Multnomah County seeking a divorce. After an unsuccessful attempt at personal service, service was made on defendant by publication pursuant to ORS 15.120 and an order signed on December 22, 1959. The affidavit upon which the publication order was based gave a San Jose, California address for defendant. Plaintiff obtained a default divorce decree in March 1960 granting her a divorce, custody of the couple’s only child, and “$250 per month permanent alimony for the support of plaintiff and said minor child * * *” plus her attorney fees and costs.

In May 1973 defendant filed a motion to vacate that portion of the decree requiring him to pay $250 monthly and the award of attorney fees and costs. The motion was predicated on the court’s lack of personal jurisdiction over defendant at the time it entered the decree because he was then domiciled in California. Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 US 714, 24 L Ed 565 (1877).

Plaintiff appeals from an order granting defendant’s motion. She attacks the order on two major [531]*531grounds in which she asserts: (1) Defendant was an Oregon domiciliary at the time the original decree was entered and thus he was subject to the court’s decree; (2) even if he was a California domiciliary, the Oregon court had jurisdiction to enter an enforceable decree with reference to support. (3) Plaintiff also raises various equitable grounds why this court should give effect to the decree even if we find it was made without the court’s having jurisdiction to do so.

(1). While the statutes establishing the jurisdiction of our courts are written with reference to “residence,” see ORS 14.010, former ORS 107.060, the Oregon Supreme Court has construed residence as used in this context to mean domicile. Fox et ux v. Lasley, 212 Or 80, 88-9, 318 P2d 933 (1957), overruled on other grounds Hawkins v. Hawkins, 264 Or 221, 504 P2d 709 (1972); Zimmerman v. Zimmerman, 175 Or 585, 591, 155 P2d 293 (1945).

In discussing the meaning of domicile the court said:

“No single word in the legal vocabulary is more difficult than ‘domicil’ to define accurately * * *.
“In Reed’s Will, [48 Or 500, 504, 87 P 763, 9 LRA (ns) 1159 (1906)], this court said:
“ ‘ “Domicile,” strictly speaking, is the relation the law creates between an individual and a particular place or country, and each case is dependent upon its own particular facts. It is not in a legal sense synonymous with “residence.” * * * To constitute domicile there must be both the fact of a fixed habitation or abode in a particular place, and an intention to remain there permanently or indefinitely * * *.’ ” Elwert v. Elwert, 196 Or 256, 264-65, 248 P2d 847, 36 ALR2d 741 (1952).

[532]*532Prior to 1957 both parties were domiciled in Oregon. The question is whether defendant changed his domicile to California thereafter.

A person can have only one domicile, and until a new domicile is established, the previous domicile continues. Elwert v. Elwert, supra, 196 Or at 265:

“The dominant factor in the change of domicil is intention. To constitute a change three things are essential: (1) residence in another place, (2) an intention to abandon the old domicil, and (3) an intention to acquire a new domicil * * *.
“A person does not acquire a new domicil by merely going to another place with the intention of making it his domicil. More is required in the eyes of the law. Such intention must be supported with an intention (1) of residing in the new place for a more or less indefinite time and (2) of making the new place his home within the meaning of ‘home’ as that term is used in the law of domicil * *

Sometime in 1957 defendant left the marital home in Portland and went to California. He stayed there, living in several places, until 1967 when he moved back to Oregon. He testified that he registered to vote where he lived in California, and that he obtained a California driver’s license in 1957 which he maintained nntil his return to Oregon. He said that his mother informed him of the divorce, but that he had no knowledge of the support provision in the decree. He remarried in Nevada in 1960. He occasionally visited his mother in Oregon, and had maintained some things in storage (like old Army uniforms) at one of his mother’s houses in Oregon. During this time the plaintiff was living in and caring for a four-apartment building belonging to defendant’s mother. She apparently had this accommodation for herself and son because of the relationship with the defendant’s mother.

[533]*533Plaintiff testified that she had talked with defendant about the pending divorce, and that defendant knew about it at a time when he visited her in 1959. She contended he knew about the judgment later. He categorically denied all such knowledge, and his mother, who had always remained close to plaintiff and the son, in her testimony tended to corroborate him in this regard.

Defendant has never made any payment on account of the judgment. Plaintiff did not, from 1960 until this motion was filed, make any attempt to collect the accruing judgment, or improve the status of the judgment, although it appears that if she really had wanted to she could have found the defendant in California and sometimes in Oregon from 1960 to 1967, and since 1967 she has known his whereabouts in Oregon. At the conclusion of the hearing before the trial court, the judge suggested that she now proceed to get a valid judgment for child support, but by the time of oral argument, no action had been taken in that regard.

The evidence leaves us puzzled as to plaintiff’s motives in several respects, and thinking both parties could have told the court more than they did, but viewing the evidence in the record as a whole, we conclude that defendant was not domiciled in Oregon from 1957 to 1967. For this reason, we need not decide if the service of process by publication pursuant to ORS 15.120 was sufficient to satisfy the due process requirement of the U.S. Constitution. Cf. Mullane v. Central Hanover Tr. Co., infra.

(2). Do the Oregon courts have jurisdiction to enter enforceable money judgments for support against [534]*534California domieiliaries absent personal service within this state?

Plaintiff contends that the support provision should be upheld because defendant had sufficient “minimum contacts” with Oregon to give an Oregon court jurisdiction, Internal. Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 US 310, 66 S Ct 154, 90 L Ed 95, 161 ALR 1057 (1945), and that service by publication is constitutionally permissible where personal service is impossible because the whereabouts of a party cannot be ascertained. Mullane v. Central Hanover Tr. Co., 339 US 306, 70 S Ct 652, 94 L Ed 865 (1950).

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Bluebook (online)
522 P.2d 906, 17 Or. App. 529, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 1115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-doyle-orctapp-1974.