16 A.D.2d 409 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1962
The issue is whether a wife, still living in a common dwelling with her husband, may bring an action for separate maintenance and also prosecute a motion for temporary alimony and counsel fees in such action. The wife in this case did precisely that, and defendant husband appeals. Having obtained an order for temporary alimony and a counsel fee, the wife has since moved from the marital residence into an apartment of her own.
The facts are: The parties were married in 1953, and have a son, aged four years. They have always resided in Tudor City in New York City, recently occupying a triplex apartment, at a monthly rental of $400. The husband is an officer and account executive in an advertising firm with an income variously argued to range from a net income, after taxes, of $6,300 to a gross of $42,000. The standard of living has been high and confirms an income in the higher, rather than in the lower range. The wife, concededly, has assets of her own, as well as securities in joint ownership with the husband. Both parties have utilized the services of a psychiatrist, apparently without medical cure, but with evident enrichment of the vocabulary.
The wife, in seeking a separation, asserts a series of severe beatings over the years at the hands of the husband, adultery by the husband, and other misconduct, making it dangerous for her to continue to cohabit with him. She says, too, that defendant husband ordered her to leave the apartment, although she was able to remain there until she obtained the order for temporary support at Special Term.
Special Term directed defendant husband to pay temporary alimony of $180 per week for the support of the wife and child, and granted a counsel fee of $1,500. It also directed that plaintiff wife should receive specified furnishings in the apartment which she could take with her.
Since Berman v. Berman (277 App. Div. 560) this court has held that it is contrary to public policy and incongruous to permit a judicial separation of parties who have not physically separated themselves. This court has continued to apply that policy with only one qualified exception.
Undoubtedly, there are cases, or there may be cases, of a wife’s physical disability, economic destitution, a special problem associated with children, or other reasons not now callable to mind, which would prevent the wife from leaving the common dwelling, absolutely, or in any practical, tolerable sense (see Pedersen v. Pedersen, supra). But there was no such showing here.
The wife here has not only suffered the husband’s misconduct for a period of years, including the alleged beatings, but she has means of her own. So far as the record reveals she and the child are physically healthy. The only obstacle to moving from the common dwelling was the usual one of finding an apartment during this protracted postwar condition of scarcity in the residential rental field.
It is recognized that the Second Department does not follow the rule in this Department requiring actual separation as a precondition to suit (e.g., Bergman v. Bergman, 280 App. Div. 820; Lowenfish v. Lowenfish, 278 App. Div. 716; Donnelly v. Donnelly, 272 App. Div. 779; but cf. Bruggemann v. Bruggemann, 191 App. Div. 689, on facts very similar to those in this case). Although, even in that Department, temporary support will be denied on a showing that defendant husband is supporting the wife in the family home (Scheideler v. Scheideler, 10 A D 2d 991; Kronenberg v. Kronenberg, 10 A D 2d 987; Lampert v. Lampert, 268 App. Div. 920; see, also, Bruggemann v. Bruggemann, supra). The divergence between the Departments has been of long standing and should give pause whether the policy here should be reconsidered. It has been, and the view remains in accord with the policy laid down so definitely in the Berman case (supra). Perhaps the reason for the divergence has been the predominance of apartment-dwelling in this department, which surely adds to the incongruity of separated-but-not-separated status for married persons. But whatever the occasion be for the divergence, this court has thus far concluded that a living together that is tolerable is not sufficient to justify a legal or judicial separation, in the absence of extraordinary circumstances.
Accordingly, the order granting plaintiff wife’s motion for temporary alimony and allowing her a counsel fee should be reversed on the law, the facts, and in the exercise of discretion,
Valente, Stevens, Eager and Steuer, JJ., concur.
Order entered on February 28, 1962, granting plaintiff-respondent temporary alimony and counsel fees, unanimously reversed, on the law, on the facts, and in the exercise of discretion, without costs to either party, and the motion denied, without prejudice to plaintiff wife bringing any new proceedings, as she may be advised.
Brous v. Brous (283 App. Div. 1050).
Cases in accord with Berman v. Berman; Sommer v. Sommer (285 App. Div. 809); Friedman v. Friedman (285 App. Div. 938); Weiss V. Weiss (1 A D 2d 769); Rothenberg v. Rothenberg (8 A D 2d 703); Ramos v. Ramos (13 AD 2d 726); cf. Ziegler v. Ziegler (10 A D 2d 270).
But see, prior to the Berman case, List v. List (186 Misc. 261 [Walter, J.], mod. 276 App. Div. 998); Letts v. Letts (84 N. Y. S. 2d 236, mod. 273 App. Div. 958).
A possible variation has been suggested in extraordinary situations where the parties are tenants by the entirety or there is a showing of necessity for
In Pedersen v. Pedersen (107 F. 2d 227 [C. C. A., D. C.]) the case most often relied upon to permit an action for separation and the receipt of temporary alimony where the parties continue to live together, the husband and wife were the joint owners of the marital home. This was made “particularly” a ground for granting relief (p. 231).
See Civil Suit for Support, Ann. 10 A. L. R. 2d 466, 522-526 (§§ 28, 29); 27A C. J. S., Divorce, § 208(4).
Compare the unquestioned invalidity of an agreement for support between husband and wife while living together (Garlock v. Garlock, 279 N. Y. 337). It would be anomalous for parties situated as the Garlocks to be entitled to a judicial arrangement of their financial affairs, while public policy would prevent them from effecting an enforcible contractual agreement.