Nichols v. Nichols

25 N.J. Eq. 60
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 N.J. Eq. 60 (Nichols v. Nichols) 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
Nichols v. Nichols, 25 N.J. Eq. 60 (N.J. Ct. App. 1874).

Opinion

Tub Ciiancellok.

The complainant, in July, 1872, filed her bill against the defendant, whom she claims to be her husband, for a divorce a vinculo, on the ground of adultery, and for alimony and the custody of their three children. The parlies were married in Massachusetts, Xovember 16th, 1852. The bill alleges that the complainant, for the ten years next preceding the filing of the bill, had been, and was, when the bill was filed, a resident of Plainfield, in this state, and that the defendant was also a resident of that place up to on or about the 10th of January, 1868, when he left the residence of the complainant at Plainfield, and went to the city of Brooklyn, and that, at the filing of the bill, he was still at the last named place. The adultery is alleged to have been committed with one Alice B. Paul, in April, 1870, at Brooklyn. The defendant was not served with process, but having received notice of the suit, appeared arid pleaded that he and the complainant were divorced from the bonds of marriage in Indiana on the 27th day of June, 1868, in a suit in the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Allen, of that state, wherein the complainant appeared and answered. The complainant replied that the decree of divorce was fraudulently obtained j that the court never acquired jurisdiction over the parties to, or the subject matter of, the proceedings, nor over their marriage relations, and that the parties had been, from 1862 up to, and were, at the time of those proceedings, residents of this state: [62]*62that the complainant never appeared in person or by attorney in the Indiana court, and never, knowingly, signed any warrant of attorney as set forth in the plea; that she never knew or heard of the proceedings until after the decree was obtained, and that the proceedings and the decree are fraudulent, illegal, void, and of no effect, and cannot be the ground of a plea in bar to her complaint.

It appears from the evidence, that the parties to this suit lived together as husband and wife in Plainfield, where the defendant was a practising physician, up to January, 1868, when, he having sold out his practice, they broke up housekeeping, and, storing their furniture, went with their children to the residence of his father in Sturbridge, Massachusetts. The complainant did not return to this state until some time in July following. The defendant, after remaining at Sturbridge for about a week, returned to Plainfield, as the complainant says, and as appears otherwise also, to settle up his business. He remained there for about a month, engaged in collecting debts due him, and in packing up his goods, to> remove them. He then went to the west, was in Indiana in March, 1868, and claims to have taken up his residence there. From Indiana he appears to have come back to the east, (as he alleges, with the intention of returning again to Indiana,) for the purpose of collecting the debts due him here. He left Indiana about the 1st of April, and from that- time to about the 1st of July, when he settled in Brooklyn, appears-to have had no particular abiding place. He, however, did not return to Plainfield, nor did he again come to this state to reside.

That he left New Jersey intending to change his domicil, I have no doubt. There had been trouble between him and his wife, arising from alleged familiarities of a grossly improper, not to say criminal, character on her part, with a man then residing in Plainfield. Naturally, under the circumstances, a change of residence yrould have been desirable. That he did remove his domicil from this state is. quite clear. When the proceedings for divorce were instituted in Indiana, [63]*63and until their conclusion, he was, if not a resident of that state, a resident of Massachusetts. Neither lie nor the complainant resided in New Jersey. Those proceedings are assailed on the ground that the court in Indiana had no jurisdiction over the persons or the subject matter. As to the former, tiny were both before it. The wife had notice of the suit. The summons had been served on her in Massachusetts, and although such service was technically a nullity, yet it was actual notice. She appeared and answered, by attorney duly appointed. The court had, by statute, jurisdiction over the subject <»f divorce. It laid jurisdiction over the subject matter of die complaint. The statute under which those proceedings wore taken, provided that, in addition to the causes of divorce iherein specified, a divorce might be granted for any oilier eaiwe for which the court might deem it proper that a divorce should be granted. The petition laid a proper foundation for the decree. If also appears by the record, that the question of domicil was passed upon, and the petitioner was adjudged to have been at the time of the filing of the petition a bona fide resident of Indiana, and to have been such for a year previous thereto. The decree is conclusive, in Indiana, and it is so here also. Cheever v. Wilson, 9 Wall. 108; Kinnier v. Kinnier, 45 N. Y. 535; Kirrigan v. Kirrigan, 2 31 McCarter 147.

In Shumway v. Stillman, 6 Wend. 447, the court said: “An examination of the cases results in the establishment of the following proposition : that the j udgment of a court of general jurisdiction in any state in the Union, is equally conclusive upon the parties in all the other states, as in the state in which it was rendered. This, however, is subject to two qualifications: 1. If it appear by the record, that the defendant was not served with process, and did not appear in person or by attorney, such judgment is void; and 2, if it appear by the record, that the defendant appeared by attorney, the defendant may disprove the authority of such attorney to appear for him.”

[64]*64In Vischer v. Vischer, 12 Barb. 640, Hand, J., said: Whatever maybe the. rule in respect to divorces granted by the courts in other countries, I am inclined to the opinion that a divorce granted by the courts of one of our sister states, after appearance, or if the parties are domiciled there, after ■personal service, there being no fraud or collusion', would be conclusive here. And it may be doubted, in case of an appearance and litigation on the merits, whether the proof of the domicil of the parties, or the lex loci contractus, or the locus delicti, would affect the decree.” But it is urged, that in this case the proof is that the petitioner in the suit in Indiana, had not, in fact, been a bona fide resident of that state for a year previous to filing the petition, and that therefore the proceedings and decree of divorce were and are a fraud upon the complainant, and upon the laws of this state. I deem it unnecessary to express an opinion on the question Avhether the decree is conclusive on the subject of the domicil of the petitioner, a point on which the courts have differed widely, for if it be not so, and the fraud .be admitted, the complainant in this cause was manifestly a party to it, and cannot take advantage of it. Her letters alone, conclusively show that she not only had knowledge of the institution, but also of the pendency and progress of the suit. They show, too, that she, notwithstanding her denial when testifying as a witness in’this'cause, executed the warrant appointing an attorney to appear for her, and did so, undeistandingly and with deliberation. There is also other abundant proof of these facts.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Miele v. Miele
95 A.2d 768 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1953)
Hedges v. Hedges
163 A. 660 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1932)
Dietrick v. Dietrick
134 A. 338 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1926)
Eldridge v. Eldridge
259 S.W. 209 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.J. Eq. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-nichols-njch-1874.