Joyner v. Joyner

62 S.E. 182, 131 Ga. 217, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 182 (Joyner v. Joyner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joyner v. Joyner, 62 S.E. 182, 131 Ga. 217, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 48 (Ga. 1908).

Opinion

Beck, J.

Boselie Joyner, hereinafter called the wife, brought an action for alimony against R. G. Joyner, hereinafter called the husband, in the superior court of Fulton county. The husband appeared and pleaded. The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and the husband excepted, one of the grounds of his exceptions being that the judgment was without evidence to support it, “because the evidence showed tliat defendant had been granted a divorce from plaintiff by a court of competent jurisdiction, to wit, the district court of Sedgwick county, Kansas, and that by said judgment plaintiff’s right to alimony was barred.” The record discloses the following facts: The parties were married in Georgia in 1898, where they both resided at the time, and where the wife continued to reside. In 1900 or 1901 the husband left the wife at their home in.Atlanta, Ga., ostensibly to go to Hot Springs, Ark., for his health. He returned about a month later and spent two days, leaving a second time and taking up his domicil at Wichita, Kan. His wife was. not permitted to accompany him. In 1905 the husband procured a total divorce in the dis[219]*219triet court of Sedgwick county, Kansas, the place of his domicil. The notice of the pendency of the divorce proceedings was by publication, a copy of the same being sent to the defendant by mail; but the wife did not appear in the action. Subsequently the husband married again, and returned to Atlanta, Ga., where he now resides. On the trial of the action for alimony, the husband pleaded the Kansas divorce. The court admitted an authenticated copy of the proceedings in evidence, but refused to recognize the same as a bar to the wife’s right to alimony.

1. In the case of Haddock v. Haddock, 201 U. S. 562 (26 Sup. Ct. 525, 50 L. ed. 867), Mr. Justice White, after an exhaustive review of the authorities both State and Federal, announced the opinion of the majority of the court in the following language: “The husband and wife being domiciled in New York, the husband left the wife, acquired in good faith, after a lapse of years, a domicil in Connecticut, and obtained in that 'State, and in accordance with its laws, a judgment of divorce based on constructive, and not actual, service of process on the .wife, who remained domiciled in New York, and never appeared in the action. The wife subsequently sued for divorce in New York and obtained personal service in that State on the husband, who pleaded the Connecticut judgment. Held, Without questioning the power of the State of Connecticut to enforce the decree within its own borders, and without intimat-ing any doubt that the State of New York might give it such degree of efficacy that it might be entitled to in view of the public policy, of the State, that the Connecticut decree, rendered as it was without being based on personal service of process on, and therefore without jurisdiction over the wife, was not entitled to obligatory enforcement in the State of New York by virtue of the full faith and credit clause of the Federal constitution.” The facts in the Haddock case are very similar to those in the case at bar, and the opinion in that ease disposes of the question as to whether the Kansas court, in virtue alone of the domicil of the husband in that State, had jurisdiction to render a decree against the wife which was entitled to be enforced against the wife in this State in and by virtue of the constitution and laws of the Hnited States.

But it is contended by the plaintiff in error that section 5237 of the code of Georgia, which provides that records and judicial proceedings properly authenticated “shall have such faith and credit [220]*220given them in every court within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the State from which they are taken/’ makes it obligatory upon the courts of this State, independently of any Federal law, to give the Kansas decree the same efficacy in Georgia that it has in Kansas. To this contention it is sufficient to reply that the code section is a literal copy of a Federal statute (U. S. Rev. Stat. §905, U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 677), and its inapplicability to a question like the one now under consideration was adjudicated in Haddock’s case, supra. As was said by Mr. Justice McCay in McCauley v. Hargroves, 48 Ga. 50 (15 Am. B. 660), “This is not intended to exclude such defenses to the judgment as inquire into ’the jurisdiction of the court in which the judgment was given, or such as inquire into the right of the State itself to exercise authority over the person or subject-matter.” In the present case, the Kansas decree was rendered without being based on personal service of process on the defendant, who did not appear in the action; and the court rendering the decree w.as, therefore, without jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. The only instance in which a judgment, entitled to obligatory enforcement in other States, can be obtained.against a nonresident defendant, based upon constructive service of process, is where the proceeding is one in rem, and the res is within the jurisdiction of the court rendering the judgment. Woodruff v. Taylor, 20 Vt. 65. And, as was pointed out in Haddock’s case, “A suit for divorce brought in a State other than the domicil of matrimony, against a wife who is still domiciled therein, is not a proceeding in rem justifying the court to enter a decree as to the res, or marriage relation, entitled to be enforced outside of the territorial jurisdiction of the court.” See also Borden v. Fitch, 15 Johns. (N. Y.) 121 (8 Am. D. 225).

2. We come next to consider the question as to whether the Kansas decree should be given effect in Georgia, not because of the statute above referred to, but because of the comity between the States. The general rule governing the comity of nations is that in a proper case the laws and judicial proceedings of one State will be enforced in another State, provided they do .not involve anything immoral, contrary to general policy, or violative of the conscience of the State called upon to give them effect. Eubanks v. Banks, 34 Ga. 407. In the case of Cox v. Adams, 2 Ga. [221]*221158, Nisbet, J., delivering the opinion, said, “The comity of nations can not be recognized as capricious- — -as depending upon arbitrary whims or tyrannic impulses. It has grown into a system whose sanctions are reason, religion, and the common interests of all, for the violation of which States are amenable to the public sentiment of the world. The rules admitted by civilized States upon this subject are founded not only in convenience, but in necessity; without them commerce could not exist between the States. . . The whole system of agencies, purchases and sales, mutual credits, and transfers of negotiable instruments depends upon the jus gentium. In fact nothing so much distinguishes civilized from savage States as this comity of the nations.” What is here said, as to the necessity of a wise and uniform system of comity between the States as regards trade and commerce, is equally applicable to the subject of marriage and divorce. Especially in the United States, where from our position as a confederation of independent sovereignties, contiguous, but each with its distinctive municipal law of divorce, the necessity for such a rule of comity becomes manifest. As was pointed out by the New Jersey Court of Chancery in Felt v. Felt, 59 N. J. Eq. 606 (45 Atl. 105, 49 Atl. 1071, 47 L. R. A. 546, 83 Am. St. R. 612), and by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 182, 131 Ga. 217, 1908 Ga. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyner-v-joyner-ga-1908.