Larrick v. Walters

177 N.E. 642, 39 Ohio App. 363, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 508, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 347
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 177 N.E. 642 (Larrick v. Walters) 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
Larrick v. Walters, 177 N.E. 642, 39 Ohio App. 363, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 508, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 347 (Ohio Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Farr, J.

This cause is here on error. The action below was for necessities' in the way of food, clothing and care furnished by defendant in error, J. Evan Walters, to Ella May Larrick, alleged to be the wife of William H. Larrick, plaintiff in error.

The issues were joined in the court below, after which the cause came on to be heard to the court without the intervention of a jury, and resulted in a judgment and finding in favor of plaintiff below in the sum of $1,734, or $6 per week for 289 weeks between September 1, 1923, and March 19, 1929; and from that judgment error is prosecuted in this court upon the ground that it is contrary to the evidence and the law.

The important facts are that William H. Larrick and Ella May Larrick were married in Noble county in 1901, of which marriage four sons were born to them between the date of marriage and the year 1911.

Mrs. Larrick became insane, and was sent to the hospital for the insane at Athens, Ohio, May 1, 1911.

On the 19th day of October, 1920, Mrs. Larrick was sent on a trial visit to the home of her mother, Lavina Heddleson, in Washington county, this state, and remained with her mother until her mother’s death in May, 1922.

On the 30th day of June, 1921, while at her mother’s home, a notice was sent in due form to the probate court of Noble county, by the superintendent of the State Hospital at Athens, that Mrs. Larrick was discharged as improved.

Upon the death of her mother, Mrs. Larrick was *365 taken to the home of her half-sister, Mrs. Sarah A. Walters, wife of defendant in error, where she has remained until the present time.

Prior to September 1, 1923, J. Evan Walters, defendant in error, husband of Sarah A. Walters, gave notice to plaintiff in error that he would expect him to pay for the food, clothing and care of Mrs. Larrick.

It is disclosed that Larrick began an action for divorce in Noble county in 1917, which was refused to him, and his petition dismissed on the 12th day of November of that year.

However, a little later in the spring of 1918, Larrick went to the state of Washington, where, on September 29, 1919, he obtained a divorce from his unfortunate wife, on the ground of “chronic dementia,” the custody of the children being awarded to him, but there was no allowance of support or alimony for his wife.

In the fall of 1920 he returned to his home in Noble county, and in 1929 this action was begun to recover for the food, clothing and care of his wife, under favor of Section 8003 of the Gteneral Code, which reads as follows: “If the husband neglects to make adequate provision for the support of his wife, any other person, in good faith, may supply her with necessaries for her support, and recover the reasonable value thereof from the husband.”

It may be noted, also, that subsequent to the time this action was brought against Larrick, Mrs. Walters, as guardian, began a suit for an allowance of alimony for her ward, Mrs. Larrick, the result of which wras that an order was made in the sum of $1,000.

*366 It is insisted, however, that the defendant in error is not entitled to recover under Section 8003, General Code, for the reason, so it is claimed, that during the time Walters cared for Mrs. Larrick she was Larrick’s divorced wife, and it is urged that under the “full faith and credit clause” of the Constitution of the United States the divorce granted to the husband in the state of Washington must be recognized in Ohio, and, if not for that reason, that it should be recognized under the rule of comity of states.

The divorce was granted to Larrick upon the ground, as above stated, of what is termed “chronic dementia” of his wife, and this ground of divorce is not recognized by the law of Ohio.

In this connection, pages 512, 513, 514, 515 and 516, of 9 Ruling Case Law, become of interest, but will not be quoted here.

The case of Haddock v. Haddock, 201 U. S., 562, 26 S. Ct., 525, 50 L. Ed., 867, 5 Ann. Cas., 1, is applicable in this case, and it is there held that the mere domicile within the state of one party to the marriage does not give the courts of that state jurisdiction to render a decree of divorce enforceable in all the other states by virtue of the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution against a nonresident who did not appear, and was only constructively served with notice of the pendency of the action.

The foregoing was a case widely discussed, and attracted much interest on the part of the bench and bar throughout the United States, and the principle there announced may well be applied in the instant case, because the state of Washington was not *367 the matrimonial domicile of these parties and service was had by publication only, and the wife being insane of course did not appear or in any way consent to the decree, nor did anyone for her. Mr. Justice White, speaking for the court in the above case, says at page 570 of 201 U. S., 26 S. Ct., 525, 527:

“Fifth. It is no longer open to question that where husband and wife are domiciled in 9 State there exists jurisdiction in such State, for good cause, to enter a decree of divorce which will be entitled to enforcement in another State by virtue of the full faith and credit clause. It has, moreover, been decided that where a bona fide domicil has been acquired in a State by either of the parties to a marriage, and a suit is brought by the domiciled party in such State for divorce, the courts of that State, if they acquire personal jurisdiction also of the other party, have authority to enter a decree of divorce, entitled to be enforced in every State by the full faith and credit clause. Cheever v. Wilson, 9 Wall. 108 [19 L. Ed., 604].”
“Sixth. Where the domicil of matrimony was in a particular State, and the husband abandons his wife and goes into another State in order to avoid his marital obligations, such other State to which the husband has wrongfully fled does not, in the nature of things, become a new domicil of matrimony, and, therefore, is not to be treated as the actual or constructive domicil of the wife; hence, the place where the wife was domiciled when so abandoned constitutes her legal domicil until a new actual domicil be by her elsewhere acquired. This *368 was clearly expressed in Barber v. Barber, 21 How. 582 [16 L. Ed., 226].”

Two things are apparent from the foregoing: First, there must be personal service of the other party. And, second, the wife’s domicile does not change until a new actual domicile is acquired elsewhere.

And it is further observed at page 572 of the Haddock case that: “b. As New York was the domicil of the wife and the domicil of matrimony, from which the husband fled in disregard of his duty, it clearly results from the sixth proposition that the domicil of the wife continued in New York. c.

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Bluebook (online)
177 N.E. 642, 39 Ohio App. 363, 10 Ohio Law. Abs. 508, 1930 Ohio App. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larrick-v-walters-ohioctapp-1930.