Reno divorce
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]Reno divorce (plural Reno divorces) (US, colloquial, dated)
- (historical) A divorce obtained in Reno, Nevada, prior to the widespread institution of no-fault divorce in the 1970s United States. Prior to this, many states imposed onerous requirements on the granting of divorces, while Nevada's (as well as some other states') were relatively lax. Nevada required only six months of residency in the state to establish legal residency (which allowed people to bring cases in its courts), a period further lowered to six weeks in 1931, leading many people seeking divorces to temporarily move to Nevada for this purpose.
- 1927-10-22, Ralph Graves, Robert Lord, directed by Ralph Graves, A Reno Divorce, Warner Bros., Vitaphone production reels #2331-2337
- A "lost film"; only survives in Vitaphone format.
- 1935 December 14, “Affidavit of Isaac Levy”, in Case Press, Inc., compiler, Case opinions, New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department, volume 5036, Walton, N.Y.: The Reporter Company, Inc, page 67:
- But I still recalled her threat to harass and annoy with litigation unless I obtained a Reno divorce against her. I was, therefore, left with no other alternative but to go through with the Reno divorce action without her appearance therein.
- 2009 March 3, John Ventura, Mary Reed, Divorce For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 255:
- In 1931, to capitalize on the income potential from being the country's new divorce mecca, the Nevada legislature shortened the residency period from six months to a mere six weeks, putting a Reno divorce within the financial reach of the average person.
- 2011 March 3, Carl Abbott, How Cities Won the West: Four Centuries of Urban Change in Western North America, University of New Mexico Press, →ISBN, page 130:
- Because Reno was Nevada's largest and most sophisticated city, to Reno they came—first Laura Corey to divorce the philandering president of U.S. Steel, then other members of New York society, and then journalists to report on the phenomenon of “going to Reno”. Reno divorces were news in the society pages of eastern newspapers by the early teens […]
- (metonymically) An easily-obtained divorce; a divorce with relatively few prerequisites, such as a short period of residency in the jurisdiction.
Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- divorce mill on Wikipedia.Wikipedia