Foris v. Foris
This text of 247 A.2d 156 (Foris v. Foris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MARY FORIS, PLAINTIFF,
v.
NICHOLAS FORIS, DEFENDANT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.
*317 Mr. Morgan E. Thomas for plaintiff.
Mr. Lawrence M. Perskie for defendant (Messrs. Perskie & Neustadter, attorneys).
HORN, J.S.C.
This is a motion to dismiss on the ground that jurisdiction over defendant is lacking.
Plaintiff brought an action to enjoin her husband from proceeding with his divorce action in the State of Nevada, on the ground that the courts of said state did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter, neither of the parties being domiciled there. Plaintiff never entered an appearance in the foreign action.
A verified complaint and order to show cause containing appropriate restraint were issued and served by registered mail upon defendant in Nevada, pursuant to the terms of said order. He received these papers four days before a *318 divorce decree in his favor was entered by the Nevada court. He failed to heed the restraint against proceeding with that action on the advice of his Nevada counsel. Defendant returned to New Jersey two days after the decree was handed down.
Defendant cites Meeker v. Meeker, 52 N.J. 59 (1968), as support for his position that the service in Nevada was ineffective. Meeker presents a question as to whether an absent New Jersey domiciliary may be served by registered mail, return receipt requested, as permitted by R.R. 4:96-4 and R.R. 4:4-5, so as to constitute due process upon a defendant in an action enjoining him from obtaining a foreign decree of divorce. That case was an action to obtain a declaratory judgment as to the existence or nonexistence of a marriage.
In Meeker the court stated:
"An action to adjudge the existence or nonexistence of a marital status involves a right personal to the parties. It can be entertained only if there is such service as would support a judgment in personam. To permit resolution of that right by service under R.R. 4:4-5 (service on absent defendants) rather than by personal service under R.R. 4:4-4 would, in our view, amount to a denial of due process."
Defendant relies primarily on this language for his contention that this court never obtained jurisdiction over him.
As demonstrated hereinafter, our decisions have for many years recognized the validity of the kind of service pursued in the present case. Our rules of procedure, as hereinafter shown, were obviously fashioned on the principles enunciated by our case law in recognition of such service outside the State.
However, the quoted language of Meeker is such as reasonably to raise the question of the validity of such service.
R.R. 4:93 to 4:98, inclusive, apply to matrimonial actions. R.R. 4:93-2 defines the term "matrimonial actions" as "all actions brought under the inherent jurisdiction of the court for the annulment of marriage, for the protection of the *319 status of marriage by injunction or otherwise, and for the confirmation or otherwise of the validity of marriage by declaratory judgment * * *." R.R. 4:85-3, which provides for service on order to show cause in lieu of summons, in part states, "Service [of the copy of the order to show cause] may be made outside the State, by mail, publication or otherwise, all as the court may by order direct, providing the nature of the action is such that the court may thereby acquire jurisdiction."
A finding of fact has already been made in this case that defendant's domicile remained in this State at all times. None of the cases which have upheld such service is cited or discussed in any manner in Meeker. Notably absent from discussion was Kempson v. Kempson, 58 N.J. Eq. 94 (Ch. 1899), affirmed 63 N.J. Eq. 783 (E. & A. 1902).
In Kempson complainant wife sought to enjoin defendant husband from proceeding with a suit he had commenced in one of the courts of the State of North Dakota for a divorce against her. Upon exhibiting of the complaint and affidavits, the vice-chancellor issued an order to show cause containing a restraint similar to that in the instant case, and directed that the order be served upon defendant whereever he might be found.
Defendant proceeded with the prosecution of the foreign suit, obtained a decree of divorce, and then attacked the jurisdiction of the New Jersey court to hold him in contempt for the reasons, among others, that "defendant was not served with either the order to show cause or the injunction, and that such notice as he actually had of it was not sufficient to place him in contempt for failure to obey it"; also, "jurisdiction of his person was not obtained by service of process within the state, and hence service of either the order or the writ, or both, out of the State was a mere nulity, because the court had acquired no jurisdiction to make any order against him."
The vice-chancellor (at page 309) held that in accordance with precedents followed by our courts,
*320 "* * * proceedings with regard to the validity or dissolution of marriage are in rem. They actually operate upon the matter; they affirm, constitute or dissolve the marriage relation * * *. The difference between the present suit and one for divorce is that the object of the one is to preserve and of the other to destroy marital relation; and I think that the one for preservation is quite as clearly within the spirit and reason of the rule laid down by Chancellor Zabriskie [in Addington v. Addington, (Coddington v. Coddington) 20 N.J. Eq. 263 (Ch. 1869)] and Mr. Justice Adams in Harvey v. Harvey [Hervey v. Hervey], 56 N.J. Eq. 424 (E. & A. 1897) as that for the destruction of the relation."
The rule established in Kempson was:
"It seems to me that where the spouses are both domiciled in this State, and one of them seeks to destroy the marriage relation by a suit in a foreign jurisdiction, the right of this court at the instance of the one who desires to preserve it against the other, to protect the marriage relation by its extraordinary process, although it is unable to make service of its jurisdictional process within the State, is quite as clear as it would be to use such extraordinary process against a party who was threatening to inflict irremediable mischief on ordinary visible property situate within the State, although it may be powerless to serve him with jurisdictional process within the State. The spouse who was domiciled in the State and who fears irremediable mischief to the marriage relation is as much entitled to judicial protection as the owner of ordinary property situate within the State." (at p. 310)
In the opinion affirming this holding, the Court of Errors and Appeals, stated:
"It may be regarded as settled, by a long train of adjudications, culminating in Atherton v. Atherton, 181 U.S. 155, 21 S.Ct. 544, 45 L.Ed. 794 that the state wherein are the matrimonial domicile and also the domicile of the complaining spouse, has the right to confer upon the courts jurisdiction over the matrimonial status, no matter where the other spouse may be.
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247 A.2d 156, 103 N.J. Super. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foris-v-foris-njsuperctappdiv-1968.