Rheaume v. Rheaume

268 A.2d 437, 107 R.I. 500, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 801
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 6, 1970
Docket774-M.P
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 268 A.2d 437 (Rheaume v. Rheaume) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rheaume v. Rheaume, 268 A.2d 437, 107 R.I. 500, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 801 (R.I. 1970).

Opinion

*502 Kelleher, J.

This is a certiorari proceeding wherein we are reviewing the Family Court’s denial of the petitioner’s motion that he be allowed to give certain testimony by deposition. We shall refer to the parties to this litigation by their first names.

Lucille and Donald were married on June 29, 1963. One child was born of the marriage. Her name is Karen. She is five years old and lives with her mother in Woonsocket. It appears from the record certified to us that the parties have been separated for a period of approximately five years. On September 20, 1968, the District Court for the Eighth Judicial District of the State of Nevada entered a default judgment against Lucille and granted Donald’s petition for divorce on the ground that the parties were separated for a period in excess of one- year. Lucille received notice of the Nevada suit, but neither she nor any attorney acting on her behalf participated in that litigation. Although the Nevada decree made no provision for Lucille’s support, it did provide that Donald would pay $15 a week for Karen’s support until she reaches majority or becomes self-supporting. The decree makes the support payment subject to the express condition that Donald be afforded the right to visit Karen at reasonable times.

Sometime thereafter, Donald left Nevada and returned to New England. He took up residence in Plainville, Massachusetts, which is minutes away from Woonsocket. On March 13, 1969, Lucille filed a petition in the Family Court for a bed and board divorce. In the petition she asked for support for herself and Karen. Donald was served with a copy of the petition in Plainville, and on April 1, 1969, he entered a special appearance for the purpose of contesting the Family Court’s jurisdiction alleging that he and Lucille were divorced in Nevada.

When Donald entered his special appearance, Lucille asked the court to issue additional process so that Donald *503 could be served once he came to Rhode Island to testify in support of his motion to dismiss her petition. Donald then filed a motion for a dedimus potestatem which would permit him to give testimony in support of his motion by deposition. In his motion, Donald expressed his apprehension that he would be served with process while in this state thereby giving the Family Court jurisdiction over him. The deposition was to be taken in Attleboro, Massachusetts. The motion for the dedimus was denied and this petition for a writ of certiorari followed.

The trial justice based his denial of Donald’s motion on the following portion of G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §9-19-26:

“In all cases of divorce, separation and annulment of marriage, the testimony shall be given viva voce in open court; provided, however, that the family court may permit the taking of depositions in cases where the witnesses or parties are aged, infirm or too ill to appear in court or for any other special cause.”

It is conceded that Donald is neither aged nor infirm. He was enjoying good health at the time he asked the Family Court to authorize the taking of his deposition. In this proceeding he claims that the denial of his motion was a clear abuse of the trial justice’s discretion and that it was in direct violation of the constitutional guarantees of equal protection' of the laws, full faith and credit by one state to the judgment rendered in another and due process. We disagree.

Ift considering Donald’s petition, we shall first consider his constitutional arguments and then determine if the trial justice’s action amounted to an abuse of his discretion.

Recently, in Beebe v. Fitzgerald, 106 R. I. 650, 262 A.2d 625, we observed that the equal protection clause doe's not require that all persons be dealt with identically. This constitutional provision, while guaranteeing' an equality of *504 treatment to all similarly situated, permits a reasonable classification which is based upon a substantial difference having a reasonable basis to the object or persons dealt with and the public purpose sought to be achieved.

It is a well-established rule in this jurisdiction that divorce proceedings differ substantially from all other civil actions in that the state is an interested party which seeks the preservation of the marital status. In furtherance of this interest, we have held that divorce shall be granted only on a showing by clear and convincing evidence of the guilt of the respondent spouse and the freedom from fault which the petitioner attributes to himself. The statutory bar against the use of a deposition in a divorce case is but another expression of the state’s concern about matters of divorce with its likely ramifications in the lives and property rights of others. The statute which requires, that, apart from the statutory exceptions, all testimony relating to a divorce petition be given in the courtroom before the trial justice represents an effort by the legislature to preserve the matrimonial bond. The legislation is reasonable, not arbitrary. There is a correlation between the persons dealt with and the public purposes sought to be achieved by the statute. Section 9-19-26 does not violate the equal protection clause.

In his claim that the Family Court has refused to afford full faith and credit to his Nevada decree, Donald ignores our holding in Rymanowski v. Rymanowski, 105 R. I. 89, 249 A.2d 407. There we repeated the oft-stated rule that, although full faith and credit must be given to an ex parte divorce decree, all states are entitled to determine for themselves the jurisdictional basis upon which the foreign decree is founded and to withhold full faith and credit if not satisfied that the party asserting the foreign divorce was properly domiciled within the divorce-decreeing state at the time the decree was entered. In fact, in Rymanow *505 ski we upheld the Family Court’s finding that the husband was a-bona fide domiciliary of Nevada at the time he obtained a divorce. The main thrust of Bymanowski, however, was the recognition of the “divisible divorce” doctrine. This concept recognizes that the marital status may be dissolved without necessarily extinguishing all of the obligations of a husband originally created by the common law as incidents thereto. White v. White, 83 Ariz. 305, 320 P.2d 702. The record before us shows this cause comes within the “divisible divorce” doctrine. The Nevada proceedings were wholly ex parte. Lucille and the minor child, Karen, have been at all times residents of Ehode Island. While in Yarborough v. Yarborough, 290 U. S. 202, 54 S.Ct. 181, 78 L.Ed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 A.2d 437, 107 R.I. 500, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rheaume-v-rheaume-ri-1970.