Petitioner, a resident of Florida, obtained there a divorce from
his wife, who had separated from him and gone to Ohio, where she
had established a residence. The service of process on her was
constructive only, she did not appear, and the Florida court
decreed that "no award of alimony be made" to her. Later, the wife
sued in Ohio for divorce and alimony, and petitioner appeared and
set up the Florida divorce. The Ohio court denied a divorce because
of the prior Florida decree, but granted the wife alimony.
Held: the Florida court did not adjudicate the wife's
right to alimony, and the Ohio court therefore did not fail to give
full faith and credit to the Florida decree. Pp.
350 U. S.
568-572.
162 Ohio St. 406, 123 N.E.2d 267, affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner, while residing in Dade County, Florida, filed a
suit for divorce from his wife, who had separated from him and gone
to Ohio, where she had established her residence. The wife was not
personally served, nor did she appear in person or by attorney in
the Florida suit. Service on her was constructive only. A divorce
decree was granted petitioner by the Florida court, and he contends
that that court also denied alimony to the respondent.
Later, the respondent wife instituted a suit in Ohio for divorce
and for alimony. The petitioner appeared and
Page 350 U. S. 569
set up the divorce obtained in Florida. The Ohio court found
that the respondent had established grounds for divorce in Ohio,
but denied the divorce because Florida had already decreed a
divorce to the petitioner. The Ohio court proceeded to pass on the
question of alimony and granted the wife alimony, taking into
account the total property owned by the petitioner. The petitioner
appealed to the Court of Appeals, 99 Ohio App. 7, 130 N.E.2d 710,
and then to the Supreme Court of Ohio, which affirmed the judgments
of the lower courts. 162 Ohio St. 406, 123 N.E.2d 267. Petitioner
argued and contends here that the Ohio courts have denied full
faith and credit to the Florida decree. We granted certiorari. 349
U.S. 915.
The sole question presented by the petition for certiorari was
whether the Ohio courts were required to give full faith and credit
to the
ex parte Florida divorce decree, which petitioner
alleges not only granted him a divorce, but also decreed that the
wife was not entitled to alimony. As we interpret the Florida
decree, however, the Florida court did not purport to adjudicate
the absent wife's right to alimony. The Ohio courts, therefore, in
awarding alimony to the wife, did not in fact fail to give full
faith and credit to the Florida decree. Accordingly, we do not
reach the constitutional question sought to be presented. But even
if there is doubt as to the meaning of the Florida decree, we
should construe its action as a refusal to pass on the question of
alimony, and thus avoid the constitutional question as to its power
to do so.
The Florida court found that Mrs. Armstrong
"has not come into this court in good faith or made any claim to
the equitable conscience of the court, and has made no showing of
any need on her part for alimony. It is therefore specifically
decreed that no award of alimony be made to the defendant. . .
."
Taken literally, that language means only that, for the reasons
it gave, the
Page 350 U. S. 570
court would refrain from making an affirmative award of alimony
to the wife, not that it adjudicated in favor of the husband that
his wife was not entitled to alimony. The husband's bill of
complaint did not ask for greater relief. It offered to show that
Mrs. Armstrong's interest in jointly held property was "ample to
support the defendant, and that she has no further need of
alimony." The purpose of this offer, however, was revealed by the
next sentence of the complaint:
"Nevertheless the plaintiff hereby offers to do equity and to
abide by such orders or decrees, with reference to the settlement
of the property affairs, as to this court may be deemed
equitable."
Thus the husband did not seek a decree holding the wife not
entitled to alimony, but rather merely submitted to the court's
jurisdiction to condition its grant of divorce to him upon an award
of alimony to his wife. The prayer for relief was fully satisfied
by the decision that protection of the absent wife did not require
the court to fix alimony before granting the divorce.
