New York Woman Allowed to Serve Divorce Papers Via Facebook

rockin'robin

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At least one Facebook user won't be "liking" an action from his ex-wife and her attorney today. A judge in New York has permitted a woman to serve divorce papers through Facebook in what the attorney says is a first for the state.

Ellanora Baidoo of Brooklyn wants a divorce from a man she married in a New York civil ceremony in 2009. Her attorney Andrew Spinnell said the husband, for unknown reasons, had reneged on his promise to follow that with a traditional Ghanaian wedding ceremony. So Baidoo wants a divorce, but she and her attorney have been unable to locate him for the past several months, save for his Facebook page and a phone number.

Baidoo never lived with Victor Sena Blood-Dzraku and the last address she has for him is an apartment that he vacated in 2011, according to a written decision by Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Matthew Cooper on March 27. Spinnell said he and his client still do not know where her husband is living.

"[Baidoo] has spoken with [her ex] by telephone on occasion and he has told her that he has no fixed address and no place of employment. He has also refused to make himself available to be served with divorce papers," Cooper wrote.

She and her attorney even hired private investigators to find him, including investigating a "false alarm" that he worked in New Jersey, to no avail, Baidoo’s attorney said.

Cooper wrote that "the post office has no forwarding address for him, there is no billing address linked to his pre-paid cellphone, and the Department of Motor Vehicles has no record of him. Inasmuch as plaintiff is unable to find defendant, personal delivery of the summons to him is an impossibility."

Cooper, after first asking her to prove that the Facebook account was her husband's through their correspondence, directed Baidoo and her attorney to serve the divorce papers for three consecutive weeks. After that time, the judge will permit Baidoo to file for default judgment for her divorce.

"She’s not looking for any money. I don’t think there is any marital property. This is a case where a woman wants to move on with her life and marry someone else potentially," Spinnell said.

"Under the circumstance presented here, service by Facebook, albeit novel and non-traditional, is the form of service that most comports with the constitutional standards of due process," Cooper wrote. "Not only is it reasonably calculated to provide defendant with notice that he is being sued for divorce, but every indication is that it will achieve what should be the goal of every method of service: actually delivering the summons to him."

Spinnell said they served Blood-Dzraku for the first time last week via his Facebook email address and an attachment, as first reported by New York Daily News. And he was served for the second time today, though there still has not been a response.

"She wants to move on with her life and this will allow her to be able to do so," Spinnell said of his client.

Spinnell said there are federal commercial cases that have allowed service by Facebook, but he did not know whether other states allow it. In September, a judge in New York's Richmond County Family Court on Staten Island allowed a woman to be served via Facebook to modify an existing child-support order, according a New York lawyer who’s familiar with the state’s matrimonial laws.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/york-woman-allowed-serve-divorce-papers-facebook/story?id=30119759
 
Wow! Well, that's one way to do it! Too bad, if he was trying to stay hidden, that he wasn't smart enough not to create a FB page. :lol:
 
Way to go!! Her soon to be ex husband is stupid to create his FB page, so divorce papers is served at him via facebook. :giggle:
 
Wonder if this posting will get a lot of likes. lol
 


Then help you disconnect in the end, hence divorce... ;)
 
Will divorcing her automatically block game requests?
 
I don't think so it's so private

If I got married and divorced I wouldn't allowed show papers on Facebook it's so private papers my parents divorce when I was 9 years old..

Mostly married couples like kept private certificate of marriages and divorced and never show on Facebook..
 
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