Harris v. Harris
Decision Date | 18 October 1927 |
Docket Number | No. 38653.,38653. |
Citation | 205 Iowa 108,215 N.W. 661 |
Parties | HARRIS v. HARRIS. |
Court | Iowa Supreme Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Appeal from District Court, Polk County; Jos. E. Meyer, Judge.
Appeal from an order overruling the special appearance filed by the defendant to the petition of plaintiff in a divorce action. The opinion states the essential facts. Affirmed.Harold E. Lippincott, of New York City, and Maxwell & Ryan and James B. Ryan, all of Des Moines, for appellant.
Parrish, Cohen, Guthrie, Watters & Halloran and Thos. J. Guthrie, all of Des Moines, for appellee.
DE GRAFF, J.
Plaintiff and defendant are husband and wife. This is a divorce action.A special appearance was filed by the defendant (appellant) denying the jurisdiction of the district court of Iowa in and for Polk county on the ground that the plaintiff was not a resident of the state of Iowa. Evidence was introduced by depositions and oral testimony. The court overruled and denied the special appearance, hence this appeal.
[1] The one controlling question, although novel, finds easy solution. The question is whether a person, an officer in active service in the army of the United States, can acquire a domicile in the army post or camp where he is stationed, even though he establishes his family there.
The numerical weight of judicial authority answers the question in the negative. Stevens v. Allen, 139 La. 658, 71 So. 936, L. R. A. 1916E, 1115;Radford v. Radford (Ky.) 82 S. W. 391;State ex rel. v. Judge of Ninth Judicial Circuit, 13 Ala. 805;Mead v. Carrol, 6 D. C. 338;Pendleton v. Pendleton, 109 Kan. 600, 201 P. 62;Inhabitants of Brewer v. Inhabitants of Linnaeus, 36 Me. 428;Tibbitts v. Townsend, 15 Abb. Prac. (N. Y.) 221;Graham v. Commonwealth, 51 Pa. 255, 88 Am. Dec. 581;Williams v. Saunders et al., 5 Cold. (Tenn.) 60;Henderson et al. v. Ford et al., 46 Tex. 627; Yelverton v. Yelverton, 1 S. & T. 574; Attorney General v. Napier, 20 L. J. Ex. 173; In re Macreight, 30 L. R. Ch. D. 165; 19 C. J. 418. The legal principle is declared and approved by the American Law Institute. See Conflict of Laws (Tentative Restatement) topic 3, p. 42 et seq.
A naval officer cannot acquire a domicile at his station or on his vessel for the same reason that his going and staying at his post, when so ordered, are not a matter of his choice. Knowlton v. Knowlton, 155 Ill. 158, 39 N. E. 595 (51 Ill. App. 71) ; Brown v. Smith, 15 Beav. 444.
[2] An officer may ask for a post and may, on his application, be assigned to it, but this is entirely in the will of his superior officer and the choice is not in the power of the applicant. Nor does an officer, under martial discipline, when detailed for special duty in a certain place, acquire a domicile there, although he may take his family there (Knowlton v. Knowlton, supra; Remey v. Board of Equalization, 80 Iowa, 470, 45 N. W. 899), and a person who enters the army of another country gets no domicile in the country whose army he joins (Ex parte Cunningham, 13 L. R. Q. B. D. 418). Therefore a person under such circumstances cannot, in any proper sense of the term, have a residence any where other than the home he has left, since he has no choice as to where he goes, the time he can remain, or when he shall return. To gain either an actual or legal residence there is, of necessity, involved at least the exercise of volition in its selection, and this cannot be affirmed of the residence of either a soldier or sailor in active service. Radford v. Radford, supra.
It is true that an officer or a private may establish a home near his military station and thus acquire a domicile there, but this must be established by independent evidence of a change of domicile to that place. Ex parte White (D. C.) 228 F. 88.
