Jacobs v. Jacobs

10 Alaska 46
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMarch 7, 1941
DocketNo. 4642
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Alaska 46 (Jacobs v. Jacobs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Jacobs, 10 Alaska 46 (D. Alaska 1941).

Opinion

PRATT, District Judge.

In his complaint for a divorce, the plaintiff alleges that he has been an inhabitant of Alaska for more than two years last past and that he and defendant were married on the 11th day of October, 1940, at Virginia City, Nevada.

The defendant has filed a ■ countersuit asking for a divorce from the plaintiff. She makes no mention of any residence or inhabitancy on the part of herself and states statutory grounds for a divorce.

The plaintiff has demurred to the cross-complaint on the ground that it appears therefrom that the Court has no jurisdiction of the subject matter thereof.

It is maintained that the Alaska statute requires the same residence of a cross-complainant as of a plaintiff and that this is true by virtue of the divorce statute passed by Congress for Alaska in 1900 (amended in 1903), as well as by the organic act creating a legislative assembly for Alaska in 1912.

By an act approved June 6, 1900, 31 Stat. at Large, pages 408, 409, Congress, in passing a code for the Territory of Alaska, provided in Chapter 45 of Civil Procedure for actions to dissolve the marriage contract. Section 469 thereof is: “In an action for the dissolution of the marriage contract the plaintiff therein must be an inhabitant of the district at the commencement of the action and for three years prior thereto, which residence shall be sufficient to give the court jurisdiction without regard to the place where the marriage was solemnized or the cause of action arose.”

By Act of Congress, approved March 2, 1903, 32 Stat. at Large, page 944, the above-mentioned section was amended by changing the three years’ residence therein provided to two years. Said section, as amended in 1903, is now section 3992, Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933.

Nowhere in the Act of Congress relative to the dissolution of the marriage contract, above-mentioned, is there any provision as to a cross-complaint on the part of defendant [49]*49for a divorce or as to a residence requirement of a defendant in a cross-complaint. It is provided in said chapter that an action for the dissolution of the marriage contract is an action of an equitable nature.

The defendant’s right to file a cross-complaint arises out of the further provisions of section 3863, Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933, which appears in the chapter entitled, “General Provisions Relating to Actions of an Equitable Nature,” which states: “The counterclaim of the defendant shall be one upon which an action might be maintained by the defendant against the plaintiff in the action; and in addition to the cases specified -in the subdivisions of section 3422 it is sufficient if it be connected with the subject of the action.”

Before the passage of the above-mentioned act of Congress of June 6, 1900, establishing the code for Alaska, the courts of equity had established a very definite rule in regard to the residence qualifications in a divorce suit of a defendant to maintain a countersuit for divorce.

This rule is succinctly stated in 19 C.J., page 27, as follows: “Generally statutes making residence of plaintiff a prerequisite to the exercise of divorce jurisdiction dors not preclude a nonresident defendant from filing a cross-bill and obtaining a decree of divorce against plaintiff. ’* * * ”

Under the above-quoted rule are cited the following cases: Sterl v. Sterl, 2 Ill.App. 223; Jenness v. Jenness, 24 Ind. 355, 87 Am.Dec. 335; Barrett v. Barrett, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 307; Watkins v. Watkins, 135 Mass. 83; Clutton v. Clutton, 108 Mich. 267, 66 N.W. 52, 31 L.R.A. 160; State v. Moran, 37 Nev. 404, 142 P. 534; Abele v. Abele, 62 N.J.Eq. 644, 50 A. 686; Charlton v. Charlton, Tex.Civ.App., 141 S.W. 290; Ferry v. Ferry, 9 Wash. 239, 37 P. 431.

It will be noted that all except two of the above-mentioned cases were decided before 1900.

In Ritenour v. Ritenour, 1933, 98 Ind.App. 283, 185 N.E. 165, 166, the husband, as plaintiff in a divorce action, [50]*50filed an affidavit of residence and occupation. The defendant/ a nonresident, filed a cross-complaint for divorce without showing her place of residence. The plaintiff dismissed his petition, but the defendant was given a divorce upon her cross-complaint.

The statute provided:

Section 1102, Burns’ Ann.St. 1926: “‘Cross-Petition and Proceedings Thereon — In addition to an answer, the defendant may file a cross-petition for divorce; and when filed, the court shall decree the divorce to the party legally entitled thereto. If the original petition be dismissed after the filing of the cross-petition, the defendant may proceed to the trial of the cross-petition without further notice to the adverse party; and the case upon such cross-petition shall in all things be governed by the same rules applicable to a case on an original petition.’ ”

The court said:

“Appellee cites the case of Jenness v. Jenness (1865) 24 Ind. 355, 87 Am.Dec. 335, wherein it was held that the defendant in an action for divorce did not have to be a resident of this state in order to file a cross-petition and obtain the affirmative relief authorized by the statute. * * *
“Section 1102, supra, was not enacted until 1873, whereas the case of Jenness v. Jenness, supra, was decided in 1865, and does not therefore contain a construction of the statute now under consideration. It does, however, establish a definite principle of law, which we cannot disregard in construing said statute in the manner in which we do. We do not think the Legislature, by the enactment of section 1102, supra, intended to preclude a nonresident from obtaining that relief to which she is entitled, after having been forced into court at the instance of the adverse party. We are constrained from placing a construction upon section 1102, supra, that might place an innocent nonresident defendant at the mercy of the whims of an unscrupulous litigant. Generally, statutes making residence of plaintiff a prerequisite to the exercise of divorce jurisdiction do not [51]*51preclude a nonresident defendant from filing a cross-bill and obtaining a decree of divorce against plaintiff, provided plaintiff has resided in the jurisdiction the requisite time. Nor will a nonresident defendant be deprived of his right to relief on a cross-bill by a dismissal or discontinuance of the original petition. * * *
“In jenness v. Jenness, supra, the court said: ‘Thus, while our statute is intended to prevent nonresidents from making use of our courts to perpetrate frauds upon their unsuspecting wives or husbands, by coming here to petition for divorces, it, at the same time arms them with every weapon of defense which is afforded to our own people when brought into court at the suit of those whose bona fide residence here gives us jurisdiction.’ We think this language is quite applicable to section 1102, supra, and hold that the word ‘case’ as used therein has reference to the proceedings or trial of the cause, and not to the pleadings.”

In the event of the dismissal of the complaint, the burden of proving residence falls upon the cross-complainant, and, in the absence of the record, we will assume that the cross-complainant proved the residence of the plaintiff to the satisfaction of the court. “Thus appellant’s contention that the dismissal of the original complaint carries out of court the case in its entirety cannot prevail.”

In Sloan v. Sloan, 1927, 155 Tenn. 422, 295 S.W.

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10 Alaska 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-jacobs-akd-1941.