Glassman v. Glassman

60 N.E.2d 716, 75 Ohio App. 47, 42 Ohio Law. Abs. 385, 30 Ohio Op. 352, 1944 Ohio App. LEXIS 426
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1944
Docket6391
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 60 N.E.2d 716 (Glassman v. Glassman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glassman v. Glassman, 60 N.E.2d 716, 75 Ohio App. 47, 42 Ohio Law. Abs. 385, 30 Ohio Op. 352, 1944 Ohio App. LEXIS 426 (Ohio Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*387 OPINION

By ROSS, P. J.

The plaintiff has appealed to this court on questions of law from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio, Division of Domestic Relations, dismissing her petition for divorce.

In that Court was filed and journalized separate finding of facts and conclusions of law which present the facts necessary for our consideration of this case.

Among the conclusions of law appears “for want of jurisdiction this action should be and is hereby dismissed at plaintiff’s costs.”

No other judgment was entered.

Although the action of the Court in dismissing the petition ' was improperly included with the conclusions. of law, it did constitute a final judgment of the Court in question and will be here so considered.

From the finding of facts (no bill of exceptions is presented) it appears that the plaintiff and defendant were married at Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, on the 10th day of October, 1941. The defendant at that time was an officer in the Medical Corps of the United States Army and was stationed at Ft. Thomas, a United States Army Post, situated in Kentucky, just across the Ohio River from Cincinnati. The defendant at the time of his induction into the United States Army resided at Charleston, West Virginia, where he had been engaged in the practice of medicine. Thereafter it does not appear that he attempted to, or did establish any other domicile. The findings fail to show any designation by the husband of any place or mode of living.

Prior to her marriage, the plaintiff had been a bona fide resident, domiciled in Cincinnati, living with her parents, for a period of four years prior to her marriage. On the day of the marriage of plaintiff and defendant, “the parties set out on a trip by automobile to New Orleans, Louisiana, as the first part of the journey of the defendant to Panama, where he had been ordered by Army authority; the defendant continued liis journey by ship to Panama and the plaintiff immediately *388 returned to the home of her parents at 809 South Crescent Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio.”

In November, 1941, the plaintiff joined defendant in Panama, and on December 9, 1941, two days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, left Panama and returned to Cincinnati “where she remained for approximately nineteen months until July, 1943.”

“In that month the defendant returned to Continental United States, notified the plaintiff, and she met his train at Louisville, Kentucky, whence they returned immediately to Cincinnati. Later on in the month of July, the defendant was ordered to Camp Rucker in Alabama and went there; the plaintiff joined him there and remained for about two weeks, when she left him and returned to Cincinnati and filed.this action on October 21, 1943.

“The trial court further finds that defendant was duly served with a copy of the petition and by publication according to law and has been guilty of gross neglect of duty' toward the plaintiff and that the plaintiff is entitled to a divorce as prayed for if she has the statutory residential qualifications.” (Emphasis ours.)

In its conclusions of law, the Court “finds that the residence of the defendant at the time of filing the petition was Charleston, West Virginia, and that the residence of the plaintiff as a matter of law, followed that of the defendant, notwithstanding the fact, that she had never resided with her husband in his residence.” (Emphasis ours.)

As stated before, it nowhere appears that the defendant attempted to or did acquire any other domicile than Charleston, West Virginia, the place of his residence at the time of his induction into the United States Army.

The plaintiff at no time resided in any legal domicile of the defendant, acquired or designated, and never after her marriage voluntarily acquired any domicile other than that of her parents, in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, which she had possessed for four years prior to her marriage.

The sole question presented .for decision by this Court is whether or not a trial court had jurisdiction over the subject of the' action. If the plaintiff had not been a resident of the State of Ohio for one year prior to filing her petition, then the Court had no power to consider or pass upon the plaintiff’s claim for divorce. Jurisdiction over the person may be waived. Jurisdiction over the subject of the action *389 cannot be conferred even by consent. Was the plaintiff a resident of Ohio for one year prior to filing her action for divorce?

(1) The residential qualifications of a plaintiff in a divorce action brought in an Ohio Court are specified in §11,980, GC, which provides in part as follows:

“Except in an action for alimony alone, the plaintiff must have been a resident of the state at least one year before filing the petition.”

(2) Such residential requirements in state statutes have been almost universally held to be jurisdictional in character. If the plaintiff in a divorce action has not been a resident in the state for the period prescribed - by statute, the trial court has no jurisdiction to consider the action and any judgment rendered in such a proceeding is absolutely void, in the state of trial and elsewhere. Chandler v Chandler, 132 Va. 418; Sang v Sang, 240 Wis., 288; Miller v Miller, 33 Fla., 453; Bradfield v Bradfield, 154 Mich., 115; Williams v State of North Carolina, 317 U. S., 287; Winston v Winston, 271 Fed., 551; Golden v Golden (New Mexico) 68 Pac. Rep. (2) 928; DuQuesnay v Henderson (California) 74 Pac. Rep. (2) 294.

(3) The Court of a state in which a petition for divorce is filed has the power to determine from the evidence submitted to it whether or not statutory jurisdictional requirements have been met by the plaintiff. Black v Black 110 Oh St., 392.

(4) It has been generally determined in Courts where the matter has been considered that the word “residence” when used in statutes conferring jurisdiction in divorce actions means domiciliary residence, or, in other words, that a .temporary residence, no matter how extended, does not meet the requirements of such statutes unless accompanied by an intention of the party involved .to constitute such residence a domicile. William v State of North Carolina, 317 U. S., 287 (supra); Howe v Howe, 179 Va., 111; Ex Parte State, ex rel. Altman, 237 Ala., 642; Blair v Blair, 149 Kan., 3; St. John v St. John, 291 Ky., 363; Lamb v Lamb, 57 Nev., 421.

5 (5) It is a rule of common law accepted and adopted generally that the wife upon- her marriage is by law invested with the domicile of her husband. Foss v Foss, 105 Conn., 502; Bruce v Bruce, 176 Ark., 442; Wheeler v Burgess, 263 *390 Ky., 693; Weisinger v McGehee, 160 Miss., 424. See also: 28 C. J. S. 24; 17 Am. Jur., 616.

(6) It has, however, been held that this rule is subject to a qualification that such obligation on the wife is only effective when the husband has provided and designated a domicile. Ferguson, Admr. v Ferguson, Admr., 255 Ky., 230; Magnuson v Magnuson, 190 Minn. 153.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 N.E.2d 716, 75 Ohio App. 47, 42 Ohio Law. Abs. 385, 30 Ohio Op. 352, 1944 Ohio App. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glassman-v-glassman-ohioctapp-1944.