Appeal by Kansas City Bridge Company, former employer of Lewis Edwin Leichty, deceased, from a judgment of the circuit court affirming an award of the Workmen's Compensation Commission in favor of claimant as the sole dependent of deceased.
The claim, filled out on a printed form furnished by the Commission, states that deceased came to his death as the result of an accident while in the employ of appellant; that claimant is the widow and sole dependent of deceased, etc. Appellant filed a general denial and no other pleadings were filed with the Commission or in the circuit court.
At the hearing before a Commissioner admissions were made as follows; that deceased was in the employ of appellant and came to his death as the result of an accident while in the course of his employment; that appellant and deceased had duly elected to come under the Compensation Act; and that appellant had filed its report of the accident and respondent had filed her claim with the Commission within the time required by law. The average weekly wages of deceased were agreed to.
Claimant introduced a marriage license and certificate showing that she was married to deceased in Texas in 1921, and testified that they lived together as husband and wife in Texas and later in Oklahoma.
Appellant offered a record, duly authenticated under the acts of Congress, of a divorce decree obtained by deceased in Kansas in 1935 upon service on claimant by publication.
Claimant objected to the receipt of this evidence on the ground that the divorce was fraudulently obtained, stating in detail the reasons for so claiming. The Commissioner admitted the evidence "for what it is worth."
Then the claimant, over appellant's objection, introduced evidence tending to show: that deceased obtained the order of publication in the divorce case by falsely swearing that he did not know her address; that at the time he instituted the divorce suit, during its progress and later, he was in correspondence with her, addressing his *Page 633 letters to her at Oklahoma City where she was staying, some letters to that effect being received in evidence; that when he filed suit he wrote to a woman at a town in Texas that he had caused a copy of the petition to be mailed there as his wife's last known address, (as required by the Kansas statute) and asked the woman to tell "them you don't know her address and it will be returned here" so his wife couldn't cause trouble in the divorce suit; that after the divorce decree deceased joined with claimant as husband and wife in executing and acknowledging a deed to real estate; that after the decree of divorce deceased visited claimant, lived with her as her husband for a short time and introduced her as his wife; that claimant did not learn of the divorce decree until after her husband's death.
Appellant objected to claimant's evidence as being a collateral attack on the Kansas judgment and in conflict with the "full faith and credit" clause of the Federal Constitution. Appellant offered evidence tending to contradict or discredit a portion of the testimony offered on behalf of claimant. After the evidence was in the Commissioner made a finding that the divorce was procured by fraud.
The sole issue tried was as to whether claimant was the wife of deceased at his death. That issue was decided in favor of the claimant by the Commissioner, on review by the full Commission and on appeal by the circuit court.
Appellant asks us to reverse the judgment on the following grounds: (1) that the Commission and the circuit court have failed to give full faith and credit to the Kansas judgment; (2) the Commission exceeded its jurisdiction because it has no equitable power; (3) the Kansas judgment could not be set aside in this proceeding, regardless of whether or not the Commission has equitable power, for the attack is a [203] collateral one; (4) the judgment is not supported by competent evidence.
[1] Beginning with Marx v. Fore, 51 Mo. 69, this court has consistently held that judgments rendered in other states are open to inquiry as to the jurisdiction of the court and notice to defendant notwithstanding the recitals of such judgments. In Marx v. Fore it was assumed that such judgments could be attacked directly, but not collaterally. Our later decisions hold that, on jurisdictional grounds, the judgment of a sister state may be assailed collaterally on evidence dehors the record, but a domestic judgment can be attacked on such ground in a direct proceeding only. On this point Stuart v. Dickinson, 290 Mo. 516,235 S.W. 446, is analogous to the instant case. There, citing many cases, we held that a judgment, fair on its face, rendered in Illinois could be assailed for want of jurisdiction of the parties when offered in evidence by a defendant in a suit in this state. We approved the ruling of that case since in In re Estate of Thompson, 339 Mo. 410, 97 S.W.2d 93; Hall v. Wilder,316 Mo. 812, 293 S.W. 760; Bonnet-Brown Co. v. Utt, 323 Mo. 589, 19 S.W.2d *Page 634 888. The opinion in Wright v. Wright, 350 Mo. 325,165 S.W.2d 870, is not inconsistent in result with Stuart v. Dickinson. The attack on the Nevada divorce in the Wright case was direct. However, in discussing other cases, we assumed that a judgment of a sister state, displaying no defect on its face, could not be attacked collaterally. We now approve the holding in Stuart v. Dickinson that such a judgment can be attacked collaterally for want of jurisdiction of the subject matter or parties. [31 Am. Jur., pages 193-4-5, sections 597-8; 34 C.J., page 1142, section 1616(c).]
"A judgment rendered in one state is subject to collateral attack in another state on the ground that the state in which the judgment was rendered had no jurisdiction over the defendant or over the subject matter, even though it appears in the judgment record that the court had jurisdiction and extrinsie evidence is necessary to establish its invalidity." [Restatement of the Law, "Judgments:" page 71, section 12(c).]
All the Missouri cases cited by appellant on this point, except Howey v. Howey (Mo.), 240 S.W. 450, involved attacks on domestic judgments. In the Howey case, while there was a rather weak attempt to attack a Florida judgment on jurisdictional grounds, the principal assault on the judgment was for alleged perjury at the trial in that state as to the plaintiff's residence, which question could not, of course, be raised collaterally. But the opinion does say that, while the Federal Constitution does not require it, the Missouri rule is to deny collateral attack upon a judgment of a sister state, which shows no defect on the record, even on jurisdictional grounds. That much of the opinion is contrary to Stuart v. Dickinson and other authorities, supra, which we think announce the sounder rule.
