DIVORCE

divorce. The legal dissolution of a  marriage by a court. — Also termed  marital dissolution;

dissolution  of  marriage. Cf.  ANNULMENT. [Cases: Divorce    1–420. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 2–138,

140–167,   169–196,   198–211,   213–610,   731,   757–766,   768–825,   837–844,   851–861.]   —

divorce,vb.

“When  used  without qualification,  the  term  [divorce]  imports  a  dissolution  of  the  marriage

relation between  husband and wife, that is, a complete severance  of the  tie by  which the parties

were united. However, in its common and wider use, the term includes the dissolution of a valid

marriage, a formal separation of married persons, and the annulment of a marriage void from the

“So, while the term ‘divorce’ has sometimes been broadly defined or applied to include both

decrees of  nullity and decrees of  dissolution  of  marriage, especially where the  marriage  was not

void but only voidable at the option of the injured party, this has been declared to be not in accord

with  modern  usage, and  generally,  the  term  denotes  only  dissolution or  suspension  of  a  marital

relation, and does not include annulment of an invalid marriage.” 27A C.J.S. Divorce § 2, at 31–32

(1986).absolute divorce.See divorce a vinculo matrimonii.

bifurcated divorce.See divisible divorce.

conditional divorce.See conversion divorce.

contested  divorce. 1. A divorce that one spouse  opposes in court. 2. A divorce in which the

spouses litigate. • In this sense, although both spouses may want the divorce, they disagree on the

terms of the divorce decree. Cf. uncontested divorce.

conversion  divorce.A  divorce  granted  after  (1)  a  legal  separation  has  been  granted  or  the

parties  have  signed  a  separation  agreement,  and  (2)  the  parties  have  lived  separately  for  a

statutorily prescribed period. — Also termed convertible divorce; conditional divorce.

divisible divorce.A divorce whereby the marriage itself is dissolved but the issues incident to

the divorce, such as alimony, child custody, and visitation, are reserved until a later proceeding. •

This  type  of  divorce  can  be  granted  when  the  court  has  subject-matter  jurisdiction  but  lacks

personal jurisdiction over the defendant-spouse. The doctrine of divisible divorce was recognized

by  the  Supreme  Court  in  Estin  v.  Estin,  334  U.S.  541,  68  S.Ct.  1213  (1948),  and  Vanderbilt  v.

Vanderbilt,  354  U.S.  416,  77  S.Ct.  1360  (1957).  —  Also  termed  bifurcated  divorce.  [Cases:

 

Divorce    146. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 209–210.]

divorce a mensa et thoro (ay men-s<<schwa>> et thor-oh). [Latin “(divorce) from board and

hearth”] Hist. A partial or qualified  divorce by which the  parties were separated and allowed or

ordered  to  live  apart,  but  remained  technically  married.  •  This  type  of  divorce,  abolished  in

England in 1857, was the forerunner of  modern judicial  separation. — Also termed separation a

mensa  et  thoro;  separation  from  bed  and  board;  limited  divorce;  legal  separation;  judicial

separation. [Cases: Divorce    155. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 223–225.]

“[The  Ecclesiastical  Courts]  grant also  what  is called  a  divorce  a  mensa  et thoro,  or  rather

what  we  should  call  a  judicial  separation,  i.e.  they  release  the  parties  from  the  duty  of  living

together on grounds of cruelty or misconduct ….” William Geldart, Introduction to English Law 38

(D.C.M. Yardley ed., 9th ed. 1984).

divorce  a  vinculo  matrimonii  (ay  ving-ky<<schwa>>-loh  ma-tr<<schwa>>-moh-nee-I).

[Latin “(divorce) from the chains of marriage”] A total divorce of husband and wife, dissolving the

marriage tie and releasing the parties wholly from their matrimonial obligations. • At common law,

but not always in canon law, this type of divorce bastardized any children from the marriage and

was granted on grounds that existed before the marriage. In England, the Matrimonial Causes Act

of 1857 introduced statutory divorce a vinculo matrimonii. — Usu. shortened to divorce. — Also

termed absolute divorce. Cf. limited divorce. [Cases: Divorce    157. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 223–225.]

Dominican divorce.See Mexican divorce.

ex parte divorce (eks pahr-tee). A divorce proceeding in which only one spouse participates

or appears in court. [Cases: Divorce    146. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 209–210.]

fault  divorce.A  divorce  granted  to  one  spouse  on  the  basis  of  some  proven  wrongful  act

(grounds for divorce) by the other spouse. • Although all states now have some form of no-fault

divorce,  some  jurisdictions still  consider  a  spouse’s  fault  in  precipitating  the  divorce,  esp.  when

dividing  marital  property  or  when  awarding  alimony.  Traditionally,  the  common  grounds  for  a

fault  divorce  were  adultery,  abandonment,  imprisonment,  and  physical  or  mental  cruelty;  the

defenses  to  alleged  fault  in  a  petition  for  divorce  were  condonation,  connivance,  collusion,

recrimination,  and  insanity.  Section  303(e)  of  the  Uniform  Marriage  and  Divorce  Act  has

abolished the defenses to divorce. Cf. no-fault divorce.

foreign divorce.A divorce obtained outside the state or country in which one spouse resides.

