86 N.J.L. 622 | N.J. | 1914
The opinion of the court was delivered by
By the decree of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, the plaintiff was granted an absolute divorce from her husband, the defendant, and by the same decree it was adjudged that the defendant pay the plaintiff the sum of $125 monthly, for her support and maintenance, such payments to be made on the first day of each month, beginning with August 1st, 1911.
The defendant made such payments to, and including November 1st, 1911, and thereafter refused to make them, whereupon the plaintiff brought her suit in the Supreme Court of this state, to recover past-due installments which had accrued on the decree between December 1st, 1911, and November 1st, 19.13, the summons being tested November 10th, 1913.
The defendant, in his answer, admitted the making of the decree by the Supreme Court of tbe State of New York, as well as non-payment of the installments of alimony thereby adjudged, as set out in plaintiff’s complaint, but set up two defences — (a) that the defendant had been, on February 28thj
"We do not agree with the determination of the court below, that although the decree of a court of a foreign jurisdiction is not such as to entitle it to full faith and credit in this state, it may, nevertheless, be used as conclusive evidence of the amount due, in aid of the enforcement of a decree of a sister state, for that would give it a part, at least, of the qualifications of a judgment entitled to full faith and credit, it either possesses such qualifications, or it is not. conclusively evidential of the fact it is supposed to prove, and which the court
The rule laid down in Wigm. Ev., § 1347, is this: “If the judgment is recognized as conclusive, then the plaintiff offering it is given his order to enforce it, or when it is pleaded in bar, is denied an order to enforce Ms claim. If the judgment is not recognized as conclusive, then an aelion or a defence based on it is rejected, and the state of facts as to the original claim is investigated in a practically distinct proceeding, in which the prior judgment plays no part except in sometimes affecting the burden of proof.”
We are also of opinion that the trial court fell into an error in holding that the decree under consideration was not such a final and conclusive judgment as to bring it within the full faith and credit clause of the federal constitution, as to past-due installments of alimony, and this was perhaps due to the fact that its attention was not called to the ease of Sistaire v. Sistaire. 218 U. S. 1, in which Chief Jnstiee White distin
In Taylor v. Stowe, 105 N. E. Rep. 890, the Supreme Court
The defendant in this ease, however, claims that the statute of the State of Yew York has been amended since 1899 by the addition of the word “annul,'"' which, it is claimed, has a broader signification than the words “vary” or “modify,” and that therefore the reasoning of the Chief Justice, in the Sistaire case, is not applicable, and this is based upon a quotation, in the opinion, of section 1771 of the Yew York code of Giv. Pro., in force in 1899, which omits the word “annul.” This is clearly a misquotation, for section 1771, as it existed in 1899, as set out in the 3nargin of the opinion, and as it actually existed, reads: “The court may, by order upon the application of either party to the action, after due notice to the other, to be given in such a manner as the court shall prescribe, at any time after final 3 udgment annul, vary or modify such directions.” That such was the statute which the Chief Justice was construing is not only manifested by his reference to it in the opinion as copied in the margin, but by the further fact that it was the law of Yew York relating to “separating the parties from bed and board forever, or for a limited time for either of the following causes,” and in the Sistaire case, the decree was one for separation “from the defendant, and from the bed and board of said defendant, on the ground of non-support and cruel and .inhuman treatment of the defendant.” Therefore, the Chief Justice was, in the Sistaire case, dfealing with a decree of separation, and from bed and board, in which cases the court of Yew York had power to annul, vahy or modify the directions concerning alimony and the
But if we assume that the word “annul” was not in the statute construed in the Sistaire case, and has been since added so' as to be applicable to the present decree, still the court has not, under the rule adopted in that case, power to annul, vary or modify the decree as to installements due and payable before any such annulment or variation is made, unless under the law of the state in which the decree is made, the right to demand past-due alimony is discretionary with the court to such an extent that no absolute vested right attaches to have the past-due installments paid. That no power to vary, or modify past-due installments was vested in the courts of New York by any statute of that state, prior to the amendment of 1900, was settled by the Sistaire case, and the addition of the word “annul,” by an amendment to the statute;, would not give to the courts any additional retroactive .power. If no power existed to vary or modify a decree with reference to past-due alimony, and such authority in the statute did not operate retroactively, as seems to be the rule established, not
For affirmance, — Tiie Chancellor, Chibe Justice, Garrison, Swayze, Trench ard, Bergen, Kalisoh, Black, Bo-GERT, YREDBNBüRGH, 1Lhj PENI-I ETMER, WILLIAMS, JJ. 12.
For reversal — None.