The Florida master's report is confirmatory of the limited scope
of the decree. The master stated that "the question of the wife's
alimony, if any, cannot be determined at this stage of the
proceeding," pointing out that most of the marital property was in
the wife's possession in Ohio, and was the subject matter of
litigation pending there. He accordingly found that "the defendant
is not entitled to receive alimony . . . under the facts and
circumstances presented in this case," and recommended "that no
award of alimony be made." The master's recommendation meant no
more than that the question of alimony should not be decided
because the wife had in her possession property adequate to meet
her immediate needs, and the unresolved litigation made it
impossible to determine her future needs. Presumably, the court's
decree meant no more when it adopted in terms the master's
recommendation that "no award of alimony be
Page 350 U. S. 571
made." Like the master's report, the decree expressly recognized
that the parties' property rights depended upon the outcome of the
pending litigation in Ohio, and that the wife had not shown any
need for alimony.
When the Florida court said, "it is, therefore, specifically
decreed that no award of alimony be made to the defendant," it
recognized that no issue of alimony should be decided by it. The
court simply said that no award of alimony be made -- a purely
negative assertion that it would not pass on the question.
It is true that the decree "that no award of alimony be made"
was followed in the same sentence by a declaration, based on the
court's and master's view of Florida property law, quieting title
in the husband to certain Florida real property. At most, however,
the fact that both matters were dealt with in a single sentence
suggests only that the court might have reserved alimony out of
that specific property had it concluded that such action was
necessary to protect the wife's interest. That it did not do so is
consistent with our conclusion that the Florida court did no more
than refrain from awarding alimony at that time.
There was a valid decree in Florida dissolving the bonds of
matrimony. There was no decree as to alimony. Ohio had personal
service on both parties in a suit for divorce and alimony brought
there by Mrs. Armstrong. The court denied her a decree of divorce
because Florida had already dissolved the bonds of matrimony. The
Ohio court found that, but for the decree in Florida, Mrs.
Armstrong had established grounds for divorce in the Ohio suit. It
considered that the matter before it was not a division of
property, but an application for alimony, and it proceeded to hear
evidence on that basis and finally entered a personal judgment
against the defendant husband for alimony. The Ohio court, which
had complete jurisdiction of both parties and the cause of action,
entered
Page 350 U. S. 572
a decree as to alimony only, which decree seems clearly
authorized by the Ohio cases.
Slapp v. Slapp, 143 Ohio St.
105, 54 N.E.2d 153;
Cox v. Cox, 19 Ohio St. 502. The
Florida judgment was given full faith and credit by Ohio as far as
the judgment in Florida went, and no other questions are presented
here.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, joining the opinion of the Court.
It is, of course, desirable to have a Court opinion, if one can
be achieved without straining one's conscience. I am sufficiently
in agreement with MR. JUSTICE MINTON's construction of the Florida
decree to be able to join him.
On my study of the record, I would dismiss the writ as
improvidently granted. And for these reasons. After a case has been
heard on the merits, it is to be disposed of on the precise issue
that full study of the case discloses, and not on the basis of the
preliminary examination of the questions that were urged in the
petition for certiorari. Due regard for the working of the
certiorari system requires this. In view of the fact that about
1,300 applications were made last Term for leave to be heard (and
this is a fair average of the volume of the Court's business),
determination during this sifting process of the jurisdictional
merits in all these 1,300 cases can hardly be expected. Theory and
practice alike reject any such notion. The inevitably cursory
consideration that is normally given in a case on the preliminary
round precludes the assumption that a tentative finding of a
federal question will survive the thorough study of the record
which consideration of a case on the merits implies. Therefore it
is that cases have again and again been dismissed for want of
jurisdiction,
i.e., a substantial federal question was
found wanting; on the contrary, it became
Page 350 U. S. 573
clear that the state court judgment rested on an adequate state
ground.
The petition for writ of certiorari in this case vigorously
argued that
"The sole question is whether the courts of Ohio, under Article
IV of the Constitution of the United States, are compelled to give
full faith and credit to the entire decree, granting a divorce, and
denying alimony, rendered by the court in Florida, the matrimonial
domicile of the parties, following the decision of
Thompson v.
