Starbuck v. Starbuck

62 A.D. 437, 71 N.Y.S. 104
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 A.D. 437 (Starbuck v. Starbuck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starbuck v. Starbuck, 62 A.D. 437, 71 N.Y.S. 104 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

Hiesohbeeg, J.:

The action is for dower. The plaintiff and William H. Star-buck, now deceased, were married in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on October 14, 1857. At that time she was a resident of that Commonwealth. They shortly afterwards moved to this State,where Mr. Starbuck continued to reside ■ until his death, which Occurred on the 29th of March, 1896. In consequence of alleged ill-treatment the plaintiff left him in the year 1868,- and returned to her parents’ home in Massachusetts, where she remained a resident until after her husband’s death in 1896, when she removed to, and has ever since been a resident of, this State. While residing in Massachusetts she instituted an action for divorce against her husband on the ground of extreme cruelty, which resulted in a decree in her favor granted on the 4th day of May, 1874. The papers in the divorce proceedings were served upon her husband personally in this State, but he did not appear in the action either personally or by attorney, nor did he in any other manner submit himself to the jurisdiction of the Massachusetts court. He subsequently mar„ ried the defendant Matilda Eliza Starbuck in the State of Pennsylvania, and the minor defendants are children of that union. The real estate, which is the subject of the controversy, is all situated in this State, and was acquired by Mr. Starbuck after the divorce decree. The question in the case is whether the plaintiff is entitled to dower in the real estate as the widow of the deceased.

In opening the case upon the trial the plaintiff’s counsel briefly recited the material facts in reference to the divorce proceedings, whereupon the defendants moved for a dismissal of the complaint upon the pleadings and the opening.. The decision was reserved [439]*439and. the defendants excepted. Subsequently the Massachusetts decree was offered in evidence by the defendants and received against the plaintiff’s objection and exception. The learned trial justice on the final determination of the case concluded that the decree did not ■operate to deprive the plaintiff of the rights of widowhood in this ■State, and he accordingly sustained the plaintiff’s objection and -excluded the decree, to which ruling the defendants excepted. Having inadvertently made findings at defendants’ request, which were based on the evidence furnished by the divorce proceedings as originally admitted, he subsequently changed such findings to conform to the altered condition of the proof, to which the defendants ■excepted, and they have given written notice of their intention to bring up the order effecting the changes for review upon the hearing of this motion. The case is presented upon defendants’ motion for a new trial under section 1001 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the changes were made after the service of the notice of motion.

Assuming that the technical question presented by the defendants’ exception to the amendments is properly before the court, it may be disposed of by the statement that the action of the trial justice in this particular instance in no manner affected the substantial .rights of the parties. Under such circumstances the power to make the amendments is undoubted. (Code Civ. Proc. § 723; Beitz v. Fuller, 92 Hun, 457, 459; Deutermann, v. Pollock, 30 App. Div. 378 ; Bohlen v. Met. El. R. Co., 121 N. Y. 546 ; Heath v. N. Y. B. L. B. Co., 146 id. 260.) It is not intended to hold generally that the amendment of findings does not affect a substantial right. In this instance, however, the whole controversy is still before the court upon the motion for a new trial, and may be determined on the merits without prejudice, in the attitude of the parties, equally whether the decree of divorce be regarded as admitted, subject to the plaintiff’s exception, or as rejected subject to that of the defendants.

On the vital point presented, viz., the effect of the decree upon the plaintiff’s property rights and interests in this State, the argument of the learned counsel for the defendants is ingenious, but I -am compelled to decide unsound: It realizes the force of the many adjudications which steadily attest the judicial policy of this State in ignoring and disregarding divorces like the one in question, but [440]*440seeks' to destroy the weight of their authority in the particular regard which concerns the object of this action. It is urged that while the Massachusetts decree was of no binding force upon William H. Starbuck, it did effectually operate to fix the marriage status of the plaintiff, as a then citizen and resident of that Commonwealth, at least so far that its validity to that extent is not now open to question by her, and that she, therefore, and as a result of her own voluntary act, ceased to have a dowable capacity in this-State at the time the deceased became seized of the real estate.

The argument is derived from certain statements of the courts in the well-known series of divorce cases in this State which acknowledge the validity of such divorces as this one in affecting the marital status of the plaintiffs by whom they are procured, but such statements I think are to. be limited to the territorial jurisdiction of the foreign State and were not intended to relate to such status within this State. At all events, it has never been decided that such, a-divorce as that which the plaintiff procured operated in this State to' lawfully terminate the plaintiff’s status as Mr. Starbuck’s wife while leaving him beyond all question still her lawful husband; yet this-anomaly is the necessary -result of the defendants’ contention. In other words, it is claimed that under the authorities in this State the effect of the Massachusetts decree was to leave Mr. Starbuck a married man while his wife became afeme sole, he still being lawfully married to a woman who was not his lawful wife. A careful examination of the authorities reveals no such absurdity.

The leading cases in the Court of Appeals are People v. Baker (76 N. Y. 78) ; O'Dea v. O'Dea (101 id. 23); Jones v. Jones (108 id. 415); Cross v. Cross (Id. 628); De Meli v. De Meli (120 id. 485); Williams v. Williams (130 id. 193); Matter of Kimball (155 id. 62); Atherton v. Atherton (Id. 129); Winston v. Winston (165 id. 553). They all adhere to the general principle enunciated in the Baker Case (supra, p. 84) that a State may adjudge-the status of its citizen towards a non-resident, and may authorize to that end such judicial proceedings as it sees fit, and that other States-must acquiesce, so long as the operation of the judgment is kept within its own confnes. But that judgment cannot push its effect over the borders of another State to the subversion of its laws and the defeat of its policy, nor seek across its bounds the person of one [441]*441of its citizens and fix upon him á status against his will and without his consent and in hostility to the laws of the sovereignty of his allegiance.”

In the case of Williams v. Williams (supra) the record of a Minnesota divorce was excluded upon the trial, and the court held that it was properly excluded, being void.” The authorities were collated and considered, and the conclusion reached that a judgment of divorce granted by a, sister State without acquiring jurisdiction of the defendant has no effect beyond the limits of the State within which it was granted, and in this State is inoperative and void.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A.D. 437, 71 N.Y.S. 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starbuck-v-starbuck-nyappdiv-1901.