Ruby Kendall Bondurant v. William Bondurant

Decision Date04 February 1932
Citation158 A. 683,104 Vt. 218
PartiesRUBY KENDALL BONDURANT v. WILLIAM BONDURANT
CourtVermont Supreme Court

January Term, 1932.

Divorce---G. L. 3571---Requisites for Notice by Publication---Statutes---Unauthorized Notice by Publication as Affecting Jurisdiction.

1. Under G. L. 3571, notice to libelee of pendency of divorce libel by publication may only be given when libelee is without State and his domicile is unknown to libelant, not being permissible when domicile of libelee is merely "unknown."

2. G L. 3571, providing that libelee in divorce libel may be notified of its pendency "if the libelee is without the State and his domicile is unknown to the libelant," should be construed according to its plain import.

3. In divorce proceedings, where, at time order of notice by publication was issued, no proof had been adduced that libelee was without State, such notice was unauthorized and void, and court thereby acquired no jurisdiction to hear and determine case.

LIBEL FOR DIVORCE. Trial by court at the September Term, 1931 Franklin County, Sherman, J., presiding. Libel dismissed by court of its own motion. The libelant excepted. The opinion states the case.

Judgment affirmed.

Leon E. Ellsworth for the libelant.

Present POWERS, C. J., SLACK, MOULTON, THOMPSON, and GRAHAM, JJ.

OPINION
SLACK

The trial court dismissed the libel for the reason hereinafter stated, to which libelant excepted. The merit of this exception depends upon the construction to be given to certain provisions of G. L. 3571. This section of the statute is entitled: "Notice when libelee is out of state." It provides, in effect, that if the libelee is without the State, and the place of his domicile is known to the libelant, he shall be notified of the pendency of the proceedings by delivering to him personally copies of the process and order, etc., in the manner prescribed by G. L. 2274 and 2275; that if the libelee is without the State and his domicile is unknown to the libelant, he shall be notified of the pendency of such libel by the publication of an order of notice in the form and manner therein prescribed. The statute further provides that "Such order of notice for publication shall issue only upon satisfactory proof by way of affidavit that the libelant has made diligent inquiry and does not know where the libelee resides." An order of publication in due form was issued and published in the manner prescribed by statute. No other service of the libel and summons upon the libelee was made or attempted.

Such order states: "And it appearing that said libelee is without this state, and that no summons can be served on him, it is ordered," etc. But neither the libel, which is sworn to, nor the accompanying affidavit of the libelant, furnish any proof that the libelee was then without the State. The libel avers merely that his residence or whereabouts is unknown to the libelant; and in her affidavit the libelant simply states what attempts have been made to find him, and that she is unable to learn anything of his whereabouts.

It was because of the lack of the required proof that the libelee was without the State at the time the libel was brought that the court dismissed the libel.

The libelant contends that the provision of the statute under which the notice was issued must be construed to mean that if the libelee is without the State or his domicile is unknown to the libelant, etc. In other words, that the word and used in this provision must be construed to mean or. It is argued that any other construction is absurd, because a libelant cannot swear that a libelee is without the State when his whereabouts are unknown to the libelant. While there is some plausibility to this argument it is not convincing that the legislative intent, which it is admitted must control, was what is here claimed. Indeed, a careful examination of the various provisions of the statute relating to the required notice to the libelee in a divorce case indicates the contrary. G. L. 3569 provides...

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