McGrew v. Mutual Life Insurance

64 P. 103, 132 Cal. 85, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1008
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1901
DocketS.F. No. 1230.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 64 P. 103 (McGrew v. Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrew v. Mutual Life Insurance, 64 P. 103, 132 Cal. 85, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1008 (Cal. 1901).

Opinion

McFARLAND,J.

—Action on a life insurance policy. Judg ment was for plaintiff in the court below, and from the judgment defendant appealed.

The respondent is a resident of California, where this action was commenced, and the appellant is a resident of the state of New York. The defense is rather a remarkable one; it rests upon a decree of divorce rendered by a court of the Republic of Hawaii in an action brought there against the present respondent by the guardian of her husband,—a decree which could not have been obtained here,—and upon a Hawaiian statute which has no force here, except by'comity.

The material facts in the case are these: On September 14, *88 1892, the respondent, was the wife of one Henri G. McGrew, and she and her huáband were then residing and domicijlM in Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. On that day the policy of insurance sued on was executed, by which defendant promised to pay five thousand dollars to the respondent herein, Alphonsine McGrew, upon the death of her husband, Henri, provided that she should be living at the time of such death. Henri died on the twenty-second day of October, 1894, leaving the respondent, his wife, surviving him. In 1893, Henri and respondent made a trip to California for the benefit of the health ' of the former; and in the latter part of December, 1893, they returned to Honolulu, he being then in a very feeble mental condition from softening of the brain. When they landed at Honolulu they were met by one Carter, who assumed control over them, and ordered them not to go to the home in which they had been living, but to go to a hotel. It appears that soon afterwards Carter was the legally appointed guardian of the ‘person and estate of Henri, who had then been judicially declared to be non compos mentis; but it does not appear when he became such guardian. A few days after respondent and her husband went to the hotel, Henri was removed by Carter from the hotel to a hospital. Respondent wanted to go back to the home where they had formerly lived, but Carter, who had the key and control of the house, would not let her, and he sold all the furniture in it, except a piano, which plaintiff claimed as her own. Carter would not furnish her a home or any money, and Henri was an imbecile, incapable of understanding the situation. On February 8, 1894, Carter, as guardian of Henri, brought an action on behalf of the latter to obtain a divorce from respondent, alleging adultery as the ground of divorce. Service of process was served on respondent in Honolulu, and she appeared in the action by an attorney, and filed a demurrer, and afterwards an answer denying the charge. On April 5,1894, respondent left the Hawaiian Islands, with the intention of not returning there again, but intending to come to California and make her home here. She obtained the funds to pay the expense of the journey by the sale of her piano. She said that she came to California to make her home here, and also through fear that “they” would take her infant child away from her. She arrived here in the same month,—April, 1894,—and has since then constantly resided in California, intending it as her place of residence. *89 On August 25,1894, the Hawaiian court entered a decree of divorce in the said action brought by Carter, dissolving the bonds of matrimony between this respondent and the said Henri (and it is not improper to say that the evidence in the case was conflicting). There was nothing in the pleadings in said case about property, and the decree was simply one of divorce, without any disposition of any other matter whatever. But there is, and at that time was, a statute of Hawaii which declares that “when a divorce is decreed for the adultery, or other offense amounting thereto, of the wife, the husband shall hold her personal estate forever.”

Respondent contends that the judgment in the divorce suit should be held invalid because, in the absence of an express statute on the subject, an action for a divorce cannot be maintained by a guardian, and there is no such statute in Hawaii,— the only' one relied on being the general provision that the guardian of an insane person “ shall appear for and represent his ward in all legal suits and proceedings, unless where another person is appointed for that purpose”; but, admitting these legal propositions to be correct, the courts of Hawaii have held otherwise, and their construction of the statutes of their own country cannot be here assailed. (McGrew v. McGrew, 9 Hawaii, 475.) Full effect must therefore be given to the judgment in the divorce suit.

It is also contended by respondent that the judgment in the divorce suit was never absolute and final, because certain exceptions taken by defendant’s attorney therein have never been disposed of, and it is provided by the Hawaiian statutes that “ no order or decree for a divorce shall be made absolute until such exceptions shall have been disposed of.” The transcript contains many things about the law of Hawaii touching the taking of exceptions in a trial court, and having them certified úp to the appellate court, which are somewhat difficult to* understand; but as the supreme court of that country seems to have held that the judgment in McGrew v. McGrew had become absolute (10 Hawaii, 117), and as there is no express finding on the subject in the case at bar, we are compelled to hold that the said judgment was final and conclusive as to the matter therein adjudicated.

Under our views of the case, it is not necessary to determine the points made by respondent that the Hawaiian statute has no force here, on the ground of comity, because it is penal, *90 works a forfefliure, and is contrary to the public policy of this state, etc.

As the plaintiff herein was served in Hawaii with process in the divorce suit, and appeared therein by attorney, the court there had jurisdiction, and the judgment therein rendered.concludes her as to the one thing adjudicated therein. But the judgment is merely a decree of divorce; it does not deal with any property rights; and if, as claimed by appellant, all the personal property of respondent, including the policy sued on, passed to her husband, that result must have flowed from the said Hawaiian statute providing for the forfeiture of the wife’s property, and not from anything decreed in the judgment. It was not a case where the adjudication by final judgment of property rights asserted in the pleadings relates back to the commencement of the action; for in that case there were no property rights averred, or considered, or adjudicated. The x .respondent’s right to her property was not affected by the mere \l pendency of the suit for divorce, and the statute had no appli- ’> cability until the entry of the judgment. The question, therefore, is, What was the right of respondent to the property involved at the time when the said statute could be invoked? And it is clear that if at that time she was domiciled in California, the Hawaiian statute had no operation upon her or her personal property here; for the law which governs personal property is the law of the domicile. (See Whitney v. Dodge, 105 Cal. 192, and authorities cited.)

In our opinion, the respondent, at the time when the ''Hawaiian statute took effect, was domiciled in California.

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Bluebook (online)
64 P. 103, 132 Cal. 85, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrew-v-mutual-life-insurance-cal-1901.