Rinaldi v. Rinaldi

118 A. 685, 94 N.J. Eq. 14, 9 Stock. 14, 1922 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 14
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 18, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 118 A. 685 (Rinaldi v. Rinaldi) 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
Rinaldi v. Rinaldi, 118 A. 685, 94 N.J. Eq. 14, 9 Stock. 14, 1922 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 14 (N.J. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Walker, Chancellor.

Onr statute conferring jurisdiction of causes for the purpose of annulment of marriage provides that jurisdiction may be acquired (1) by personal service of process upon the defendant within this state, when either party is a bona fide resident here at the time of the commencement of the action, or (2) when the defendant cannot be served personally with process within this state, and when at the time of the commencement of the action the petitioner is a bona fide resident here, jurisdiction may be acquired by publication to be followed where practicable by service upon, or notice to, the defendant without this state, &c. P. L. 1907 p. 474 § 5 subdivs. 1, 2.

On examining this case on the master’s report and depositions annexed, I filed a memorandum in which I recited that the parties were married February 23d, 1917, at Syracuse, New York, when the petitioner was twelve years, eight months and five days old; that they have not cohabited since March 17th, 1917, when, on the latter date, petitioner left the [16]*16defendant and went to the home of her brother in Phillips-burg, in this state, where she has lived ever since; and I cited Jimenez v. Jimenez, 93 N. J. Eq. 257, in which I held that a marriage as to its dissolution is governed by the lex dornicilii, and that this applies to nullity suits as well; that here, as there, the petitioner claims to be domiciled in New Jersey, and invokes the jurisdiction of our court, but that there may be an impediment to the granting of the decree, for the proofs show that the defendant is a resident of the State of New York, where the' parties were married and lived through the brief period of their cohabitation; and the question arises, Can this wife, by deserting her husband in that state, come here and obtain a domicile for the purpose of bringing a nullity suit ? Jimenez v. Jimenez, supra,. The desertion here referred to meansl leaving, and the word is not used in a technical sense. I concluded my memorandum with the statement that counsel- might be heard orally or on briefs upon the question of residence.

In pursuance of the leave thus given counsel for petitioner appeared before me and argued the reserved question, citing Avakian v. Avakian, 69 N. J. Eq. 89, as authority to the effect that the petitioner is domiciled in New Jersey and has the reqirisite residential status to maintain this suit. In that case Vice-Chancellor Pitney observed (at p. 99) : “The notion that the domicile of the wife follows that of her husband has little or no practical application to suits between husband and wife, since if the wife was justified in leaving her husband she thereby became entitled to adopt a new domicile, and if she was not justified she will fail in her suit on the merits.”

Avakian v. Avakian, supra, is also an authority that' this court has power to annul a marriage solemnized in another jurisdiction and when the cause for action arose in a foreign state.

In order, apparently, to lay a foundation for the obtaining of a Iona fide residence in this state by the petitioner upon her actual desertion of her husband, counsel has filed an affidavit of the petitioner, in which she says that prior to her [17]*17marriage she was in good health, robust and strong for a girl of her age (twelve years); that her experience oh the first night of her married life was such that she incurred a feeling of fear of the defendant, and from that time on she never had intercourse—meaning, of course, sexual intercourse—with him of her own free will and consent, and on each occasion thereafter when they had intercourse she complained of pain and suffering that she underwent, and begged the defendant not to try to have intercourse with her; that her health failed and it.was necessary to call in a doctor to treat her; that he tolcl her that she was very nervous and that her condition was such that she should go to bed and remain there; that she remained in bed for about one and a half weeks, or up to the very day she was taken from her husband’s home by her father, whom she begged to take her away from the defendant, saying if her father did not take her she would run away, because she could not stand that life any longer.

This affidavit is intended as a showing that the wife was justified in leaving' her husband. That may be so. In English v. English, 27 N. J. Eq. 579, upon bill for divorce a mensa et thoro, on the ground of extreme cruelty, consisting mainly in gross abuse by the defendant of his marital rights in insisting on having intercourse with his wife against her entreaties and expression of apprehension that it would be fatal to her, she being kept awake many nights by the pain she suffered during and after intercourse, Chancellor Eunyon decreed a divorce from bed and board forever, ante p. 74. The corirt of errors and appeals in reversing the decree said that the action of that court was not based upon any approval of the acts of the husband of which his wife complained, nor upon his requests for her return, nor upon any formal security that he could offer for his future good behavior, and held that a divorce a mensa et thoro will be granted where there is gross abuse of marital rights.

Vice-Chancellor Pitney in his assertion in Avakian v. Avakian that a wife could acquire a domicile independent of that of her husband, if she is justified in leaving him, could not have meant she could leave him for any cause sufficient [18]*18unto herself not affording legal justification. The fact in the case before him was that a marriage contract between a girl fourteen years of age with a man fifty-five years old, in the circumstances recited, was procured through duress by the man practiced on the girl. This, of course, was an offence which justified her leaving.

In re Geiser’s Will, 82 N. J. Eq. 311, I held, as ordinary (at p. 313), that upon marriage the legal domicile of the wdfe merges into that of the husband as a legal sequence of the nuptial contract, and the unity of domicile exists during coverture, unless the wife acquires one elsewhere by the husband’s consent. That consent may be either actual or constructive, and may be manifested by acquiescence, by abandonment or by such conduct inimical to cohabitation as would secure to the wife a decree of divorce a vinculo or a mensa et thoro.

In Suydam v. Suydam, 79 N. J. Eq. 144, I held, when vice-chancellor, that if a husband be guilty of conduct amounting to a matrimonial offence that would constitute ground for divorce, his wife is justified in leaving him and the desertion thereby becomes his.

In Rogers v. Rogers, 81 N. J. Eq. 479, the court of errors and appeals held that desertion is justified only when the deserting party has been so offended against as to authorize at his or her instance a decree of divorce or judicial separation

In Thompson v. Thompson, 89 N. J. Eq. 70 (at p. 77), Vice-Chancellor Baches held that in legal contemplation the husband’s domicile is that of the wife, and unchangeable by her, except with his acquiescence or consent or for misconduct on his part, inimical to the union, as justified her in selecting another, citing, among other authorities, In re Geiser’s Will, supra, and Tracy v. Tracy, 62 N. J. Eq. 807.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 685, 94 N.J. Eq. 14, 9 Stock. 14, 1922 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rinaldi-v-rinaldi-njch-1922.