Grande v. Grande

55 Pa. D. & C. 647, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 237
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County
DecidedMarch 22, 1946
Docketno. 244
StatusPublished

This text of 55 Pa. D. & C. 647 (Grande v. Grande) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grande v. Grande, 55 Pa. D. & C. 647, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 237 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Laub, J.,

In this petition for a declaratory judgment we are requested to define the marital status of Carl J. Grande, a resident of the City of Erie, County of Erie and State of Pennsylvania.

No answer was filed by defendants but a general appearance was entered in their behalf by local counsel. Under the circumstances we are required to consider the facts averred in the petition to be admitted: Act of May 22, 1935, P. L. 228, sec. 3, 12 PS §849.

There was no demand for a jury trial and we deem our duty to be the same as where there is a trial by a judge without a jury. Therefore, we are required to adopt the format which obtains in equity cases: Act of 1935, supra, sec. 6, 12 PS §852. This is an essential requirement in every declaratory judgment proceeding, for the very nature of a judgment demands that its scope and the circumstances upon which it is founded be clearly and unmistakably defined.

“As to the fact that judgments or decrees must be certain and unequivocal, it is aptly stated in Freeman on Judgments, §72: ‘Inasmuch as the judgment and its enforcement is the end and aim of the whole litigation, to satisfy this purpose it must so dispose of the matters at issue between the parties that they and such other persons as may be affected, will be able to determine with reasonable certainty the extent to which their rights and obligations have been determined.’ Where a judgment or decree lacks such certainty and is absolutely unintelligible, it is a nullity: 34 C. J., §863, pp. 563-4.”: Rockett Will, 348 Pa. 445, 450.

From the pleadings we make the following

Findings of fact

1. Carl J. Grande and Mary F. Grande, also known as Mary F. Keasey, were married April 11, 1929, at Ripley, New York, and both of them were at that time [649]*649residents and citizens of the City of Erie, County of Erie and State of Pennsylvania.

2. Following the marriage the parties lived together at Erie, Pa., as husband and wife, until December of 1943, when the parties separated.

3. On November 29, 1943, Mary F. Grande filed a libel in divorce in this court at No. 132 February Term, 1944, naming petitioner as respondent, and alleging that petitioner had committed wilful and malicious desertion and absence from the habitation of Mary F. Grande, the injured and innocent spouse, without reasonable cause for and during the term and space of two years. Upon service of the subpoena in that case, petitioner Carl J. Grande entered a rule on Mary F. Grande for a bill of particulars. Said bill of particulars was never furnished and the divorce proceedings were never pursued to final judgment.

4. On or about March 10, 1945, Mary F. Grande went to the City of Reno, County of Washoe, and State of Nevada, for the avowed and sole purpose of enabling the said Mary F. Grande to obtain a divorce from petitioner.

5. Precisely six weeks after her arrival in Reno, Nevada, on June 5,1945, defendant, Mary F. Grande, brought suit for divorce from petitioner in the First Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada in and for the County of Ormsby. In said action is was alleged that the parties had lived separate and apart without cohabitation for a period of more than three consecutive years preceding the commencement of said divorce action.

6. On July 19, 1945, the First Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada in and for the County of Ormsby, entered a decree of absolute divorce upon the action mentioned in the preceding paragraph, said decree of absolute divorce being granted on the ground of extreme cruelty.

[650]*6507. During the entire period of the Nevada proceeding, petitioner was never personally present within the State of Nevada, he was not served there with any summons or process in that divorce proceeding, but he was served in the City of Erie, County of Erie and State of Pennsylvania, with a copy of the summons therein. Petitioner did not appear in the divorce proceeding in Nevada either in person or by attorney and never authorized any person or attorney to appear for him therein and no appearance was ever entered or made on his behalf.

8. Defendant Mary F. Grande, following the entry of the Nevada divorce decree above mentioned, entered into a purported marriage with Webster Keasey, the other defendant, the date and place of said purported marriage being unknown.

9. At the time defendant Mary F. Grande applied for a divorce in Nevada she was not a bona fide resident of that State.

Discussion

There can be no doubt but that every citizen is entitled to a clear understanding of his own marital status. Almost every decision of his daily life, whether economic, social or spiritual, depends upon the certainty of that status. The right to convey real estate without joinder of a spouse; the rights, duties, liabilities and obligations arising under the Federal income tax laws; the important function of preparing a will; the right to marry and beget legitimate children; the uncertainty as to the obligation to support and maintain an alleged spouse — all of these and many other similar problems cannot be resolved by an individual unless his legal status as a married or single person be clear and incontestable. Therefore, a petition for a declaratory judgment is the proper method by which that status can be adjudicated: Melnick v. Melnick, 154 Pa. Superior Ct. 481.

[651]*651The legal questions raised by this petition have been so thoroughly discussed and so definitely settled by the decisions of the highest courts of Pennsylvania and of the United States, that any consideration of them by us must perforce be historical in character.

Since the celebrated decision of the United States Supreme Court in Haddock v. Haddock, 201 U. S. 562, 26 S. Ct. 525 (1906), there has been an overabundance of concurring and dissenting opinion1 expressed, verbally and in writing, as to the right of a State to refuse full faith and credit to a divorce decree of a sister State. The ghost of Haddock v. Haddock has been an invited guest at many a gathering attended by lawyers, and it has frequently appeared in an uninvited form in bar examinations. In that case the United States Supreme Court held that the State of New York, the matrimonial domicile where the wife still resided, need not give full faith and credit to a Connecticut decree of divorce, since it was obtained by the husband who wrongfully left his wife in the matrimonial domicile, service on her having been obtained by publication and she not having entered an appearance in the action.

It is to be observed that the Haddock case did not include in its scope a situation where the divorcing State did not have jurisdiction of the party seeking the divorce. Thus, it did not conflict with the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Bell v. Bell, 181 U. S. 175, 21 S. Ct. 551, and its companion case, Streitwolf v. Streitwolf, 181 U. S. 179, 21 S. Ct. 553 (both decided April 15, 1901), in which it was held that a decree of divorce was not entitled to full faith and credit when it was granted on constructive service by the courts of a State in which neither spouse was domiciled.

The turmoil created by Haddock v.

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Related

Bell v. Bell
181 U.S. 175 (Supreme Court, 1901)
Streitwolf v. Streitwolf
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Williams v. North Carolina
317 U.S. 287 (Supreme Court, 1943)
Williams v. North Carolina
325 U.S. 226 (Supreme Court, 1945)
Esenwein v. Commonwealth Ex Rel. Esenwein
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19 A.2d 165 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Rockett Will
35 A.2d 303 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Esenwein v. Esenwein
33 A.2d 675 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Melnick v. Melnick
36 A.2d 235 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Meth v. Meth
41 A.2d 752 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1944)
Colvin v. Reed
55 Pa. 375 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Reel v. Elder
62 Pa. 308 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1869)
Estate of Fyock
19 A. 1056 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1890)
Grossman's Estate
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Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. D. & C. 647, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grande-v-grande-pactcomplerie-1946.