Thompson, 226 U. S. 551."
The references to the Florida decree in the opinion of the Ohio
Supreme Court -- the two documents are hardly to be deemed
conspicuously lucid -- warranted, without more, a belief that the
case did present the question formulated by petitioner. Such a
question would, no doubt, raise an important problem in the
construction of the Full Faith and Credit Clause.
But the course of the oral argument, for such is one of its
functions, and an exacting scrutiny of the record, for such is the
requirement of plenary consideration of a case, put in a very
different light the decree of the Florida court, and thereby the
significance of the litigation in Ohio.
A study of the Florida decree, a portion of which is set out in
the margin, [
Footnote 1] in
conjunction with Florida case law, [
Footnote 2]
Page 350 U. S. 574
demonstrates, I believe, that Florida expressly disavowed any
adjudication regarding claims to and in property situated in Ohio,
the very properties which are the subject matter of the challenged
Ohio decree.
Thus, the sole question that survives is the power of Ohio, as a
matter of its own policy, to define rights in property situated in
Ohio in the circumstances of this case. A question of due process
might be raised, though not successfully. Both the real property
and securities which had their locus in Ohio were subject to Ohio's
control, in that both items constituted "property within the
state."
Pennington v. Fourth National Bank, 243 U.
S. 269,
243 U. S. 271.
In any event, it was not raised, and the claim under the Full Faith
and Credit Clause has evaporated, because Ohio merely dealt with
property within its borders which Florida had not purported to
affect.
Of course we have to go through all this reasoning to determine
whether a substantial federal question was raised by reason of
Ohio's disregard of Florida's decree. The Court not infrequently is
required to find its way through a tangled or confused record in
order to determine whether a state court judgment turned on a state
ground or on a federal ground. In short, the Court has jurisdiction
to decide whether it has jurisdiction. But, when adequate analysis
discloses that a state judgment amply rests on a state ground, we
are barred from proceeding to the merits of the alleged federal
question. The appropriate disposition is to dismiss the case for
want of jurisdiction.
[For concurring opinion of MR. JUSTICE BLACK, joined by THE
CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, and MR. JUSTICE CLARK, see next
page.]
Page 350 U. S. 575
[
Footnote 1]
"This court takes recognition of the fact that litigation is now
pending in the state of Ohio relative to the recovery of . . .
stocks and bonds, as well as the settlement of other matters
concerning property rights between the parties. This court
recognizes that the courts of Ohio will have the ultimate
determination of the question of property rights where the property
itself is in the state of Ohio. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
Compare Burkhart v. Circuit Court of Eleventh Judicial
Circuit, 146 Fla. 457, 1 So. 2d 872,
and Lucian v.
Southern Ohio Savings Bank & Trust Co., 156 Fla. 370, 23
So. 2d 674,
with Pawley v. Pawley, 46 So. 2d
464,
and Sorrells v. Sorrells, 82 So. 2d 684.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS, and MR. JUSTICE CLARK join, concurring.
The opinion of the Court takes the position that the Florida
court did not adjudicate Mrs. Armstrong's right to alimony. We
cannot agree. In the husband's Florida complaint, he alleged that
his wife's property was "ample to support the defendant, and that
she has no further need of alimony or property settlement." The
Florida court expressly held that it had jurisdiction over both
parties and over the subject matter of the complaint. It then
proceeded to find that the wife was at fault in leaving her husband
and the "matrimonial domicile." The court even suggested that Mrs.
Armstrong was guilty of a criminal act in taking some of her
husband's money and securities to Ohio. The decree continued:
"This court, therefore, finds the defendant has not come into
this court in good faith, or made any claim to the equitable
conscience of the court, and has made no showing of any need on her
part for alimony. It is
therefore specifically decreed
that no award of alimony be made to the defendant. . . ."
