103 A.D. 74 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The object of the action is the annulment of marriage on the ground of defendant’s impotency. The Special Term denied the plaintiff temporary alimony, but granted an allowance. Defendant here questions not the amount of the allowance, but the power of the court to grant it.
Notwithstanding the fact that the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure (§ 1769) in terms authorize the granting of alimony .and counsel fee only in actions for divorce or separation, the law is now settled in this State that the same power exists in actions for the annulment of marriage as incidental to the jurisdiction of the court over such actions. In Higgins v. Sharp (164 N. Y. 4) the Court of Appeals has held : “ The Supreme Court, in an action against a wife to annul a ceremonial marriage, has, in a proper case, as an incident to its jurisdiction to entertain the action, power to grant alimony and counsel fees pendente lite, although the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure (§§ 1742 et seg.), authorizing and regulating actions to annul a marriage, are silent as to alimony and counsel fees.” The practice seems to have been borrowed, according to the authorities, from the practice of the courts of England in matrimonial actions, whether for divorce or for annulment of marriage.
While the defendant does not contest the right of the court, under the authorities, to grant alimony or counsel fee where the suit is brought by the husband against the wife for annulment and the wife defends, insisting upon the legality of the marriage, he contends that where the wife herself brings the suit and asserts the invalidity of the marriage and asks for its dissolution, she has no standing in court to demand either support during the pendency of the action, or suit money for the purpose of prosecuting the same.
If there be any authority for the allowance of alimony and counsel fee in an action for the annulment of a marriage, I am at a loss to see why, upon principle, it should not be allowed to this plaintiff. Her marriage is a perfectly valid marriage until the judgment of the court shall dissolve the same. She may elect to waive her right of annulment, in which case both husband and wife have correlative marital property rights. Even though she elect to ask for the annulment of the marriage, until that annulment she bears to the defendant the legal relation of wife, to which are attached the hus
In the courts of this State there has been some disagreement in the decision. In Allen v. Allen (59 How. Pr. 27) Judge Donohue, at Chambers, granted alimony and counsel fee to a wife in an action against her husband to annul a marriage on the ground of physical incapacity. In Bloodgood v. Bloodgood (59 How. Pr. 42) it is held at Special Term that such allowance was unauthorized in a similar case. In Meo v. Meo (22 Abb. N. C. 58) Mr. Justice O’Brien, at Special Term, held that the court was not authorized to grant' an allowance for alimony and counsel fee in an action brought by the wife against the husband to dissolve the marriage on the ground of fraud. Both of the cases denying the power of a court to grant alimony to the plaintiff seem to be based largely upon the dictum of Judge Raparlo in Griffin v. Griffin (47 N. Y. 134). That was an action brought by the husband against the wife to have the marriage declared void by reason of her former marriage. The wife defended the action, and the court granted her alimony
The order should, therefore, be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Yol. 1 (6th ed.), § 554.— [Rep.