220 A.D. 555 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The decree in the separation action directed the defendant to pay the plaintiff accrued alimony since the commencement of the action to December 10, 1926, in the sum of $18,154.68, and directed that the defendant pay to her during her lifetime, in full for her support and maintenance, alimony in the sum of $12,000 per annum, payable in equal monthly installments of $1,000 each on the first day of each month in advance, such payments to commence as of June 10, 1925, and that the amount of such alimony payments accruing under the decree from June .10, 1925, to and including May 31, 1926, should be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff on June 1, 1926. There was due under the provisions of
In opposition to plaintiffs’ application for sequestration of the defendant’s property voluminous affidavits were filed’ by the defendant. In answer to the contention of the plaintiff that said agreement modifying said decree was obtained by fraud and misrepresentation, the defendant sets forth a long series of correspondence passing between the plaint'ff and the defendant leading up to the execution of said agreement. This correspondence and the circumstances would seem to throw considerable doubt as to the claim of the plaintiff that she was overreached by the defendant.
In granting the order appealed from herein sequestrating the property of the defendant, the court below relied upon the decisions of this court in Hallow v. Hallow (200 App. Div. 642) and in Gewirtz v. Gewirtz (189 id. 483). In neither of these cases was there any consideration for the agreement to modify the decree. In the opinion of Page, J., in Gewirtz v. Gewirtz it was expressly stated: “ There was no consideration for the agreement, nor did it affect the status of the parties.’,’ In the case at bar the consideration was ample. The defendant agreed to abandon his appeal from the decree herein. He further agreed to discontinue his Supreme Court action in Nassau county to establish his claimed superior rights in the common fund derived from the sale of the real property held by the parties jointly, and the actual equal division of said fund between the parties, the plaintiff receiving upon such division the sum of $91,500 in cash.
We are of the opinion that the parties had a right to compose all differences between them by agreement, and that the written agreement entered into on July 30, 1926, was, in the absence of fraud or duress, binding upon both parties. Until set aside because of fraud or duress, said agreement was valid and enforcible. The agreement was entered into upon sufficient consideration. Following the execution of the agreement, the plaintiff received from defendant two quarterly payments of alimony under said agreement of $1,500 each, on the 4th day of August, 1926, and on the 1st day of November, 1926, respectively. We do not think the plaintiff,
The order appealed from should therefore, be reversed and the motion for sequestration denied.
Dowling, P. J., Finch, McAvoy and Proskauer, JJ., concur.
Order reversed and motion denied.