The principal question in this case has been decided by the Court of Appeals. The facts are very similar to those in Van Voorhis v. Brintnall (23 Hun, 260; 86 N. Y., 18). Austin I). Moore was married in this State, was divorced for his own adultery. . While his divorced wife was alive he married again in New Jersey. Edwin Moore is the result of this New Jersey marriage. . There was no actual intent to evade the laws of Now York in this case, although both parties knew of the divorce. In Van Voorhis v. Brintnall, there was an intent to evade the laws of New York, by the marriage of the parties in New Haven. The Court of Appeals held the marriage good; that the statutes of New York had no extra territorial effect, and that a marriage good in Connecticut was good here, notwithstanding our statutes prohibited a person divorced for his own adultery from marrying again during the life of his wife so divorced.
The decision of the Court of Appeals in Wait v. Wait (4 N. Y., 95) was to the effect that the marriage was not entirely abrogated by the statute, but only so far as the statute provided, and that the first wife was entitled to dower in her divorced husband’s lands. The same principle is held in Cropsey v. Ogden (11 N. Y., 228). This decision must be deemed overruled by the case of Van Voorhis v. Brintnall, otherwise there will b§ two widows, perhaps more, of one man, equally entitled to dower in a husband’s lands and distribution, under our laws providing for distribution in cases of intestacy of the husband.
The rule probably now is that the divorce severs entirely the marriage relations. The divorced wife is no longer wife, either for dower or distribution in the divorced husband’s real or personal property. Such being the case, there is nothing in the New Jersey statute which calls for a different conclusion from that reached in Van Voorhis v. Brintnall. That statute is as follows:
*71“ Divorces from the bonds of matrimony shall be decreed when either of the parties had had another wife or husband living at the time of such second or other marriage; and all marriages when either of the parties shall have a former husband or wife living at the time of such marriage, shall be invalid from the beginning and absolutely void, and the issue thereof shall be deemed to be illegitimate and subject to all the legal disabilities of such issue.”
If the marriage in New York was absolutely dissolved there was no former wife existing at the time of the New Jersey marriage.-The divorced wife was by our law free to marry here or in New J ersey. The husband so divorced could marry anywhere out of the State without violating our law and the marriage be legal. If the former wife in the Yan Yoorhies case had not been absolutely free from the marriage, relations, the marriage would not have been good ii\ Connecticut.
The restricted meaning claimed for the word former in the statute of New Jersey is against the spirit of the act. The intent was to punish bigamy and to provide against bigamous marriages. The criminal part of the New Jersey law is as follows :
“ If any person being married, or who hereafter shall marry any person, the former husband or wife being alive, then the person so offending shall be guilty of a high misdemeanor.”
The construction claimed by the appellants would make the innocent divorced wife within the scope of this law, and yet she could marry here without offense. I think such is not the construction to be put upon the law. The former wife means an existing-wife by a former marriage, an undivorced wife, and not a wife divorced absolutely; and one as to whom the relations of marriage was wholly abrogated.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Dtkman, J., concurred; Gilbert, J., not sitting.Judgment affirmed, with costs.