(Emphasis added.) This was plainly a denial of alimony, not on
the ground that the court was leaving the matter open, but because
the judge thought the wife should not have alimony. [
Footnote 2/1]
We agree with the majority that the Ohio decree was an alimony
judgment, and not a division of property.
Page 350 U. S. 576
Thus, in our view ,there is a direct conflict between that
decree and the decree of the Florida court denying alimony to the
wife. We therefore reach the constitutional question whether the
Ohio court was justified in denying full faith and credit to the
Florida decree.
We believe that Ohio was not compelled to give full faith and
credit to the Florida decree denying alimony to Mrs. Armstrong. Our
view is based on the absence of power in the Florida court to
render a personal judgment against Mrs. Armstrong depriving her of
all right to alimony although she was a nonresident of Florida, had
not been personally served with process in that State, and had not
appeared as a party. It has been the constitutional rule in this
country at least since
Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S.
714, decided in 1878, that nonresidents cannot be
subjected to personal judgments without such service or appearance.
We held in
Estin v. Estin, 334 U.
S. 541, that an alimony judgment was this kind of
"personal judgment."
See also Kreiger v. Kreiger,
334 U. S. 555;
Barber v.
Barber, 21 How. 582,
62 U. S. 588;
Barrett v. Failing, 111 U. S. 523,
111 U. S. 525.
The
Estin case was much like this one. There, after the
wife had obtained a separation and permanent alimony decree in New
York, the husband went to Nevada and obtained a divorce. In accord
with our previous holding in
Williams v. North Carolina,
317 U. S. 287, we
held that the Nevada divorce was valid, and must be given full
faith and credit by New York, even though rendered without personal
service on the wife. It was argued that New York also had to
recognize Nevada's rule of law that the dissolution of a marriage
put an end to a support order. We held, however, that Nevada could
not adjudicate rights of the wife under the New York judgment,
because she had not been personally served with process and did not
appear in the Nevada proceedings. 334 U.S. at
334 U. S.
547-549. The considerations supporting that holding
are
Page 350 U. S. 577
applicable here. The fact that Mrs. Estin's claim to support had
been reduced to judgment prior to divorce, while Mrs. Armstrong's
had not, is not a meaningful distinction. Mrs. Armstrong's right to
support before judgment, like Mrs. Estin's right to support after
judgment, is the kind of personal right which cannot be adjudicated
without personal service.
Cf. May v. Anderson,
345 U. S. 528.
The husband here seeks to distinguish the
Estin case on
the ground that there, the husband left the "matrimonial domicile"
and established a residence elsewhere, while here, the husband kept
his domicile in Florida and the wife fled from him. He argues, as
the Florida court held, that it was impossible as a matter of law
for Mrs. Armstrong to obtain a new domicile separate and apart from
that of her husband. He bases this argument on the Florida court's
finding on
ex parte evidence that Florida, where the
couple had resided during a considerable part of their marriage,
was the "matrimonial domicile," and that the wife had left her home
in Florida without cause. On this premise, the Florida court held
that she "did not have the right to separate and claim a separate
legal domicile, and, in truth and in fact, her domicile was that of
her husband." The fiction that a woman cannot have a separate
"domicile" from that of her husband is a relic of the old
discredited idea that women must always play a subordinate role in
society; it does not justify a departure from settled
constitutional principles. The concept of "matrimonial domicile"
was expressly repudiated in both the
Williams cases.
[
Footnote 2/2] Yet the Court is
asked to say here that a State's power over
Page 350 U. S. 578
an alimony case is to depend on which spouse is to blame in
leaving the other. We adhere to what was said in the first
Williams case: "the question as to where the fault lies
has no relevancy to the existence of state power in such
circumstances." 317 U.S. at
317 U. S.
300.
Relying on
Milliken v. Meyer, 311 U.
