This is in response to your memorandum dated September 27, 1978 regarding the recognition
                  by the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico of a valid Dominican Republic divorce based on
                  mutual consent. The occasion for the delay has been a major change in the applicable
                  law of divorce due to a recent Puerto Rico Supreme Court decision -- Sonia F. F~ and
                  Roberto Morales Morales v. the Commonwealth  of Puerto Rico (May 15, 1978)-- which held portions of the statute in this area unconstitutional.
                  The statute has not been amended to reflect this change and the case opinion, which
                  is quite lengthy, was published only in Spanish and required a translation. For your
                  information, I have attached a copy of the translation.
               
               As a result of this recent decision Puerto Rico must now permit divorces based on
                  mutual consent in order to fully protect its citizens' constitutional right to privacy
                  and human dignity, a right which the Puerto Rico Supreme Court held to be rather more
                  sweeping than the corresponding federal Constitutional rights. Since mutual consent
                  is now a legal, legitimate ground for divorce in Puerto Rico it can no longer be considered
                  a matter contrary to Puerto Rican "public policy."
               
               This is important because principles of international law, or comity, generally require
                  that one country accept as valid the valid judgments of another country unless those
                  foreign judgments violate a strong public policy of the country which is being called
                  upon to give recognition. In the past, Puerto Rico interpreted the public policy issue
                  in the foreign divorce context quite narrowly, so as not to recognize foreign divorces
                  granted upon grounds unavailable in Puerto Rico. See, e.g. Ramirez v. Registrar, 96 Puerto Rican Reports 332, 348 (1968). But even under a narrow test, valid foreign
                  mutual consent divorces would now be valid in Puerto Rico.
               
               We recognize that the divorce of Carmen R. R~ was obtained prior to the change in
                  Puerto Rican law but, for several reasons, do not believe that this would prevent
                  its application to this decision -- i.e., whether or not to recognize the Dominican
                  Republic judgment at this time, as valid in Puerto Rico. First, decisions based on
                  fundamental constitutional rights are often applied retroactively, insofar as possible.
                  More importantly, under principles of comity, the only issue herein presented is whether
                  a divorce concedely valid in the country in which it was obtained at the time it was
                  obtained would today be deemed consistent with the public policy of Puerto Rico. Considering
                  the strong terms in which the Puerto Rico Supreme Court couched its opinion on mutual
                  consent divorces, we believe that it would look askance at any contention that public
                  policy precluded the recognition at this time of a valid foreign judgment based on
                  the same grounds.