In the case of Holmes v. Holmes, 4 Lans. 388 (as to facts more fully reported in 57 Barb. 305), the parties were married in this State, and for some time continued to reside here. The plaintiff then left his wife in this State and went to Iowa. While there he brought an action for divorce against his wife on account of cruel and inhuman treatment and desertion by the defendant toward the plaintiff. Due notice of the proceedings, in accordance with the laws of Iowa, were personally served on defendant in this State, who did not appear, but suffered a default, and upon the pleadings and proofs of plaintiff a decree of absolute divorce was entered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant.
The defendant, after such decree, married again in this State, whereupon the plaintiff returned to this State and brought his action of divorce for adultery against defendant. She set up by answer the decree obtained by her husband in Iowa, as above stated, and alleged the necessary jurisdictional facts, except service being out of the State, upon a non-resident defendant, and further alleged that said decree, by the laws of Iowa then and there and at all times since, was legal, valid and effectual, that thereby the marriage contract had been annulled, and the defendant was restored thereby to the rights of an unmarried woman, including the right to marry again.
The plaintiff demurred to the answer that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense, thereby admitting all the facts set up in the answer.
The general term of this department in December, 1871, held such demurrer well taken, and that the decree was not valid here for any purpose, and, as a consequence, that the husband, who had obtained the decree in Iowa, was not bound by it nor estopped from ■ maintaining the action in this State against the wife who had remarried upon the faith of such decree.
*649Upon a careful reading of the opinion of Mr. Justice Pabkeb, I am unable to see why his reasoning does not apply in all respects to this case with much greater force.
The cause of action in both cases arose out .of the State attempting to exercise jurisdiction, while the parties to such actions were residing out of such State. In each the plaintiff leaves the defendant and goes to another State and procures a divorce under the laws of such State upon personal service upon the defendant of notice of proceedings, out of the State. In Holmes v. Holmes, the alleged offense for which the divorce was granted was not a cause for absolute divorce in this State, where the parties at the time of such offense resided. In the case at bar, it does not appear whether desertion was a cause for absolute divorce in or prior to 1859 in the State of Massachusetts. In the former case, the service outside of the State of notice stood conceded in its broadest sense; in the latter, while service of a notice is admitted, the sufficiency of such notice under the laws of Vermont is denied. Both were cases of judgment by default, no appearance being had by either defendant. There is as much cause for doubting the bonafides of the residence of the plaintiff in one case as the other.
“ On no principle,” says Judge Pabkeb, “ can the courts of Iowa be said to have jurisdiction of the subject-matter. Jurisdiction of the subject-matter must, of course, exist at the time of the commission of the offense or not at all. The law of the place of domicile at the time of the commission of the offense * * will control. Every State has the right to dissolve the marriage relation of .all its domiciled inhabitants for causes occurring while such domicile continues.” The learned judge, therefore, concludes that “ the courts of Iowa * * * acquired no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action.”
Hpon the insufficiency of the service of notice, the opinion is equally clear and conclusive. To give jurisdiction of the party (p. 392), “ service of process can only be made within the territorial jurisdiction of the court * * the process of the court cannot run into the territory of another government.” The service in that case “ gave no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, for as appears, both upon principle and authority, such service out of the State is a nullity.” Todd v. Kerr, 42 Barb. 317.
The case of Holmes v. Holmes is therefore conclusive, and the referee erred in giving force and effect to the decree of the Vermont *650court as evidence of the dissolution of the marriage contract between plaintiff and Thurston, and of the right of the plaintiff to marry again. See, also, Kerr v. Kerr, 41 N. Y. 272; McGiffert v. McGiffert, 31 Barb. 69; Vischer v. Vischer,. 12 id. 640; Borden v. Fitch, 15, Johns. 141; Dunn v. Dunn, 4 Paige, 425; 2 Bish. on Mar. & Div., § 156 (731) 4th ed., et seq.
Besides the considerations above noted, it is quite probable, from the evidence in this case, that the Vermont decree was void for fraud in that the alleged desertion of plaintiff by Thurston was not true, in fact, and if true, did not occur in the State of Vermont, so as to give jurisdiction of the subject-matter. Vischer v. Vischer, ante.
However that may be, the judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted.
Judgment accordingly.