S. 457, the husband further contends that, regardless of
"matrimonial domicile," personal service was unnecessary, because
Mrs. Armstrong was actually domiciled in Florida at the time the
Florida action was brought. The Florida court did find she was
domiciled there, but that was in an uncontested proceeding. This
finding was open to challenge in Ohio.
Williams v. North
Carolina, 325 U. S. 226. The
issue was tried in Ohio with both parties present, and the trial
court expressly found that Mrs. Armstrong had returned to Ohio, and
was a "resident" there within the meaning of the Ohio divorce
statute at the time the Florida divorce proceedings were
instituted.
See Page's Ohio Rev.Code Ann.1954, §
3105.03. This statute has been uniformly interpreted by the Ohio
courts to require residence accompanied by an intention to make the
Ohio a permanent home.
See, e.g., Saalfeld v. Saalfeld, 86
Ohio App. 225, 89 N.E.2d 165. We would accept the Ohio court's
finding that Mrs. Armstrong was such a resident of Ohio when the
Florida suit was brought as amply supported by evidence in the
record. Consequently the husband's reliance on
Milliken v.
Meyer is misplaced.
There was nothing novel in our holding, in
Estin v.
Estin, that a State where one of the parties to a marriage is
domiciled can dissolve the marriage without personal service, but
that it cannot render a personal decree granting or denying
alimony. The distinction between a decree which grants a divorce
and one which grants a personal money judgment was recognized, and
the reasons for the distinction were stated by this Court, in
Pennoyer v.
Neff,
Page 350 U. S. 579
95 U. S. 714.
[
Footnote 2/3] The state courts
have long recognized the rule that a court lacking personal
jurisdiction over a husband cannot render a valid alimony judgment
against him. [
Footnote 2/4] We see
no reason why a court lacking personal jurisdiction
Page 350 U. S. 580
over a wife should be allowed to render a valid judgment denying
alimony to her. [
Footnote 2/5]
Personal jurisdiction is as necessary to protect a wife's interests
as it is to protect a husband's. It is an essential to this kind of
determination. Not long after
Pennoyer v. Neff was
decided, this Court upheld the validity of a legislative divorce
which was granted without notice, service of process, or a hearing
of any kind, judicial or otherwise.
Maynard v. Hill,
125 U. S. 190.
[
Footnote 2/6] But legislative
divorces attempting to create or destroy financial obligations
incident to marriage have not been sustained by the courts.
[
Footnote 2/7] Thus, the different
treatment
Estin v. Estin accorded to alimony and divorce
is well grounded in the judicial and legislative history of our
country.
It is argued that this case is controlled by
Thompson v.
Thompson, 226 U. S. 551.
That case, however, was decided before the
Williams cases,
the
Estin and
Kreiger cases, and
May v.
Anderson. It relied, moreover, on the case of
Atherton v.
Atherton, 181 U. S. 155,
which, in holding that an
ex parte divorce was entitled to
full faith and credit, itself quoted extensively from authorities
recognizing that such a divorce may be binding
"so far as related to the dissolution of the marriage, though
not as to other parts of the decree, such as an order for the
payment of money by the husband."
181 U.S. at
181 U. S. 166.
The
Page 350 U. S. 581
Thompson case stands alone in the United States Reports
in supporting the proposition that a valid
ex parte
divorce in one State cuts off alimony rights in another. [
Footnote 2/8] To the extent that the
Thompson decision can be considered as in any way
inconsistent with
Pennoyer v. Neff and
Estin v.
Estin, the
Thompson case should no longer be
considered to be the law.
For the foregoing reasons, we concur with the Court in affirming
the judgment of the Supreme Court of Ohio.
[
Footnote 2/1]
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER's separate opinion takes the position
that "Ohio merely dealt with property within its borders which
Florida had not purported to affect." But the Florida decree stated
that Mrs. Armstrong "is hereby directed and specifically ordered to
return the said stock certificates and bonds to the plaintiff
within fifteen (15) days. . . ." These were the very stocks which
the Ohio court ordered Mr. Armstrong to transfer to Mrs. Armstrong
as alimony.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Williams v. North Carolina, 317 U.