If a soldier stationed at any army post is permitted to live outside the post, it was held In re Cunningham et al., 45 Misc. Rep. 206, 91 N. Y. S. 974, that such person might acquire a domicile there. There seems to be no doubt that a soldier may acquire a new domicile apart from the army, and the fact that he cannot stay in the new home, if called away to the army, does not prevent his forming the animus manendi and acquiring the domicile there. Mooar v. Harvey, 128 Mass. 219; Hodgson v. De Beauchesne, 12 Moore P. S. 285; President of the United States v. Drummond, 33 Beaver, 449; Attorney General v. Pottinger, 30 L. J. Ex. 284.
We now turn, for a moment, to the essential allegation of the plaintiff's petition and the provision of the statute called in question. The petition of plaintiff inter alia alleges:
“That he is now and has been for the past 20 years a legal resident of the city of Des Moines, Polk county, Iowa, and that such residence has been in good faith, and not for the purpose of obtaining a divorce only.”
The Code of Iowa provides:
“The district court in the county where either party resides has jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this chapter” (Divorce). Section 3171, Code 1897; section 10468, Code 1924.
In Melvin v. Lawrence et al. (Iowa) 213 N. W. 420, it is said:
“It is the law of this state that, if either party to the divorce action was a resident of this state, the court has jurisdiction and the decree will be valid.”
The Code further provides:
“If the averments as to residence are not fully proved, the hearing shall proceed no further, and the action be dismissed by the court.” Section 10473, Code 1924.
[3] The plain intent of the statute is manifest, and a bona fide residence is essential to confer jurisdiction. This rule has obtained since the decision in Hinds v. Hinds, 1 Iowa (Clarke) 36. See, also, Williamson v. Williamson, 179 Iowa, 489, 161 N. W. 482;Comes v. Comes, 190 Iowa, 547, 178 N. W. 403;Scott v. Scott, 174 Iowa, 740, 156 N. W. 834.
[4] The record facts in the instant case are undisputed, and it is shown that the plaintiff was born in Poland and came to Des Moines in 1877 with his mother to join his father, who had immigrated here prior thereto. His father became a naturalized citizen before the plaintiff reached his majority. The parents of plaintiff continued to reside in Des Moines, and upon the death of the mother, a few years ago, she was buried in Des Moines.
The father continued to live in said city to which he came more than 50 years ago and still resides there. The plaintiff attended and was graduated from the East Des Moines high school in 1887. He continued to live in Des Moines, and in 1888 was appointed by Hon. H. H. Conger, then Congressman from the Seventh congressional district, to West Point, and upon a competitive examination was admitted. He was graduated from the West Point Military Academy in June, 1892, and returned to Des Moines to await orders from his government. Subsequently he was ordered to Governor's Island, N. Y., where he remained about a year. He was then ordered to Ft. Sheridan, Chicago, where he remained about three years, and from thence to Ft. Monroe, Va., where he remained two years. It is sufficient to state that thereafter he continued in the military service of his government and was stationed at different military posts.
In 1901, while stationed in the service at Ft. Monroe, he married the appellant. Subsequently he was ordered to the Philippine Islands, where he remained in service for three years returning to the United States in 1915. At the outbreak of the World War he was ordered to Washington, and a little later was ordered to Chicago where he was Adjutant General. After several changes in station he was ordered to the Panama Canal Zone in 1922, and remained there until 1925, when he was ordered to Ft. Banks, Mass., where he was stationed at the time of the hearing of this case.
At all times in question he was in the military service of the United States government and was stationed in places over which the government of the United States had complete and absolute control. It is quite apparent that the only residence the plaintiff ever had was Des Moines, Polk county, Iowa, and he testified that whenever the government released him from his duties he intended to return to Des Moines and make it his future home.
[5][6] A residence once established continues until a new one is acquired. A change of residence does not consist solely in going to and living in another place, but it must be with the intent in making that place a permanent...
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