Smerda v. Smerda

74 N.E.2d 751, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 232, 35 Ohio Op. 472, 1947 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 217
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMay 1, 1947
DocketNo. 521,038
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 N.E.2d 751 (Smerda v. Smerda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smerda v. Smerda, 74 N.E.2d 751, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 232, 35 Ohio Op. 472, 1947 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 217 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By McNAMEE, J.:

This is an action for a declaratory judgment wherein plaintiff, Estelle Smerda, asks this Court to declare a decree of divorce obtained by defendant Frank Smerda in Nevada to be void, and to adjudicate that she is the defendant’s lawful wife. Plaintiff seeks no coercive relief. Plaintiff and defendant were married in 1931 and resided in this county as husband and wife until their final separation in March, 1937. One child was born of said marriage.

In March, 1937, Frank Smerda filed a petition for divorce in the Common Pleas Court of Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Estelle Smerda filed an answer thereto, and a cross petition, in which she prayed for alimony, custody of their minor child, and an order for the child’s support. In 1939 this court denied Frank Smerda’s petition for divorce and granted his wife the- relief prayed for in her cross petition, including an award for alimony in the approximate sum of $18,500 payable $1500 in cash and the balance in weekly installments of $40 each. Estelle Smerda was also awarded custody of the minor child and the court ordered Frank Smerda to pay $10 per week for the child’s support. To secure the payment of the alimony award, the court made the same a lien upon certain shares of stock owned by Frank Smerda in the National Realty & Finance Company [234]*234and Smerda’s Music House, Inc. Frank Smerda appealed from the judgment of the Common Pleas Court but in the spring of 1941 the Court of Appeals of this district affirmed the judgment of the court below.

In January, 1942, together with his mother, who had been advised by her physician to go west in the interest of her health, and a Mrs. Emile Boresch, a widow, Smerda left Cleveland, and traveled by automobile to Tucson, Arizona. On January 29, 1942, after spending about eight .days in Tucson with his mother and Mrs. Boresch, Smerda drove to Carson City, Nevada. Staying one night at. Qarson City, he then went to Reno, Nevada, and obtained a room at the home of a Mrs. Mathews. Immediately upon the expiration of six weeks’ residence in Reno, Nevada, — On March 14th, 1942, — Smerda filed suit for divorce against his wife Estelle Smerda, on the ground that defendant and plaintiff had not cohabited as man and wife for a period of more than three years.' Under Nevada law personal service of summons- out of the state may be substituted for service by publication. Pursuant to this law plaintiff was served with, summons and a copy of the divorce petition here in Cuyahoga County, the service being made by local counsel for Frank Smerda on March 18th, 1942. Estelle Smerda was never in Nevada, did not enter her appearance in the action or in any way submit to the jurisdiction of the Nevada court.

On April 18th, 1942, upon his testimony, corroborated only as to his period of residence in Nevada by Mrs. Mathews, Smerda obtained a decree of divorce. On April 20th he left Reno, Nevada, and went to San Francisco to see Robert M. Brown whom he had met and claims to have done business with during his stay in Reno. After spending one day in San Francisco, Smerda left for Tucson, Arizona, and the day following his arrival there his mother and Mrs. Boresch accompanied him back to, Cleveland. A few weeks after his return to Cleveland Smerda and Mrs. Boresch went to Covington, Kentucky, 'where a ceremonial marriage was performed. They returned to Cleveland to live as man and wife, and shortly thereafter the plaintiff, learning of the marriage, instituted this action.

Upon the original hearing of this cause the court granted defendant judgment on the pleadings. An appeal was taken and after some delay occasioned by an error in the journal entry the Court of Appeals reversed the holding of this court and remanded the cause for trial. Additional relevant facts bearing upon the issue to be determined are hereinafter outlined.

It is plaintiff’s contention that the Nevada decree is void because Frank Smerda did not establish a bona fide domicile [235]*235in that state and that the Nevada court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine his action for divorce. Defendant asserts that he was in good faith a domiciliary of Nevada at the time he procured the decree of divorce, and further that in this action wherein only an adjudication of status is sought and no coercive relief prayed for, plaintiff cannot question the jurisdiction of the Nevada court.

It is defendant’s view that an attack upon the jurisdiction of the court of another state to grant an uncontested divorce decree upon substituted service must be made by a State, or for a purpose in which a State has a direct and immediate interest; that is, that the attack must be made with a definite remedial objective and be not “merely an assault upon the marital status.” In support of this view defendant relies upon the expressions of the United States Supreme Court in the syllabi and opinion of Williams v North Carolina, 325 U.S., 226, and upon the concurring opinions of Justices Douglass and Rutledge in Essenwein ex rel Essenwein, 325 U.S., 279.

An examination of the opinion in the Williams case will quickly dispel the notion that the decision in that case has the limited effect claimed for it by defendant. The Williams case involved a prosecution by the State of North Carolina for bigamous cohabitation, and it is true that the Supreme Court in its opinion and in paragraph 4 of the syllabus refers to, and declares it to be the right of a State to -question the jurisdictional basis of a divorce decree granted in another State, for the purpose of enabling the challenging State to vindicate its social policy and to punish for particular acts and the like. But manifestly these expressions were not intended as limitations upon the general principles of law announced by the Supreme Court and which impart to the decision in the Williams case its far reaching and controlling effect.

Paragraph 2 of the syllabus of the Williams case reads:

“A decree of divorce rendered in one state may be collaterally impeached in another by proof that the court which rendered the decree had no jurisdiction, even though the record of the proceedings in that court purports to show jurisdiction.”

The sharp and vigorous criticism of the court’s decision as expressed in the dissenting opinions of Justices Rutledge and Black demonstrate the dissenters’ awareness that the court’s opinion in the Williams case fixed no limitation as to parties or forms of action in which an attack may be made upon the jurisdictional foundation of uncontested divorce de[236]*236crees based upon substituted service, nor do the concurring opinions of Justices Rutledge and Douglass in the Essenwein case supra support defendant’s contention. That case, which involved an order of support, was decided squarely upon the doctrine of the Williams case. The additional reasons for their concurrence which were expressed by Justices Rutledge and Douglass in the Essenwein case, indicate the authors’ opinions that the jurisdictional basis for a decree of divorce in one.state “capable of foreclosing an action for maintenance and support in another state, may be different from that required to alter marital status with extra-territorial effect.” But these views are not efficacious to narrow the scope or effect of the general principles enunciated by the court in the Williams case supra.

Adequate sanction for an action to determine marital status only, is found in the Declaratory Judgment Act of Ohio. Sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 N.E.2d 751, 48 Ohio Law. Abs. 232, 35 Ohio Op. 472, 1947 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smerda-v-smerda-ohctcomplcuyaho-1947.