McLean v. Grabowski
Decision Date | 08 February 1968 |
Docket Number | No. M--4392--65,M--4392--65 |
Citation | 239 A.2d 35,99 N.J.Super. 209 |
Parties | Gertrude L. McLEAN, Plaintiff, v. Joseph GRABOWSKI, Defendant. |
Court | New Jersey Superior Court |
Gertrude L. McLean, plaintiff, appeared pro se.
Ralph Yacavino, Orange, for defendant(Frank A. Palmieri, Orange, attorney).
James G. Gardner, Newark, for the State(Charles B. Collins, Newark, attorney).
CONSODINE, J.C.C. (temporarily assigned).
Plaintiff sued for custody and support of the minor children of her marriage with defendant, which, it was alleged, had been dissolved in the State of Alabama.Defendant answered and, challenging the validity of the Alabama judgment of divorce, counter-claimed for divorce.A certified copy of the Alabama proceedings was filed.The admitted facts demonstrated that plaintiff never was a domiciliary there and in fact had only been present in that State for parts of two successive days.
Plaintiff then informed the court that she had settled her present differences with defendant.Defendant joined her in a request that the matter be dismissed.The court refused and appointed Charles B. Collins, Esq., of our bar, to represent the interests of the State for the reasons expressed in McLean v. Grabowski, 92 N.J.Super. 545, 224 A.2d 157(Ch.Div.1966).
The State intervened and filed a complaint against both parties demanding, among other things, that the Alabama divorce be declared null and void.Defendant, with leave of court, filed a third-party complaint against plaintiff's second husband, asking the court to set aside the marriage between plaintiff and Edward McLean because of the prior subsisting marriage between plaintiff and defendant.
At trial the parties requested the court to set aside plaintiff's Alabama divorce and void her marriage to Edward McLean.McLean did not appear and was in default for failure to answer.The facts are not in conflict.
The full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution(U.S.Const. Art. IV, § 1) requires that judgments within the jurisdiction of the rendering state be given the same faith and credit in sister states as they have in the state of the original forum.Schlemm v. Schlemm, 31 N.J. 557, 566, 158 A.2d 508(1960), quoting fromJohnson v. Muelberger, 340 U.S. 581, 584, 71 S.Ct. 474, 476, 95 L.Ed. 552, 556(1961).
This court must therefore look to Alabama case law to ascertain what action would be taken by an Alabama court if the parties were before it.
The Alabama Supreme Court has ruled in a situation surprisingly parallel to this one in Hartigan v. Hartigan, 272 Ala. 67, 128 So.2d 725(1961).In that case, on a hearing for modification of an alimony decree, it became apparent to the trial judge that neither plaintiff nor defendant was ever a bona fide resident of Alabama.The trial judge then elicited without objection the fact that Mrs. Hartigan had only been in Alabama a few hours to sign the complaint, the property settlement agreement and her deposition at the office of an attorney selected and paid for by her husband.
On the following day the trial judge on his own motion set aside the divorce decree because of the fraud on the court.The court found that divorce suits are tripartite in nature, that the public occupies the position of a trustee, and that the court is bound to act for he public.The court, citing Thompson v. Cook, 20 Cal.2d 564, 127 P.2d 909(Sup.Ct.1942), andFreeman on Judgments(5th ed.1925), § 375(a), stated that if the parties stipulate, or fail to object to the evidence of the facts showing lack of jurisdiction, it is then established that the judgment is void as effectively as though shown by the record, and whenever such fact is brought to the attention of the court, it is the duty of the court to so declare as a matter of law.The court further found that not only was it conclusive that the divorce decree was void for want of jurisdiction but also that the decree was not entitled to full faith and credit in other jurisdictions.The theories of estoppel or laches were held not to be a bar to the action of the court setting aside the divorce.
In the present matter both parties, prior to the intervention of the State, voluntarily presented clear and convincing evidence that plaintiff was not a domiciliary of Alabama when that state granted her a divorce and, therefore, that the parties perpetrated a fraud on the courts of New Jersey and Alabama.New Jersey recognizes that it is a...
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