H obtained a default divorce decree under which W was given custody of two minor children and H was granted reasonable visitation privileges. Later H remarried and established residence in Montana, and, in order to enable the children to visit him there, filed a motion and affidavit for an order that W show cause why the decree should not be modified. The show cause order was granted, but meanwhile W, in an original application in the Supreme Court, requested a writ of prohibition restraining the Superior Court from modifying. She contended that Superior Court jurisdiction to modify cannot be invoked by a motion and affidavit. Held: Writ granted. RCW 26.08.170 [Rem. Supp. 1949 § 997-17] (formerly RRS § 995-3; PPC § 7511-3) provides that up...
Covers cases on a taxpayer\u27s capacity to maintain actions against state officers and on jurisdict...
A husband and wife were residents of Wyoming. In a divorce proceeding in that state, having both par...
Husband and wife were domiciled in Wisconsin. When marital troubles developed, the parties agreed th...
It is generally conceded by American authority that a divorce granted by a court, when neither party...
The American Law Institute in its Restatement of the Conflict of Laws has codified the rules governi...
This paper discusses whether or not a divorce court, by granting a continuing order for support and/...
Respondent had applied for a determination of petitioner\u27s rights under the New York Decedent Est...
A husband domiciled in Wisconsin obtained a divorce decree in Wisconsin from his non-resident, absen...
Jurisdictional Problems of Foreign Divorce Decrees under the Full Faith and Credit Claus
Plaintiff husband brought a divorce action under an Arkansas statute, which granted state courts div...
It is old learning that a decree of divorce, like any other judicial action, must have been rendered...
Plaintiff petitioned a New York court to restrain her husband from prosecuting an action for divorce...
On November 30, 1973, Raymond A. Ways, a member of the United States Navy on active military duty, f...
Having exhausted his state remedies in seeking a reversal of a 1954 conviction for forgery, petition...
Divorce—Adjudication of Property Rights in Divorce Action (Johnson v. Johnson, Mont. 1960
Covers cases on a taxpayer\u27s capacity to maintain actions against state officers and on jurisdict...
A husband and wife were residents of Wyoming. In a divorce proceeding in that state, having both par...
Husband and wife were domiciled in Wisconsin. When marital troubles developed, the parties agreed th...
It is generally conceded by American authority that a divorce granted by a court, when neither party...
The American Law Institute in its Restatement of the Conflict of Laws has codified the rules governi...
This paper discusses whether or not a divorce court, by granting a continuing order for support and/...
Respondent had applied for a determination of petitioner\u27s rights under the New York Decedent Est...
A husband domiciled in Wisconsin obtained a divorce decree in Wisconsin from his non-resident, absen...
Jurisdictional Problems of Foreign Divorce Decrees under the Full Faith and Credit Claus
Plaintiff husband brought a divorce action under an Arkansas statute, which granted state courts div...
It is old learning that a decree of divorce, like any other judicial action, must have been rendered...
Plaintiff petitioned a New York court to restrain her husband from prosecuting an action for divorce...
On November 30, 1973, Raymond A. Ways, a member of the United States Navy on active military duty, f...
Having exhausted his state remedies in seeking a reversal of a 1954 conviction for forgery, petition...
Divorce—Adjudication of Property Rights in Divorce Action (Johnson v. Johnson, Mont. 1960
Covers cases on a taxpayer\u27s capacity to maintain actions against state officers and on jurisdict...
A husband and wife were residents of Wyoming. In a divorce proceeding in that state, having both par...
Husband and wife were domiciled in Wisconsin. When marital troubles developed, the parties agreed th...