COE V. COE

Decision Date07 June 1948
CourtU.S. Supreme Court

CERTIORARI TO THE PROBATE COURT

FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS

Syllabus

In a suit between residents of the state, a Massachusetts court granted a wife separate support and denied her husband a divorce. The husband went to Nevada and sued for divorce there as soon as he had been there the six weeks required by Nevada law. The wife appeared personally and by counsel, filed a cross-complaint for divorce, admitted the husband's Nevada residence, and participated personally in the proceedings. After full opportunity to try the jurisdictional issues, the Nevada court found that it had jurisdiction and granted the wife a divorce, which was valid and final under Nevada law. The husband then married again and returned to Massachusetts, whereupon his ex-wife petitioned the Massachusetts court to adjudge him in contempt for failing to make payments for her separate support under its earlier decree. She also moved that the support decree be modified so as to award her a larger allowance. The husband defended on the ground of the Nevada divorce. The Massachusetts court held the Nevada divorce void for want of jurisdiction and increased the first wife's allowance for separate support. Its opinion contained no intimation that, under state law, the decree for separate support would survive if the Nevada divorce were valid.

Held: by subjecting the Nevada decree to collateral attack, the Massachusetts court denied it full faith and credit, contrary to Art. IV, § 1 of the Constitution and the Act of May 26, 1790, 28 U.S.C. § 687. See Sherrer v. Sherrer, ante, P. 343. P P. 379-384.

320 Mass. 295, 69 N.E.2d 93, reversed.

A Massachusetts probate court denied a divorce to a resident of that state and granted separate support to his wife. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts affirmed. 313 Mass. 232, 46 N.E.2d 1017. He went to Nevada and sued for a divorce. His wife appeared personally and filed a cross-complaint. The Nevada court found that it had jurisdiction, and granted the wife a divorce. Upon the husband's return to Massachusetts,

Page 334 U. S. 379

the wife petitioned the probate court there to adjudge him in contempt for failure to make payments for her support under its earlier decree. She also moved for an increase in her allowance under the support decree. Upon proof of the Nevada divorce, the probate court dismissed the petition. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts reversed. 316 Mass. 423, 55 N.E.2d 702. After hearings on the issue of domicile, the probate court held the Nevada divorce void for want of jurisdiction and increased the wife's allowance for support. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts affirmed. 320 Mass. 295, 69 N.E.2d 793. This Court granted certiorari. 330 U.S. 814. Reversed, P. 384.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the companion case to Sherrer v. Sherrer, ante, P. 3 43. We granted certiorari to consider the contention of petitioner that the courts of Massachusetts have failed to accord full faith and credit to a decree of divorce rendered by a court of the Nevada.

Petitioner, Martin v. B. Coe, and the respondent, Katherine C. Coe, were married in New York in 1934, and thereafter resided as husband and wife in Worcester, Massachusetts. [Footnote 1] Discord developed between the parties, and, on January 13, 1942, respondent filed a petition for separate support in the Probate Court for the County of Worcester. Petitioner answered and filed a libel for

Page 334 U. S. 380

divorce. Following a hearing, the petition for separate support was granted, and the libel for divorce was dismissed. [Footnote 2] The decree of the Probate Court was affirmed by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts on February 23, 1943. [Footnote 3]

Petitioner left Worcester in May, 1942, and arrived in Reno, Nevada, on June 10, accompanied by his secretary, one Dawn Allen, and her mother. On July 24, 1942, petitioner, through his attorney, instituted divorce proceedings by filing a complaint in the First Judicial District Court of the Nevada. The complaint alleged that petitioner was a bona fide resident of the Nevada, [Footnote 4] and charged respondent with desertion and extreme cruelty. Respondent received notice of the proceedings while in Massachusetts. She arrived in Nevada in August, 1942, and thereafter, through attorneys, filed an answer to petitioner's complaint, together with a cross-complaint for divorce alleging extreme cruelty on the part of petitioner as grounds for her suit. Respondent's answer admitted as true the allegations of petitioner's complaint relating to petitioner's Nevada residence.