[2] We hold that the finding of the Commission and the judgment of the circuit court in the instant case do not conflict with the "full faith and credit clause" of the Federal Constitution.
[3] However, appellant in oral argument contended that a judgment for divorce is not governed by rules applicable to other judgments, and that the Kansas decree is not subject to attack in this state even in a direct proceeding, explaining this contention in this manner; a divorce action is a proceeding in rem; the res is the marriage status and, when the marriage is dissolved by the death of one of the contracting parties, no action affecting the res survives to the living spouse or against the heirs or representatives of the deceased spouse. Appellant finds support for this contention in some language used by Judge Woodson in the majority opinion in Lieber v. Lieber. 239 Mo. 1. l.c. 55, 143 S.W. 458, but we think the reasoning of Judge Woodson and of appellant rest upon an unsound premise. If a divorce suit is an action in rem the res is not a stationary or immovable thing. It travels with the parties and may even be divided and exist in separate states if the parties in good faith acquire *Page 635 separate domiciles. A divorce case is not strictly in rem, but, of necessity, a state must have sufficient control over the marriage status of its residents to enable its courts to affect that status without personal service if such service cannot be obtained. However, due process requires that reasonable and good faith effort be made to notify the absent spouse. All this is clearly set forth in the able dissenting opinion of Judge Valliant in the Lieber case, supra.
[4] In the instant case the appellant, Bridge Company, by accepting the Compensation Act, contracted to pay to the dependents of its employee, if he should die by accident in[204] the course of his employment, a sum to be determined by the Compensation Commission in accordance with the Act. Claimant claims to be and, if the divorce is invalid, was the sole dependent of the deceased employee at his death. Of course, her right to compensation survived the death of her husband for it did nor come into being until his death. To say that the very event which caused her right to accrue [her husband's death] precluded any remedy, would be to say her right died the instant it was born and from the same cause. That would be a reflection upon the law and a travesty upon justice. Nor is there any doubt that her right survived against the employer who made a contract with her husband for her benefit.
[5] Appellant says that as the Compensation Commission is not a court recognized by our Constitution it was without power to pass upon the validity of the divorce decree. Claimant's counsel must have been troubled with this same doubt for after the claim was filed a suit was brought in the circuit court of Jackson County seeking to attack the divorce by declaratory judgment. The Bridge Company brought direct prohibition in this court; the case was lodged in Division Two and an opinion adopted forbidding the circuit court to proceed in the declaratory judgment suit. [State ex rel. v. Terte, 345 Mo. 95, 131 S.W.2d 587.]
Later the claimant sued in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis against the Bridge Company and the Compensation Commission, praying that the former be enjoined from offering, and the latter from receiving, the Kansas decree in evidence in the compensation case. Claimant lost in the circuit court and also on appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The latter court, after adopting a unanimous opinion, transferred the case to us because it believed its opinion in conflict with the opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in Kelly v. Howard (Mo. App.),123 S.W.2d 584. In Division One we adopted the opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals verbatim, adding a few comments of our own. [Leichty v. Kansas City Bridge Co. (Mo.), 162 S.W.2d 275.] In that case it was conceded that there were no facts making the City of St. Louis proper venue for suit against the Bridge Company unless the circuit court there had jurisdiction over the co-defendant, the Compensation *Page 636 Commission. The opinion assumes, but does not decide, that the City of St. Louis was proper venue for a suit against the Commission because the law requires it to maintain an office there, but held that the petition failed to state a cause of action against the Commission. The opinion states that plaintiff's case was based upon the theory that the Commission had no power to pass upon the validity of the Kansas decree if and when it should be offered in evidence and, therefore, a court of equity should grant the relief prayed. Then the opinion goes on to say:
"In the case at bar the issue to be determined by the Commission is whether or not the claimant is the widow of Lewis Edwin Leichty. The Workmen's Compensation Commission has many times determined that issue in cases before it, where the determination involved the application of well-settled rules of law to facts found. De Ra Luis v. Carter Carburetor Co., Mo. App., 94 S.W.2d 1130; Sanders v. Central Building Materials Co., Mo. App., 43 S.W.2d 863; and Griggs v. Pullman Co., Mo. App., 40 S.W.2d 463. In the case at bar the principles to be applied are found in the decisions which hold that in the absence of waiver a judgment is subject to collateral attack because of its rendition against one who never was legally served with process of the court. If the Commission finds the facts to be such as to bring the Kansas judgment under this rule, and applies the rule by excluding the document when offered, we do not believe the Commission will exceed its powers."
Then we held that the Commission has the authority to make the necessary rulings to determine the fundamental question of whether claimant is entitled to compensation.
We adhere to our ruling in the last mentioned case and hold that the Commissioner who first heard the claim had authority to inquire into the manner in which the divorce was obtained in order to determine the admissibility of the decree as evidence. True, before this evidence came in, the Commissioner admitted the decree, but this was only a tentative ruling. Later he ruled that the decree was obtained by fraud and this amounted to a rejection of the decree as evidence, which became a judicial ruling when affirmed by the circuit court.
[6] We need say little on the remaining point relative to the sufficiency of the [205] evidence. If believed it shows that deceased not only falsely swore as to his knowledge of his wife's residence, but took active steps to prevent her from knowing of the divorce suit. This was a violation of the requirement for due process under the Kansas statute and a fraud upon the court. We must assume that, if the facts were presented to the court which granted the divorce, the decree would not be recognized as valid. Certainly we are not required to recognize it.
The judgment is affirmed. All concur, except Ellison, J., absent. *Page 637