Greenspan v. Greenspan

18 A.2d 283, 19 N.J. Misc. 153, 1941 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 87
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 7, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 A.2d 283 (Greenspan v. Greenspan) 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
Greenspan v. Greenspan, 18 A.2d 283, 19 N.J. Misc. 153, 1941 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 87 (N.J. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Stafford, A. M.

The complainant, Rose Greenspan, on or about March 2d, 1937, filed a bill for maintenance,wherein she charged that the defendant, Louis Greenspan, had obtained a decree of divorce against the complainant in the Republic of Mexico, State of Morelos, but that the same had been procured by-fraud, suppression of the truth, and false statements, and that the courts of Mexico at no time had jurisdiction over the subject-matter or jurisdiction over the complainant or defendant. As a result thereof, the complainant charges the said decree of divorce is a nullity and petitions this court to declare the said decree to be null and void.

[154]*154Under the second cause of action in the said bill of complaint, the complainant charges the defendant with abandonment, commencing during the month of December, 1932, coupled with an additional allegation that the defendant, although he has been contributing toward the support of the complainant and her children it was a meager contribution; further alleging that since January, 1937, the defendant failed to make any contributions toward the support and maintenance of the complainant and a dependent child.

The defendant answered, denying the material allegations set forth in the bill of complaint, and alleged that he at all times adequately and fully maintained and supported the complainant and the children of the marriage.

Defendant, in his answer to the allegations set forth under the second cause of action, entered a special appearance, asking leave to be heard thereon before the matters in issue were determined by the court, alleging further that neither the complainant nor the defendant were residents of the State of New Jersey; that the domicile of both the complainant and the defendant was in the State of New York, and that by reason thereof the Court of Chancery of the State of. New Jersey is without jurisdiction.' Defendant further alleged in said answer that no subpoena ad respondendum was issued out of the State of New Jersey, commanding the complainant to make answer to the bill of complaint.

Issue was joined and the matter came on for final hearing.

The marriage of the parties was proved and corroborated, but the question of residence in the State of New Jersey has been disputed by the defendant.

The evidence reveals the fact that the complainant and defendant were married in the city of New York on or about September 6th, 1913, and as a result of the said marriage three children were born: Herman, twenty years, Irene, twenty-two years, and Mary, twenty-four years.

Apparently the family life was not a very happy one, and in the month of December, 1932, while they were living in the city of Brooklyn, State of New York, the final separation occurred, the complainant saying that the defendant just walked out of the house without saying anything and never returned since that time.

[155]*155While they were living together, the complainant testified she received from the defendant the sum of seventy ($70) or eighty ($80) dollars weekly to take care of household affairs, but after the final separation he reduced this to the sum of thirty ($30) dollars a week. Later on, the defendant again reduced this allowance to the sum of fifteen ($15) dollars a week.

Shortly after the final separation, the complainant purchased a grocery store in Newark, New Jersey, where she lived, and operated the same for a period of three years, after which time she disposed of the same for the reason, as she testified, when the children got older they didn’t like working in a grocery store.

While the complainant was living in Newark, during the month of June, 1935, she was served with papers printed in the Spanish language. These papers admittedly constituted the service of divorce proceedings commenced by the defendant against the complainant in the Eepublic of Mexico, State of Morelos.

The complainant consulted a lawyer about these divorce papers, but never took any steps to file an answer or defend or protect her interests in the matter.

After the service of these divorce papers, the defendant continued to support his wife and family irregularly in the sum of fifteen ($15) dollars a week.

However, sometime during the month of January, in the year 1937, the complainant received information from her daughter, Irene Greenspan, that the defendant was not only divorced, but had remarried. The witness, Irene Greenspan, testified that she had visited her father in a hospital in the city of Passaic in the month of January, 1937, and while she was there her father informed her that he had remarried.

The receipt of this information about the remarriage of her husband changed the attitude of the complainant with regard to support and maintenance and, as a result of this change in attitude, the bill of complaint was filed in the instant case.

I will first discuss and examine the defendant’s contentions concerning the allegations in the bill, and the jurisdiction of this court to hear and determine the same.

[156]*156The defendant, in his answer, and of his own volition, attempted to enter a special appearance. The defendant also entered into a certain stipulation with the complainant in which, among other things, he attempted to reserve the right to enter a special appearance.

The file does not contain any record of any application for leave to file a special appearance; nor does the file contain any order allowing the same, and the mere fact that the defendant attempted to enter a special appearance in the answer, or that an application was made at the hearing, or the fact that the defendant entered into certain stipulations with the complainant, in which the defendant reserved the right to enter a special appearance, does not absolve the defendant from making his application to the court for an order permitting such special appearance. The reasons are obvious, and have been set forth very clearly in the case of Swetland v. Swetland, 105 N. J. Eq. (at p. 608), wherein Vice-Chancellor Berry stated: “So far as this court is concerned I consider it settled that a special appearance for the purpose of addressing a motion to the jurisdiction of the court, filed without leave, amounts to a general appearance. And it is my understanding of the law that this was always so where the question was one of jurisdiction over the person arising out of service of process.”

In other words, before .any steps may be taken in the cause, the defendant, if he desires to appear specially, must first apply to the court and obtain leave or permission so to do; otherwise, the defendant is appearing generally in the cause.

Defendant also claims this court lacks jurisdiction because neither the complainant nor the defendant were residents of the State of New Jersey, and this motion applies both to the date on which the bill of complaint was filed, and also the date on which the Mexican divorce decree was obtained. Whether or not the parties herein were residents of the State of New Jersey when the Mexican divorce decree was-obtained is immaterial, as long as the residential requirements were present at the time of the filing of the bill.

This is a bill for maintenance, which is an action in personam. Being a personal action, it must needs be brought [157]*157in the state where the husband is located.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 283, 19 N.J. Misc. 153, 1941 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenspan-v-greenspan-njch-1941.