Perlstein v. Perlstein

204 A.2d 909, 152 Conn. 152, 1964 Conn. LEXIS 335
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 10, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 204 A.2d 909 (Perlstein v. Perlstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perlstein v. Perlstein, 204 A.2d 909, 152 Conn. 152, 1964 Conn. LEXIS 335 (Colo. 1964).

Opinion

King, C. J.

The plaintiff husband instituted this action against the defendant wife, claiming an annulment of their purported marriage. While the complaint lacks clarity, the allegations of fact in the plaintiff’s answer to the defendant’s plea in abatement, admitted by the defendant’s demurrer to that answer, make it clear that the annulment is claimed on the ground that the defendant was legally married to another at the time she went through the marriage ceremony with the plaintiff in Hartford, Connecticut, on August 25, 1959.

The court sustained the demurrer to the plaintiff’s answer to the plea in abatement, the plaintiff chose not to plead oyer, and judgment was thereupon rendered that the action abate. A motion to erase, based on substantially the same jurisdictional ground as the plea in abatement, was also granted. From separate judgments 1 erasing and abating the action for want of jurisdiction this appeal is taken.

I

The ground of the jurisdictional attack was that this action was for the annulment of a bigamous marriage and could be maintained only if the defendant, who was a resident of the state of New Jersey at the time of the institution of the action, *155 was personally served within Connecticut. Service had been constructive, by registered mail addressed to the defendant in New Jersey.

At the outset, it should be noted that the defendant’s claim is concerned with jurisdiction of the person, that is, jurisdiction to affect the rights of this particular nonresident defendant, in this particular action, on the basis of the particular service of process utilized. There is no doubt that the Superior Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of annulment where, as here, the plaintiff is domiciled in Connecticut, and this is so whether the ground relied upon would make the marriage void or voidable. General Statutes § 46-28; Restatement, Conflict of Laws § 115 (1); id., §§ 109-111 and § 113 as amended in the 1948 Sup., p. 111. Indeed, the defendant does not seem seriously to contest the court’s jurisdiction of the subject matter.

The rule denying that jurisdiction over this nonresident defendant can be acquired by constructive service outside Connecticut appears to be the majority rule today. Note, 128 A.L.R. 61, 73; 43 A.L.R.2d 1086; 4 Am. Jur. 2d, Annulment of Marriage, § 65. It is set forth perhaps as well as anywhere in the case of Owen v. Owen, 127 Colo. 359, 257 P.2d 581. In essence, in a case seeking annulment of a bigamous marriage, the majority rule proceeds upon two grounds. The first relates to the situation during the pendency of the action and prior to the rendition of the decree of annulment. The second applies to the action upon the rendition of the decree of annulment.

A

The first ground is that, by instituting an action for the annulment of a marriage on the claim that *156 it is bigamous, the plaintiff necessarily claims that the marriage is “void”; 2 that, therefore, there can, on the plaintiff’s own claims, be no marriage status, and, consequently, no res; and that without a res the action is necessarily in personam. Admittedly, in personam jurisdiction cannot be acquired over a nonresident defendant by constructive service without the state.

One vice in the reasoning of this first ground is that it presupposes that the marriage status, in the constitutional sense, can be changed by a plaintiff’s claims. Obviously, status either exists or it does not exist, and a plaintiff cannot create it or destroy it by his claims as to the validity or invalidity of the marriage.

Another vice in the reasoning is that it overlooks the fact that the terms “in rem” and “in personam” are not apt in describing the character of an action seeking to affect marital status. Such an action is neither an action merely in personam nor a true action in rem. In the constitutional sense it requires, in the forum state, the domicil of at least one of the parties to the marriage. In the determination of jurisdiction to render a decree affecting the marriage status, the search must be for a domicil, not for a status or res. Williams v. North Carolina, 317 U.S. 287, 297, 63 S. Ct. 207, 87 L. Ed. 279. *157 Manifestly, domicil cannot be affected by the type of action instituted.

Moreover, the status of marriage is an intangible res, entirely different from the tangible res of real estate or personal property within the jurisdiction upon which a true in rem action can be based as in cases such as Harris v. Weed, 89 Conn. 214, 221, 93 A. 232, or a quasi in rem action as in cases such as Pezas v. Pezas, 151 Conn. 611, 614, 201 A.2d 192. Thus, if the parties are domiciled in separate states, jurisdiction over the marriage status exists in each state, and under the “res” theory, the res necessarily exists in each state. The res is not, nor can it be, independently ascertainable as such, apart from domicil. The existence of the status or “res” in the forum state stems solely from the fact that the domicil of at least one party to the marriage is in that state. Rice v. Rice, 134 Conn. 440, 445, 58 A.2d 523, aff’d, 336 U.S. 674, 69 S. Ct. 751, 93 L. Ed. 957; Cook v. Cook, 342 U.S. 126, 127, 72 S. Ct. 157, 96 L. Ed. 146; note, 96 L. Ed. 152, and earlier annotations therein referred to. If domicil exists in a state, jurisdiction to affect the status of marriage exists in that state, regardless of whether the status does or does not fit into the classic concept of a “res”. See Williams v. North Carolina, supra.

A marriage ceremony, especially if apparently legally performed, gives rise to a presumptively valid status of marriage which persists unless and until it is overthrown by evidence in an appropriate judicial proceeding. No mere claim of bigamy, whether made in a pleading or elsewhere, would establish that a marriage was bigamous. See cases such as Roxbury v. Bridgewater, 85 Conn. 196, 202, 82 A. 193. Seldom, if ever, would a party to a bigamous marriage, in the face of the presumption *158 of its validity, feel free to treat the marriage as a nullity without a decree of annulment. Nor do we believe any attorney would advise such a course of conduct. The state’s concern in the marriage status of its domiciliarles imperatively demands that the invalidity of the purported marriage be judicially determined before that invalidity be accepted. See Williams v. North Carolina, supra, 298; 4 Am. Jur. 2d, Annulment of Marriage, § 2.

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Bluebook (online)
204 A.2d 909, 152 Conn. 152, 1964 Conn. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perlstein-v-perlstein-conn-1964.