S. 287,
325 U. S. 325 U.S.
226. In the latter case, the Court said:
"In view of
Williams v. North Carolina, supra, the
jurisdictional requirement of domicil is freed from confusing
refinements about 'matrimonial domicil' . . . and the like."
325 U.S. at
325 U. S.
230.
[
Footnote 2/3]
". . . we do not mean to assert by anything we have said that a
State may not authorize proceedings to determine the status of one
of its citizens towards a nonresident which would be binding within
the State, though made without service of process or personal
notice to the non-resident. . . . The State, for example, has
absolute right to prescribe the conditions upon which the marriage
relation between its own citizens shall be created, and the causes
for which it may be dissolved. One of the parties guilty of acts
for which, by the law of the State, a dissolution may be granted
may have removed to a State where no dissolution is permitted. The
complaining party would, therefore, fail if a divorce were sought
in the the defendant, and, if application could not be made to the
tribunals of the complainant's domicile in such case, and
proceedings be there instituted without personal service of process
or personal notice to the offending party, the injured citizen
would be without redress."
Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U.S. at
95 U. S.
734-735.
As early as 1832, the distinction received recognition in a
state court.
Harding v. Alden, 9 Me. 140. There, the court
said:
"In giving effect here to the divorce decreed in Rhode Island,
we would wish to be understood that the grounds upon which we place
our decision is limited to the dissolution of the marriage. In the
libel, alimony was prayed for and certain personal property then in
the possession of the wife was decreed to her. Had the court
awarded her a gross sum, or a weekly or an annual allowance, to be
paid by the husband, and the courts of this or any other State had
been resorted to to enforce it, a different question would be
presented. . . ."
9 Me. at 151.
See also 2 Kent's Commentaries (14th ed.,
Gould, 1896) *110, n. (
a).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Beard v. Beard, 21 Ind. 321 (1863);
Ellison v.
Martin, 53 Mo. 575 (1873);
Prosser v. Warner, 47 Vt.
667 (1875);
Bunnell v. Bunnell, 25 F. 214 (1885);
Anderson v. Anderson, 55 Mo.App. 268 (1893);
Dillon v.
Starin, 44 Neb. 881, 63 N.W. 12 (1895);
De la Montanya v.
De la Montanya, 112 Cal. 101, 44 P. 345 (1896).
See also
Barrett v. Failing, 111 U. S. 523,
111 U. S. 525.
And see 2 Bishop, Marriage & Divorce (6th ed. 1881),
§ 381a; Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (6th ed., Angell,
1890), 497-498.
[
Footnote 2/5]
See, e.g., Turner v. Turner, 44 Ala. 437, 450 (1870);
Vanderbilt v. Vanderbilt, 1 App.Div.2d 3, 147 N.Y.S.2d 125
(1955),
stayed pending appeal, 309 N.Y. 971, 132 N.E.2d
333 (1956);
Hopson v. Hopson, 95 U.S.App.D.C. 285, 221
F.2d 839.
[
Footnote 2/6]
In that case, the Court said:
"If the act declaring the divorce should attempt to interfere
with the rights of property vested in either party, a different
question would be presented."
125 U.S. at
125 U. S.
206.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Crane v. Meginnis, 1 Gill & J. (Md.) 463 (1829);
Wright v. Wright's Lessee, 1852, 2 Md. 429.
See
also 1 Bishop, Marriage & Divorce (6th ed. 1881), §
693; 2 id., § 382; 2 Schouler, Marriage, Divorce, Separation
and Domestic Relations (6th ed., Blakemore, 1921) §§
1471-1473.
[
Footnote 2/8]
It may be noted that this question was not argued by the wife in
the
Thompson case. And the District of Columbia Court of
Appeals stated, "it was conceded at bar that, if the Virginia
decree was not void, this action could not, upon any theory, be
maintained." 35 App.D.C. 14, 26.