Plaintiff seeks a separation on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment and nonsupport. The allegations of the complaint concerning such cruel and inhuman treatment and nonsupport have been established, as set forth in the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law passed upon by the court. Defendant, however, denies any liability in this action on the ground that plaintiff’s Arkansas divorce decree from a prior husband was invalid. Defendant contends, therefore, that plaintiff’s subsequent marriage to him was void, thereby relieving him of any legal responsibility to her. It is plaintiff’s contention, however, that defendant’s complicity and aid in obtaining her Arkansas divorce decree estops him from now contesting its validity.
The credible evidence leaves no doubt that defendant was the motivating factor that caused plaintiff to obtain the Arkansas decree in the latter part of 1953. The record shows that defendant himself obtained a similar decree in Arkansas shortly before plaintiff obtained hers, despite his lack of the requisite legal domicile. Defendant then recommended and obtained for plaintiff the services of the lawyers who had previously represented him in his Arkansas action. Likewise, as a railroad employee, he obtained free train passage for plaintiff from New York to Arkansas and for her return trip. The fees for the legal services rendered by plaintiff’s counsel in New York and in the Arkansas action were paid from the joint funds of both plaintiff and defendant. Thereafter, on March 11, 1954, plaintiff and defendant, who had been living together since 1950, were married in the city and State of New York, where they continued to live as husband and wife until August, 1957.
Thus, this court, sitting as a court of equity, has before it a plaintiff whose divorce decree is purportedly invalid, and a defendant who seeks to avoid responsibility for his marriage to plaintiff following the defective decree for which he arranged and of which he had knowledge, but did nothing for approximately four years, while at the same time he/ relies upon a similar defective Arkansas decree to evade his own prior marriage to a New York resident.
The principal issue before the court is relatively simple, to wit, does such conduct on defendant’s part serve to bar him from asserting in this action the invalidity of plaintiff’s divorce decree. An examination of relevant case law and text material establishes an uncertainty and anomaly in the application of the so-called “ doctrine of estoppel ” in cases involving matrimonial disputes. It is fundamental that the existence of a valid marriage is prerequisite to the right to maintain an action
The apparent theory behind these recent cases which preclude the doctrine of estoppel is that the interest of the State in refusing to give even a semblance of recognition to an invalid marriage or divorce takes precedence over all other considerations. It is most unfortunate that some courts, in adjudicating marital status, have, in effect, determined that the public policy of this State uoav dictates that a court blind itself to the equities and other factors which often appear in matrimonial actions. In my opinion, public interest in the stability of matrimonial ties and their severance only as provided by law is not flouted by the application of the doctrine of estoppel in an instance such as the ease at bar. The fallacy in the reasoning which permits a defendant who comes into court with unclean hands to escape the effect of his deeds and the fraud which he helped to perpe
The doctrine of equitable estoppel is founded upon principles of morality and fair dealing and is intended to subserve the ends of justice (19 Am. Jur., Estoppel, § 42). It imposes silence on a party when, in good conscience and honesty, he should not be allowed to speak. To permit defendant herein now to assert the invalidity of the Arkansas decree would, in effect, allow him to occupy a position directly contrary to and inconsistent with his own past conduct. In view of such conduct and his full participation in and knowledge of the facts surrounding plaintiff’s divorce decree, I find it in the best interests of justice and of the particular parties here involved that defendant be estopped and barred from escaping his obligations to plaintiff as a result of his own testimony and other evidence which attack the Arkansas decree.
In the instant action, however, despite the estoppel now imposed upon defendant, I find that plaintiff nevertheless has failed to establish a valid marriage to defendant. In the proposed conclusions of law, it is significant that plaintiff herself has admitted the invalidity of the Arkansas decree. The burden was upon her, therefore, to prove that she had legal capacity to
Proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law have been passed upon and filed. No costs are awarded.
Submit decision and decree accordingly within 10 days on three days’ notice.