40 N.Y.2d 124 | NY | 1976
We hold that, in the absence of proof as to whether a foreign divorce decree and the separation agreement incorporated therein were subject to collateral attack on the ground of fraud in the foreign jurisdiction, it was error for the court on a motion for summary judgment to have adjudged that such decree and agreement were insulated from collateral attack in the courts of this State.
The record discloses that plaintiff wife and defendant husband, having been married for some 20 years, separated and in the fall of 1971 commenced negotiations looking to the execution of a separation agreement and their divorce. The negotiations were concluded on March 20, 1972 when a separation agreement was signed and the wife executed a power of attorney authorizing an appearance on her behalf in contemplated proceedings for a divorce in the courts of the Dominican Republic. Four days later on March 24 the husband obtained a divorce decree in the Dominican Republic, the wife having appeared by her attorney and the husband in person. On April 6, less than three weeks after the date of the divorce decree, the wife’s counsel learned from an announcement in the Wall Street Journal that the husband’s family business, in which he had a one-third interest, had been sold to Pepsico, Inc., for some $28,500,000. On June 19, less than three months after the divorce decree, the wife commenced the present action to set aside both the Dominican Republic divorce decree and the separation agreement on the ground of fraud.
In her complaint the wife alleged that the separation agreement was procured by the husband’s fraud in failing to disclose a material fact which would have substantially influenced her in executing the separation agreement and the related power of attorney—the contemporaneous negotiations for the sale of his family business. The husband countered that both parties had been represented throughout their
On cross motions for summary judgment Special Term concluded that the husband was guilty of such fraud as would vitiate the execution of both the agreement and the power of attorney, but went on, without proof as to the pertinent law in the Dominican Republic, to hold that the action would not lie because the divorce decree could not be collaterally attacked in New York, and accordingly dismissed the action. The Appellate Division affirmed but noted its disagreement with the conclusion that fraud had been established. We now reverse the grant of summary judgment to defendant and remit for trial of the issues delineated herein.
It first must be determined, as a matter of procedure, whether a New York court may entertain a collateral attack for fraud on a divorce decree rendered in the Dominican Republic. In our view this procedural determination cannot properly be made on the record now before us; ultimate resolution of the issue will depend on a progressive analysis, the predicate for the first step of which is not now available.
The first step will be to determine whether the divorce decree and the separation agreement, or either, may be collaterally attacked in the courts of the Dominican Republic for fraud of the sort here alleged.
Although not constitutionally mandated to do so, our courts
Under the full faith and credit clause, and thus by extension under principles of comity, where collateral attack on the ground of fraud would be permitted in the courts of the foreign State in which the judgment had been rendered, our courts will entertain a similar challenge. (See, generally, Restatement, Conflict of Laws, 2d, § 115, Equitable Relief Available Against Judgment in State of Rendition; 1 Foster-Freed, Law and the Family [rev ed], § 9:1.) It follows then that if it is determined that the decree of divorce obtained by the respondent husband in this case would be subject to attack in the courts of the Dominican Republic for fraud of the sort here alleged, the court should then proceed to a consideration of the alleged fraud on the merits.
If on the other hand as to the second aspect, proof with respect to the laws of the Dominican Republic demonstrates that collateral attack would be barred in the courts of that Country or that there were doubts as to whether it would be permitted, the trial court in this case should nonetheless then consider, under principles of comity, whether there are here sufficient circumstances to warrant allowing collateral attack notwithstanding that such an attack would not be permitted in the courts of the Dominican Republic. (Cf. Schoenbrod v Siegler, 20 NY2d 403, 409, n 3, supra; Restatement, Conflict of Laws, 2d, § 115, Comment f; Reese, Status in This Country of Judgments Rendered Abroad, 50 Col L Rev 783, 790-800.) As to this aspect we do not now reach or express any view, contenting ourselves in the procedural posture in which the case is now before us only to suggest that this question is relevant if it appears that collateral attack would be barred in the Dominican Republic or even that there may be doubt as to whether it would be permitted.
If it is determined that the separation agreement, or the divorce, or both, are open to collateral attack in our courts (whether on the ground that such attack would be permitted
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be modified to the extent of reversing the grant of summary judgment to defendant and the case remitted for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed herein.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke concur.
Order modified and case remitted to Supreme Court, Nassau County, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs to abide the event.
In passing we observe that analysis has not always called for an express prior determination of the state of the law in the foreign jurisdiction (e.g., Oppenheimer v Oppenheimer, 11 NY2d 838; Tamimi v Tamimi, 38 AD2d 197; Kantrowitz v Kantrowitz, 21 AD2d 654.)