Floyd v. Floyd

124 A. 525, 95 N.J. Eq. 661, 10 Stock. 661, 1924 N.J. LEXIS 908
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 4, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 124 A. 525 (Floyd v. Floyd) 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
Floyd v. Floyd, 124 A. 525, 95 N.J. Eq. 661, 10 Stock. 661, 1924 N.J. LEXIS 908 (N.J. 1924).

Opinion

. The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kalisch, J.

This is an appeal from an order advised by Vice-Chancellor Ingersoll, refusing defendant’s motion to strike out the bill of complaint and to quash the writ of subpoena.

[662]*662The bill was filed by the complainant against the defendant, to the end that a certain decree of divorce obtained by her in the State of Nevada against the complainant be decreed by the court of chancery to have been fraudulently procured by her “and that the decree may be declared null and void and of no effect, and that she may be perpetually enjoined and restrained from setting up the decree or making use of the same in any manner or matter in this or in any other jurisdiction to defeat or affect the marital rights of complainant, and that she be further commanded to present the truth of the matters alleged and shown in the bill of complaint to the district .court of the State of Nevada, county of Washoe, and in good faith to urge the said district court to set aside its aforesaid decree of divorce."

The bill of complaint avers that the complainant and defendant intermarried at the town of Eastville, in the State of Virginia; that the complainant is a resident of Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, and that he and his wife lived together, whether at Eastville or Philadelphia does not appear, up to January 9th, 1921, on which date she left her husband and went to the city of Reno, in the State of Nevada, for the purpose of obtaining residence there, whereon to base her application for a divorce from complainant. That on the 3d day of September, 1921, she filed her petition for divorce in the Nevada court, allegiirg as grounds therefor that her husband had refused to provide the common necessaries for her, when such neglect was not the result of poverty. •

That on October 24th, 1921, she was granted a final decree and the custody of their minor child. That immediately after the decree she “returned east and settled and took up her residence in the State of New Jersey, at Atlantic City, where she now resides"

“That it was never the intention of the defendant to live in the State of Nevada, nor was her residence in said State of Nevada for any other purpose than to perpetrate a fraud on her husband and on the courts of this state,” &c.

[663]*663The many grounds of appeal set forth and relied on by appellant’s counsel for a reversal of the decretal order may be conveniently summed up under two heads:

1. The court below was without jurisdiction to entertain the suit because the complainant is a resident of and domiciled in the State of Pennsylvania, and that both complainant and defendant were residents of and domiciled in the State of Pennsylvania at the time the defendant left complainant and went to the State of Nevada.

2. That the facts set out in the bill of complaint do not afford a legal basis for the interposition of a court of equity.

We have reached the conclusion that the complainant has no legal status in this state to attack the validity of the judgment of a court of the State of Nevada in a direct proceeding, and that, therefore, his bill of complaint should have been dismissed.

For it is quite plain what the complainant seeks by his bill is a review of the validity of a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction of the State of Nevada by our court of chancery in a direct proceeding instituted for that special purpose. But even if it be conceded that such a course of procedure was permissible, nevertheless, it is quite apparent that it is only available to one who has a legal status, which the complainant obviously did not have, since the domicile of both husband and wife was in the State of Pennsylvania and there was no res in this state which could be properly dealt with by the court of chancery.

Did the complainant have a legal status in this state ? The statements in his bill of complaint answer this qucery in the negative. According to his averments he and his wife were domiciled in the State of Pennsylvania and she left him against his consent and was guilty of wrongful conduct.

Under the decisions of this state it is held that the domicile of the wife is merged into that of the husband and continues during coverture unless the wife acquires a separate domicile elsewhere, by her husband’s consent, or where he abandons her or conducts himself in such a manner as would constitute in law a matrimonial offense and justify her in [664]*664leaving him. Rinaldi v. Rinaldi, 94 N. J. Eq. 14, in which case Chancellor Walker has collated the cases decided by the-court of chancery and by this court, dealing with the question to the effect, as stated.

It is therefore clear that the matrimonial domicile, according to complainant’s averments in his bill, is in the State of Pennsylvania.

It is hardly necessary, in view of the complainant’s statements in his bill, to inquire into the question whether there was a res in this state of which a court of equity could properly take hold, for the bill does not disclose any, and reliance for the successful prosecution of the suit is based upon the simple fact that the defendant was residing in Atlantic City and was served with process there, and that in leaving her husband and going to the State of Nevada and obtaining a divorce there, under the circumstances narrated in the bill, she perpetrated a fraud upon the complainant and courts of this state.

How can it be properly said, in view of the fact that the matrimonial domicile of the parties, so far as the facts of this case disclose, is in the State of Pennsylvania, that a fraud was perpetrated by the defendant upon the courts of this state, is inconceivable in sound reason. In order to so hold we would be required to adopt the theory that because the defendant, after obtaining her divorce in Nevada, came to this state, where she was residing at the time she was served with process, impressed ex post facto upon her alleged conduct a design to commit a fraud upon the courts of this state. If this can be fairly said to be the legal affect of her coming into this state, then there is no good reason why the like situation should not exist in each of the remaining forty-seven sister states, to which the defendant may resort temporarily or otherwise, so long as process can be served upon her. Pursuing this thought to a‘logical sequence there would be no obstacle in the complainant’s way, if he were defeated here to repeat his effort in a sister state, and if defeated therp to go to another state, and so on until he had exhausted thw category of states where he was successful in having the [665]*665defendant served with process. This is a burden which our courts are unwilling to assume upon the ground that such a procedure is against public policy. We are only concerned in passing upon the validity of a judgment of a sister state where an attempt is made to enforce such judgment in this state; and when the validity of such judgment is attacked upon the ground of fraud or want of jurisdiction of the foreign forum over the subject-matter or of the person.

But to entertain a suit of the character, as here, would have a pernicious tendency to convert this state into a mecca for disgruntled divorcees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 A. 525, 95 N.J. Eq. 661, 10 Stock. 661, 1924 N.J. LEXIS 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-floyd-nj-1924.