Plaintiff commenced proceedings for divorce in Genesee County Circuit Court. In response thereto, defendant interposed a decree of divorce rendered in a Nevada court as res judicata. The trial court, finding the decree entitled to full faith and credit,1 granted defendant an accelerated judgment of dismissal. Plaintiff claims the trial judge erred in according validity to the Nevada divorce decree; the defendant has filed a motion to affirm and, in the face of the authority arrayed against plaintiff, we cannot conclude the issue she raises is substantial enough to warrant formal submission.
With defendant in search of employment, the parties went to Las Yegas, Nevada, in November, 1957. After an altercation, plaintiff returned to Michigan while defendant remained in Nevada. Defendant immediately notified plaintiff of his intention to institute divorce proceedings. On December 6, 1957, plaintiff executed a document authorizing a specific Nevada attorney to “enter my appearance and represent me in said action” conditioned on payment of his fee by defendant and on his obtaining $50 per month support for the parties’ minor child.
Pursuant to this authorization, once defendant initiated divorce proceedings, the Nevada attorney the wife had designated entered her appearance. He filed an answer denying the husband’s allegation of domicile and his allegation of extreme cruelty. Af*696ter a hearing, at which the attorney was again present, a decree of divorce was entered which included an express finding of jurisdiction in the Nevada court and the support provision requested by the wife.
Upon these facts, we are not reviewing a pro confesso foreign divorce decree.2 Rather, this is a case where plaintiff entered a general appearance through counsel, filed an answer, and asserted defendant did not have a valid domicile in Nevada; resolution of the question by the Nevada court constituted final adjudication of the issue of defendant’s Nevada domicile, and is entitled to full faith and credit. Pratt v. Miedema (1945), 311 Mich 64; Albaugh v. Albaugh (1948), 320 Mich 16. The Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Federal Constitution bars a party from collaterally attacking a divorce decree in the courts of a sister state where there has been participation by the party in the divorce proceedings. Sherrer v. Sherrer (1948), 334 US 343 (68 S Ct 1087, 92 L Ed 1429); Davis v. Davis (1938), 305 US 32 (59 S Ct 3, 83 L Ed 26). Plaintiff, after voluntarily authorizing the Nevada attorney to enter her appearance and act in her behalf upon the conditions she set forth, cannot now disassociate herself from those divorce proceedings.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.