At the hearing in the divorce proceedings, petitioner and respondent appeared personally. Both parties were represented by counsel. Petitioner testified that he had come to Nevada with the intention of making that State

Page 334 U. S. 381

his home, and that such was his present intention. Respondent gave testimony with respect to specific acts of cruelty, but raised no question in relation to petitioner's domicile. On September 19, 1942, the Nevada court, after finding that it had "jurisdiction of the plaintiff and defendant and of the subject matter involved," [Footnote 5] entered a decree granting respondent a divorce as prayed for in her cross-complaint. [Footnote 6] Neither party challenged the decree by appeal to the Nevada Supreme Court. [Footnote 7]

Following the entry of the divorce decree, petitioner and Dawn Allen were married in Nevada. Shortly thereafter, they returned to Worcester, Massachusetts, as husband and wife. In May or June, 1943, they left Massachusetts for Nevada, where they remained until August of that year.

On May 22, 1943, respondent filed a petition in the Probate Court for the County of Worcester, praying that petitioner be adjudged in contempt of court for failing to abide by the terms of the decree for separate support which had been entered by the Massachusetts court in the previous year. [Footnote 8] Subsequently, respondent also moved that the decree for separate support be modified so as

Page 334 U. S. 382

to award her a larger allowance. Petitioner in his answer denied that the decree for separate support was still in effect, and set up the Nevada divorce decree as a bar to respondent's action.

In the hearings which followed, petitioner introduced in evidence an exemplified copy of the Nevada court proceeding. The presiding judge refused to allow the introduction of evidence placing in issue petitioner's Nevada domicile, and thereby the jurisdiction of the Nevada court, on the ground that permitting such collateral attack was not consistent with the requirements of full faith and credit. Petitioner's motion to dismiss the action was, accordingly, allowed.

The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts reversed on appeal, holding that the Probate Court had erred in excluding the evidence placing in issue petitioner's Nevada domicile and the jurisdiction of the Nevada court. [Footnote 9] In conformity with that judgment, the Probate Court held an extended hearing on those questions. [Footnote 10] The court concluded that petitioner went to Nevada to seek a divorce; that neither petitioner nor respondent had a bona fide residence in that State; that the Nevada court did not have jurisdiction of either party, and that the divorce was in violation of the provisions of the applicable

Page 334 U. S. 383

Massachusetts statute. [Footnote 11] The Probate Court dismissed petitioner's motion for revocation of the decree for separate support, and modified that decree so as to award respondent a substantially larger allowance. On appeal, the Supreme Judicial Court affirmed the order of the Probate Court dismissing petitioner's motion to revoke the decree for separate support on the ground that the evidence supported the conclusion that petitioner was never domiciled in Nevada, and that the Nevada courts lacked jurisdiction to enter the decree of divorce. The order of the Probate Court modifying the decree for separate support was reversed, apparently for further hearings on petitioner's financial condition. [Footnote 12] There is no suggestion in the opinion of the Supreme Judicial Court that petitioner, under state law, could be held to the obligations imposed by the decree for separate support if it be conceded that the Nevada decree of divorce is valid. [Footnote 13]

It is clear that the decree of divorce in question is valid and final in the State in which it was rendered, and, under the law of Nevada, may not be subjected to the collateral attack permitted in this case in the Massachusetts courts. [Footnote 14] Respondent does not urge the contrary.

Page 334 U. S. 384

Nor has it been suggested that the proceedings before the Nevada court were in any degree violative of the requirements of procedural due process, or that respondent was denied a full opportunity to contest the issue of petitioner's Nevada domicile.

It is abundantly clear that respondent participated in the Nevada divorce proceedings. She appeared personally, and gave testimony at the hearing. Through her attorneys, she filed pleadings in answer to petitioner's complaint, and successfully invoked the jurisdiction of the Nevada court to obtain the decree of divorce which she subsequently subjected to attack as invalid in the Massachusetts courts.

Thus, here, as in the Sherrer case, the decree of divorce is one which was entered after proceedings in which there was participation by both plaintiff and defendant and in which both parties were given full opportunity to contest the jurisdictional issues. It is a decree not susceptible to collateral attack in the courts of the State in which it was rendered. In the Sherrer case, we concluded that the requirements of full faith and credit preclude the courts of a sister State from subjecting such a decree to collateral attack by readjudicating the existence...

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