Givernaud v. Givernaud

85 A. 830, 81 N.J. Eq. 66, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 7
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 6, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 85 A. 830 (Givernaud v. Givernaud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Givernaud v. Givernaud, 85 A. 830, 81 N.J. Eq. 66, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 7 (N.J. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

(orally).

My conclusion in this case is that the bill of complaint must be dismissed.

1. The bill is filed as a bill of review, or a bill in the nature of a bill of review. A petition was presented to the court for leave to file the bill. An order was made permitting the bill to be filed, and the consent of the court was further endorsed by the hand of the vice-chancel]or on the back of the bill. I have a very grave doubt that, in a divorce case where a decree has gone by default, the case having been tried ex parte in the lifetime of the parties, at any time before the enrollment of the decree, after the enrollment of the decree, within the time allowed for an appeal in a contested case, or after such period has elapsed, the correct method of obtaining on behalf of the defendant a right to contest the case is by a bill of review rather than by a petition in the cause setting forth the default — setting forth the fact that the defendant had not been heard in the case at all — setting forth, further, that application was made at the earliest moment possible, and then setting forth the merits which underlie — must underlie — the application. I think at present the court of chancery has full power at all times during the lifetime of the parties to hear a defendant in the cause where the divorce has gone against him or her by default, who alleges that the decree was obtained by fraud, and that he or she, as the case may be, has only recently received actual notice of either suit or decree.

We have, however, this bill filed as a bill of review setting forth, or attempting to set forth, a cause of action in equity. It is not such an application as I mentioned a moment ago, which is made during the lifetime of the parties. This application is made to the court after the death of the husband, who obtained a decree of divorce ex parte, and it is very plain both from the fact that this bill was filed as a bill of review and also from the frame of the bill, and particularly of the prayer, that the pleader had in [68]*68view as a complete cause of action in equity the setting aside of this decree of divorce on the ground of fraud.

The bill assigns the reason why the complainant — the defendant in the divorce suit — comes into this court with such a bill. She says that she recovered a judgment for forty-four thousand francs against her husband, now deceased, in' 1866, in France, where both parties were then domiciled, and the reason why she wants to have the decree of divorce opened is not a sentimental one. — -not for any vindication of her character against the charge of desertion which her husband made and proved ex parte. She has a very practical reason; she says,

“I want my money — my judgment for forty-four thousand francs,” equivalent to over eight thousand dollars, “and I cannot obtain any remedy for the collection of that judgment because I am barred by the statute of limitations which began to run in 1872 when this fraudulent divorce was obtained. I, therefore, desire to have a decree of this court vacating that decree of divorce and leaving me at liberty to proceed for the collection of my judgment in any court of competent jurisdiction, law or equity.”

And I may say, in passing, that a question is suggested right on the face of this case, whether in case the divorce were set aside the action of the widow, as she then would be, against her husband’s executor would be at law or in equity. If her judgment is only enforceable in equity — if her case is equitable — tibie mere death of her husband, by which she is able to sue Ms executors in a law court, would not give the law court any jurisdiction, because the incapacity of the law court to take jurisdiction of such a case does not arise out of the fact that the litigation is between a man and wife; it arises from the fact that the cause of action is purely equitable, of which the court of law can take no cognizance.

But I do not want to pursue this thought further, I only intended to say that the question arises, or might arise, what the remedy of Mrs. Givernaud for the collection of this money would be in case the decree of divorce were vacated and she stood now-before the courts of this state as the widow of her husband, seeking to recover from her husband’s executors the amount of this judgment, of a French court, rendered forty-six years ago'when [69]*69both parties were citizens of France and were domiciled in France.

I do not think that any such equitable action will lie as the pleader had in mind when he drew this bill and framed the prayer for relief and obtained leave to file the bill as a bill of review. In other words, it seems to me that the court of cham eery of blew Jersey will not entertain an application in any form, either by bill of review or by petition in the cause, to open a decree of divorce — final decree of divorce — when the party, the spouse who obtained it, is dead. The subject-matter of. the litigation in a divorce suit is the marriage relation, the status of marriage, and that has perished — that' has been destroyed by the death of one of the spouses.

It is difficult to see what would be the result of the opening of this decree of divorce. The husband could not contest the case any further. The effect would seem to be that immediately upon opening the decree the court must recognize the fact that the suit has abated without hope of revival, and so the result of opening the decree would be not to recognize the litigation and give the complainant an opportunity to try his case and the defendant to defend, but to have the whole litigation immediately puffed out of existence.

I have considered the authorities which have been submitted, and which are conflicting, in regard to the status of a fraudulent decree of divorce after the death of the party who obtained it, and my conclusion is that no direct application is proper to open the decree, but the defrauded spouse may bring a suit for the enforcement of any civil right in any appropriate court in the State of New Jersey and obtain such enforcement, notwithstanding the fact that the decree of divorce, if honest and valid, would be a complete bar.

Generally, an adjudication that the decree of divorce was void would be made by the court in which the spouse — we will say the wife — was undertaking to prosecute her claim. If, however, for any reason the court of law should consider that it could not entertain the attack-of the wife upon the validity of the divorce— if by applying the rule against collateral attack or for any reason the court of law should reach that conclusion — it may be that the [70]*70wife would have to file her bill in this court to enjoin the other part}' in the lawsuit from setting up the divorce. In one way or another it seems to me that where a spouse has been defrauded— the wife, we will say — by a decree of divorce obtained by imposition upon this court and the husband has died before she was able to learn about it' and attack the decree, she can then maintain an action against the heir for dower and, either in that proceeding or in a proceeding in this court in aid of her suit for dower, have the impediment from the fraudulent divorce removed.

Mrs. Givernaud might assert a variety of rights as widow of Mr. Givernaud. She might wish to contest the probate of the will. She does not say in her bill that she has the slightest claim against the probate of that instrument. She might also, as I said a moment ago, wish to recover her dower in a large amount of valuable real estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A. 830, 81 N.J. Eq. 66, 1912 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/givernaud-v-givernaud-njch-1912.