Wallace v. Wallace

50 A. 788, 62 N.J. Eq. 509, 17 Dickinson 509, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 5
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 A. 788 (Wallace v. Wallace) 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
Wallace v. Wallace, 50 A. 788, 62 N.J. Eq. 509, 17 Dickinson 509, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 5 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Pitney, Y. C.

The special master who beard and took tbe testimony in this cause has reported tbe same, and recommended that a decree of divorce be granted to tbe complainant.

Tbe history of tbe cause is as follows: Tbe bill was filed December 11th, 1899, a subpoena was issued and banded to the sheriff of Hudson county, and returned by him not served, with the usual affidavit that tbe defendant could not be found,' but that he resided in tbe State of New York; and an order of publication was made January 17th, 1900, expiring March 17th, 1900.

By an affidavit made in the cause on May 14th, filed May 17th, 1900, it appeared that the defendant herein had sued the complainant herein in the supreme court of New York, and a trial had been had therein, but what was the nature of the suit did not appear, and that the defendant had been duly served in the State of New York with a notice of this suit, according to the statute and the practice of the court.

No appearance or answer having been filed, an order of reference was made on May 29th, 1900.

Depositions were taken before the special master on July 19th, 1900, and again, after a lapse of more than a year, on August 27th, 1901, those taken on the latter day being a re-examination of the complainant and one of the witnesses previously examined.

[511]*511The facts elicited are the following: Complainant was born and-lived continuously in New York City up to November, 1897. She lived with her parents, who were domiciled there, until she was married, in 1890, and afterwards with her husband, until he deserted her, in August, 1896. After the desertion she lived with her mother, then a widow, in the city of New York, until the fall of 1897, when both moved to New Jersey, and have ever since lived here.

Both mother and daughter, at- their first examination, testified that their object in coming to New Jersey was to enable the daughter to procure a divorce from her husband. The language used by the mother, on her first examination, is as follows:

“I came to New Jersey to live with my children [she had a son] so that she could get rid of the bad rascal she had. My daughter and I support ourselves at work that comes from New York City—work on neckwear. My son is an actor, with a desk in a room on Fourteenth street. His regular voting place is New Jersey, when he is home. I consider myself a permanent resident of New Jersey.”

And the daughter swears:’

“I moved to New Jersey in order to get a divorce. That was my idea. I do not intend to move back to New York if I get it. I mean to live on with my mother in New Jersey.”

When re-examined a year later complainant said that she was informed of the possibility of getting a divorce in New Jersey by some notices she saw in the newspapers, and that, before she moved to New Jersey with her mother, her getting a divorce was a subject of conversation between them. She did not talk about it with her uncles, who live in New Jersey.

There were other reasons which might well, and probably did, influence the action of the mother and the daughter in coming to New Jersey to live, which were given when they were recalled in August, 1901. But taking all the evidence, it is clear that the principal reason for their coming was the desire on the part of the daughter to procure a divorce; and it-is not clear that they would have changed their' residence except for the accomplishment of that purpose.

[512]*512The desire to obtain a divorce was meritorious to a degree sufficient to excite the sympathy of the court. But it should always be borne in mind by the judge who deals with this class of cases ex parte that he naturally and necessarily hears but one side of the affair.

But sympathy for the complainant, however well exercised, should not induce the court tp act if it lacks power for want of jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. The defendant has always, so far as appears, resided in the State of New York, and was served with a notice of this suit in that state. No service of any kind was made in this state.

In stating my reasons for being unable to agree with the conclusion of the learned master, I shall assume, as stated by Chief-Justice Beasley, in Doughty v. Doughty, 1 Stew. Eq. 582, that each state has complete power over the marriage relation of its citizens, and may dissolve it at its pleasure. Such power was exercised by the legislature of this state prior to the adoption of the constitution of 1844; and, however arbitrary and unjust the action of that body might be, its result was binding within its territorial jurisdiction; but beyond its limits it might'be, and often was, of no binding force, and was not recognized by the courts of other jurisdictions.

It must, moreover, be admitted that many of the divorces granted by courts of one state, and binding upon all parties within the territorial limits of that state, are of no binding force beyond such territorial limits.

The principal cause of such invalidity is the want of jurisdiction over the person of the spouse proceeded against, by reason whereof the decree is not recognized as binding by the courts of other states, under that clause of the constitution of the United States which provides that “full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the * * * judicial proceedings of every other state.”

In interpreting that clause the federal courts have always held that, in order to maintain the validity of a foreign judgment, it must appear that the court pronouncing it had jurisdiction of the person of the party proceeded against, as well as of the subject-matter, and that the adjudication of the court pronouncing [513]*513ihe decree that it had such jurisdiction is always open to question in another jurisdiction.

It follows, as a corollary to this thoroughly-established proposition, that no state can, by legislative enactment or otherwise, authoritatively determine what state of facts shall be sufficient to give the judgments and decrees of its courts validity in other states.

There must, of course, be jurisdiction over both the subject-matter and the person.

The question of jurisdiction over the subject-matter may be finally determined by the courts of the state exercising it, but the question of the jurisdiction of the person must be determined in accordance with the fundamental rules of justice, as interpreted by international law, and that, in this country, under our system, is a federal question, to be finally determined by the supreme court of the United States.

The courts of New Jersey have always interpreted the statute conferring jurisdiction of the subject of divorce upon this court, and regulating its proceedings thereunder, as requiring the court to so conduct suits against non-residents as that its decree shall, when set up-in the court of a foreign jurisdiction, not only command the respect of that court, because manifestly obtained after a due observance of the fundamental maxims of justice, but also shall compel obedience and acquiescence under the federal constitution.

I feel quite sure that no judge of this court has ever consciously granted a divorce that he thought would be open to successful attack in a foreign jurisdiction for want of jurisdiction of the party decreed against.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 788, 62 N.J. Eq. 509, 17 Dickinson 509, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-wallace-njch-1901.