71 N.J. Eq. 524 | New York Court of Chancery | 1906
The bill is filed by complainant, a resident of New York, against her husband, who resides in this state, for maintenance and support. The bill sets up an abandonment by the husband in New York (where they both resided) previous to February, 1884, when she brought suit against him in the city court of Brooklyn, and that on February 28th, 1884, by the judgment of that court, they were separated from bed and board, and it was adjudged that the husband pay to her $5 per week during her natural life for her support and that of their infant son, then eleven years of age. The husband appeared and defended in the New York suit, and after the judgment paid the alimony adjudged, until December, 1889, when he left the State of New York, and has since paid nothing for her support, nor has he communicated with her. From that time his place of residence was unknown to complainant, until May, 1904, when she discovered that he was living in Newark, New Jersey, and, as she charges, in adultery with another woman, who passed as his wife, and with whom he is still alleged to be living. On these facts
The decree for future alimony being thus subject to future modification, it was not a final judgment within the full faith and credit clause of the federal constitution. Lynde v. Lynde, 181 U. S. 188 (1900). This case decides that where, either by the' decree itself or the statute, a provision for future alimony is subject to the discretion of the court, and the decree or its amount may be modified by the court, it is not, as to the amount of alimony, a final judgment for a fixed sum, such as comes within the'protection of the full faith and credit clause of the federal constitution and statutes. This decision controls the earlier decision in Barber v. Barber, 21 How. 582 (585), relied on by the complainant on this point, and overrules it if it be inconsistent. In the New York court of appeals the court, in deciding the Lynde Case, 162 N. Y. 418, distinguished the Barker Case for the reason that the answer admitted the finality of the decree for alimony as to the amount alleged to be due thereon, and the United States supreme eoui’t, in affirming the decision of the New York court of appeals in the Lynde Case, xnade no comment on the Barber Case.
Whether, independent of the full faith and credit clause, and as a matter of comity, decrees of this character, subject to future modification, will be enforced by actions at law or in equity so long as they remain unrevoked or unaltered, has not been expressly decided in this state. In the courts of some states they have been enforced, but many of the decisions are rested on the full faith and credit clause, and being rendered before decision in the Lynde Case, these decisions are to this extent overruled by that case. The authorities are collected in 1 Whart. Confl. L. (8d ed.) p. 525 § 289c. In a later case, Wagner v. Wagner (R. I.), 57 Atl. Rep. 1058 (1904), recovery of the future alimony on such decree, so long as it was unrevoked, was allowed on the basis of comity. These provisions are provisions for maintenance and are not usually considered as property or property rights,
Treating the bill as a bill purely for alimony under the statute, the New York decree set out in the bill is evidence of the wife’s right thereto, as was said by Mr. Justice Dixon in a similar ease, Van Orden v. Van Orden, 58 N. J. Eq. (13 Dick.) 545 (Gourt of Errors and Appeals, 1899), and the first question is how far it is conclusive on this point.
This judgment was rendered by a court having jurisdiction in a cause in which the defendant appeared and defended, denying the abandonment, and I think the judgment is conclusive evidence of the abandonment by the husband at the time therein fixed (December, 1881), and sufficiently proves a case of abandonment then commencing. If the former judgment for abandonment had been recovered in this state it would have been conclusive evidence of the abandonment and of the time of its occurrence in a subsequent suit for desertion. Smith v. Smith, 55 N. J. Eq. (10 Dick.) 222, 225 (Vice-Ohancellor Pitney, 1897). And under the federal constitution and laws, the judgment in New York having been rendered by a court having jurisdiction
The present action of complainant is brought for support under our statute, alleging abandonment continuing from before the commencement of the New York suit (1884) up to the filing of the present bill. The judgment in the New York suit is conclusive evidence of the abandonment from 1881 to the time of the judgment, and complainant by setting out this judgment in her bill and claiming the benefit of it will be entitled to the estoppel so far as it is such. If she had not claimed this benefit in the bill, but had only offered it in evidence as proof, it might perhaps have been claimed that the benefit of an estoppel was waived, and the judgment would have been only prima facie evidence, subject to be contradicted. The continuance of the abandonment since the decree, by defendant’s failure to pay the alimony directed, his removal from the jurisdiction of the New York court,-and the concealment of his residence from complainant since 1889 and until 1904, is proved by complainant and her son and is not denied by the defendant, who offers no evidence on his own behalf on this point. The complainant has also in this suit, by her own evidence, proved the original abandonment as found by the judgment in the New York suit, and even if the New York judgment should not be held to be conclusive proof on this point, it is certainly corroborative evidence, and in con
I will advise a decree for the payment of the amount thus due at the date of the decree, and for the payment of $5 per week thereafter. Costs and counsel fee, which I will fix at the time of settling the decree, will also be given.