[Cases: Divorce    351–420. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 769–825, 837–844, 851–861.]

Haitian divorce.See Mexican divorce.

hotel divorce.Slang. A form of collusive divorce — occurring before widespread passage of

no-fault divorce laws — in which the spouses agree to fake an adultery scene to create “fault.” Cf.

no-fault divorce.

“Clearly a lawyer may not originate or participate in a scheme to make it appear to the court

that a ground for divorce has occurred when this is not the fact. Such is the case in the so-called

 

‘hotel divorces,’ prevalent in jurisdictions where adultery is the only ground for divorce, and based

on  the  principle  that  intercourse  will  be  presumed  from  apparently  uninhibited  opportunity.”

Henry S. Drinker, Legal Ethics 123–24 (1953).

legislative  divorce.Hist.  The  legal  termination  of  a  particular  marriage,  enacted  by  the

legislature  rather  than  by  a  court.  •  In  the  18th  century,  Colonial  American  legislatures  granted

these  special  statutes.  In  1816,  the  House  of  Burgesses  of  Virginia  granted  a  divorce  to  Rachel

Robards  Jackson,  the  wife  of  then  President  Andrew  Jackson,  from  a  former  spouse.  Mrs.

Jackson’s untimely death was attributed to her reaction to the scandal that she had married Jackson

before the divorce was procured. Now only state courts have authority to grant decrees of divorce.

— Also termed parliamentary divorce. [Cases: Divorce    5. C.J.S. Divorce § 4.]

limited divorce. 1. A divorce that ends the legal relationship of  marriage by court order but

does not address financial support, property distribution, or care and custody of children. • In the

days before no-fault divorce, a spouse might seek a quick divorce in a state with a short residency

requirement (such as Nevada). Then courts in the home state would give full faith and credit only

to  the  dissolution  of  the  marital  res,  while  maintaining  sole  jurisdiction  over  property-division,

support,  and  custody  issues.  [Cases:  Divorce    155.  C.J.S.  Divorce  §§  223–225.]  2.  Loosely,  a

legal separation. 3. See divorce a mensa et thoro. Cf. divorce a vinculo matrimonii.

mail-order  divorce.Slang.  A  divorce  obtained  by  parties  who  are  not  physically  present  or

domiciled in the jurisdiction purporting to grant the divorce. • Such a divorce is not recognized in

the United States because of the absence of the usual bases for jurisdiction.

Mexican  divorce.A  divorce  obtained  in Mexico  by  mail  order  or  by  the  appearance  of  one

spouse who does not have a Mexican domicile. • Neither type is recognized in the United States.

—  Also  termed  Dominican  divorce  (if  granted  in  the  Dominican  Republic);  Haitian  divorce  (if

granted in Haiti).

migratory divorce.A divorce obtained in a jurisdiction other than the marital domicile; esp., a

divorce obtained by a spouse who moves to, or temporarily resides in, another state or country to

get the divorce.

no-fault  divorce.A  divorce  in  which  the  parties  are  not  required  to  prove  fault  or  grounds

beyond a showing  of the irretrievable breakdown  of the marriage  or irreconcilable  differences. •

The system of no-fault divorce has been adopted throughout the United States. By 1974, 45 states

had adopted no-fault divorce; by 1985, every state but New York had adopted some form of it. In

New York — one  of the  last bastions of fault grounds for  divorce — the closest equivalent is a

conversion  divorce  one  year  after  legal  separation  or  a  legal-separation  agreement.  Cf.  fault

divorce; hotel divorce. [Cases: Divorce    12. C.J.S. Divorce §§ 13–18, 70.]

parliamentary divorce.See legislative divorce.

pro–con divorce.Slang. An uncontested divorce granted after only the plaintiff appears at the

proceeding (since the defendant contests nothing).

quickie divorce.Slang. A fast divorce granted with minimal paperwork. — Also termed quick

 

rabbinical  divorce.A  divorce  granted  under  the  authority  of  a  rabbi.  • This  type  of  divorce

affects the relationship  of the  parties under the tenets of  Judaism.  It affects particularly a Jewish

woman’s ability to remarry in accordance with Judaic law. In the United States, it is not generally

a divorce recognized in civil courts. — Also termed get.

uncontested  divorce.A  divorce  that  is  unopposed  by  the  spouse  who  did  not  initiate  it.  Cf.

contested divorce. [Blacks Law 8th]