Smith v. Smith

9 R.I. Dec. 210
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 23, 1933
DocketDiv. No. 25037
StatusPublished

This text of 9 R.I. Dec. 210 (Smith v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Smith v. Smith, 9 R.I. Dec. 210 (R.I. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

CHURCHILL, J.

Petition for divorce and cross-petition heard on the merits,

Mary A. Smith filed a petition for divorce from bed and board on the grounds of extreme cruelty and gross misbehavior. The respondent filed a cross-petition on the ground that the petitioner, Mary A. Smith, at the time of her marriage to the respondent was married to one George J. Rotzman.

Gross-Petition.

On August 29, 1898, George J. Rotz-man married Augusta Layer at Newport, Rhode Island.

July 23, 1904, an interlocutory judgment of divorce in favor of Augusta Rotzman was entered in a divorce action in the Supreme Court of the State of New York in the County of Queens. No final decree has ever been entered in this action and under the law of the State of New York, the marriage status remains unchanged until entry of final decree.

Wilson vs. Burnett, 172 N. Y., Supp. 673.

On November 26, 1904, at Jersey City, New Jersey, the petitioner, under the name of Marie Anna Ruth, went through a ceremony of marriage with George Rotzman under the name of George C. Rotzman, as recited in the marriage certificate. They lived together thereafter as man and wife until 1913, -when the petitioner learned that no final decree had been entered in the divorce proceedings in the Supreme Court of the State of New York. She immediately left Rotzman and came to Rhode Island, where she has since lived.

[211]*211On December 21, 1915, the petitioner, under the name of Mary A. Ruth, and the respondent were married at Attle-boro, Massachusetts, and lived together in Providence until August, 1930, when the petitioner left the respondent, as she states, because of cruel treatment.

November 26, 1920, Rotzman, under the name of George C. Ratzman, instituted an action for divorce from the petitioner, naming her in the summons as Mary Ratzman. This action was begun in the Supreme Court of the State of New York for the County of Queens. Service was made on the petitioner in New York State but no appearance was entered by her or on her behalf, nor was any contest waged by her. This action went to final decree in favor of George J. Ratzman on April 15, 1921.

An examination of the evidence shows conclusively that the plaintiff in this action was the same person who went through a marriage ceremony with the petitioner at Jersey City on November 26, 1904, and who married Augusta Layer at Newport on August 29, 1898, and the Mary Ratzman named as the defendant in the New York proceedings instituted in November 1920 is the petitioner in this proceeding.

By stipulation of the parties, the statutes and the judicial opinions declaratory of the laws of the States of New Jersey, Massachusetts and New York, cited by the parties, may be used by this Court with the same force and effect as though formal proof thereof had been made at the hearing.

The main point relied on by the respondent is, that by the contract of marriage at Jersey City in 1904, Rotz-man and the petitioner became husband and wife de facto at least. In other words, the respondent contends that a marriage status was established which, while voidable by appropriate proceedings, yet had a validity sufficient to prevent the petitioner from entering into a valid marriage with the respondent.

Under the laws of New Jersey, where Rotzman and the petitioner went through a marriage ceremony, a second marriage is invalid and the status of marriage is not created by such a ceremony if either of the parties and a spouse alive and undivorced at the time.

Friesner vs. Symonds, 46 N. J. Eq. 521.
“In no civilized country can a man have two lawful wives at the same time.”

The rule in this state is the same, our Court having declared that a second marriage under such circumstances is a nullity.

Lynch vs. Lynch, 34 R. I. 261.

The respondent seeks to avoid the effect of the principle laid down in the Lynch case by what he claims to be the rule laid down in the case of Leckney vs. Leckney, 26 R. I. 441. That case came up on motion for temporary allowance, counsel fees and expenses under a petition in which a divorce was sought on the ground that at the time the marriage was entered into, the respondent had a wife who was still living and undivorced. The actual point decided was that under such a petition the petitioner had sufficient standing to be entitled to an allowance and counsel fees, and in so deciding the Court stated that “the parties became husband and wife de facto at least * * *.”

The Court was careful, however, to point out the distinction in substance between a divorce proceeding in a technical sense of the term predicated upon an existing marriage and an annulment proceeding based on the ground that the pretended marriage never, in fact, existed, and went on to state that an annulment proceeding, though denominated by our divorce proceedings as a divorce, cannot be treated as a divorce for the purpose of awarding alimony proper or as entitling the wife to dower as those rights depend upon the existence of a valid marriage.

[212]*212The case may not be treated as authority for the proposition for which the respondent contends. No decision of statute has been cited by the parties with respect to the law of Massachusetts which would invalidate the marriage of the parties at Attleboro, Massachusetts, on December 21, 1915.

See Glass vs. Glass, 114 Mass. 563.

The respondent nest takes the position that by the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of New York in the County of Queens, where a final decree of divorce was entered on April 5, 1921, the validity of the New Jersey marriage between the petitioner and Rotzman was established beyond successful attack.

The rule is otherwise; A judgment or decree in a divorce proceeding cannot be invoked by a third person in a subsequent action against one of the spouses as establishing facts which may have been or were adjudicated in the divorce proceedings.

Williams vs. Williams, 63 Wis. 58.
9 R. C. L., Sec. 273, and note and cases cited in 45 A. L. R. 925.

The respondent also argues that the action for- divorce in New York instituted by Rotzman against the petitioner and the decree entered therein were the result of collusion on the part of the petitioner and hence the petitioner is barred.

Without reviewing the evidence on this point, it is sufficient to state that the Court, on all the evidence, does not find that the petitioner was guilty of fraud or collusion in causing the New York Court to enter a decree in the action brought by Rotzman. In any event'this State has an interest in the present legal status of the petitioner and the respondent.

Lynch vs. Lynch, 34 R. I. 261.

There is no estoppel, therefore, which bars this Court from considering the validity of the New York divorce proceedings and the effect of its final decree.

The Court rules that the marriage between the petitioner and George C.

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Related

Glass v. Glass
114 Mass. 563 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1874)
Williams v. Williams
23 N.W. 110 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
9 R.I. Dec. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-risuperct-1933.