89 N.Y.S. 902 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1904
Plaintiff makes this motion for alimony and counsel fees in an action to annul the marriage between her and the defendant on the ground of his physical incapacity. The sharp conflict of authorities upon this question makes it somewhat interesting. The Special Term case of Allen v. Allen, 8 Abb. N. C. 175, decided January, 1880, by Donohue, J., and Anonymous, 15 Abb. Pr. (N. S.) 307, Judge Davis at Special Term in 1874: “Erom the argument and the consideration I have given them (the questions), with my brethren of the general term,” sustain the power of the court to grant the motion. Bartlett v. Bartlett, 1 Clarke Ch. 460, decided by the vice-chancellor in 1841; Meo v. Meo, Judge O’Brien, at New York Special Term in 1888, 2 N. Y. Supp. 569; Herron v. Herron, 28 Misc. Rep. 323, decided by Judge Dunwell, July, 1899, held there is no authority for such a motion.
The question has not been squarely decided by the Appellate Division or the Court of Appeals, and in view of this
The court says (at p. 9) : “It see^is to us, therefore, that actions to annul a marriage are governed, with respect to alimony and counsel fees, l)y the same principles as all other actions of divorce. When the court was vested with jurisdiction in such cases, the incidental power to guard and protect the rights of the wife, which had always been regarded as a part of the jurisdiction, necessarily followed and attached, upon the plainest principles of reason and justice.”
The same principle was recognized in Griffin v. Griffin, 47 N. Y. 134, the court saying (at p. 137) : “ Tet it has been the constant practice of the Court of Chancery, both before and since the Revised Statutes, to make equitable provision for all these matters; and in so doing, it has been guided by the decisions of the ecclesiastical courts of England in similar cases'. * * * This has not been done upon the theory that the'Oourt of Chancery of this State was vested with the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts of England in matrimonial cases, or that (except in special eases hereafter referred to) it ever possessed any jurisdiction in cases of divorce other than that which was conferred by our own statutes; but upon the ground of the general equitable jurisdiction of the court, and also that when our statutes did confer jurisdiction upon the Court of Chancery, in those actions for divorce which by the English law are solely cognizable in the ecclesiastical courts, the grant of that jurisdiction carried with it by implication the incidental powers which were indispensible to its proper exercise, and not in conflict with our own statutory regulations on the same subject.”
“After proof of a marriage in fact, alimony pending the suit will be allotted whether it be commenced by or against the husband, not only in cases of impotency but in all cases of nullity of marriage, and in suits for restitution of conjugal rights or for divorce by reason of adultery or cruelty.” Shelf. Marr. & Div., 17 Law Lib. (N. S.) 341 (587), citing Bain v. Bain, 2 Add. 253; Smyth v. Smyth, id. 254.
The line of divergence arises in Bartlett v. Bartlett, decided by the vice-chancellor in February, 1841, 1 Clarke Ch. 460. There the wife’s father had agreed to support her and make no charge to the husband therefor, and she had left him and was living with her father. The court assumes that at the time of the marriage the defendant was ignorant of the impotency, if it existed. The vice-chancellor points out that there is no provision in the statute authorizing an allowance,in cases to annul a marriage, and assumes that that impliedly shows that the Legislature did not intend that any such allowance should be made, and he says there is no precedent for it; that the woman can enlist some friend, assumably the father, in that case, to procure the contract to be annulled, and he closes the opinion as follows: “ I can
But in 1845 the chancellor in North v. North, 1 Barb Ch. 241, held that where the husband brought the action to annul the marriage upon the ground that the wife had a former husband living, alimony and counsel fee were allowable, but the court remarked that where a wife files a bill in such a case, the allegations in her bill will be taken to be true as against herself when she applies for an allowance out of the husband’s estate, evidently having in mind the Bartlett case.
In Griffin v. Griffin, 47 N. Y. 134, decided in 1872, the husband was defeated in an action brought by him to have the marriage annulled upon the ground that the wife had a former husband living, and the court held an allowance in the judgment for counsel fees, expenses, etc., was proper, finding the authority, in the inherent- powers. of the court, as before referred to. Judge Rapallo refers.to the statute as to allowances in divorce cases and says they are only allowed to the wife as plaintiff, and that it is very properly restricted to cases where the wife admits a valid marriage; that where she denies the existence of the marriage, she cannot consistently claim that the defendant is under obligation to furnish her with means to carry on her suit against him, citing Bartlett v. Bartlett and North v. North, supra, These suggestions were not pertinent to the decision, and the question was not in any manner before the court. And we have already seen that the Bartlett case, cited by him as authority, proceeded upon the theory that alimony could only be granted where authorized by statute, which has been held since not to be the law (Higgins v. Sharp, supra) and also held as a matter of discretion that no allowance should be made to the plaintiff, as the defendant was evidently acting in good faith, and the plaintiff was amply provided for. In fact the decision in Griffin v. Griffin is opposed to
In Meo v. Meo, 2 N. Y. Supp. 569, Judge O’Brien denies the wife’s application for alimony, where she seeks to avoid the marriage on the ground of fraud, holding, First: That the case does not come within the provisions of the Oode which grants alimony only in divorce cases, and
Second: That under the Revised Statutes a distinction was drawn between actions brought by the wife and those brought against her to set aside the marriage contract, citing North v. North and Griffin v. Griffin, and quoting the language of Judge Rapallo in the latter case hereinbefore referred to, and then says that the granting of such an allowance wrould be seemingly against the practice of the courts, citing Bloodgood v. Bloodgood, 59 How. Pr. 42, where Judge Daly, at a Special Term of the New York Common Pleas in 1880, followed Bartlett v. Bartlett, referring to Allen v. Allen as holding to the contrary, but says that it is against the cases in this State, and then Judge O’Brien refers in Meo v. Meo, to Allen v. Allen and Anonymous, 15 How. Pr., above cited, but says that considering that the Code makes no provision in these cases, taking the language of Griffin v. Griffin, and the fact that the Revised Statutes do not provide for such allowances, and that the weight of authorities in the State is seemingly the other way, he reluctantly denies the motion.
In Herron v. Herron, 28 Misc. Rep. 323, the wife sought to avoid the marriage on the ground of her not having arrived at the age of legal consent, Justice Dunwell denied her application for alimony, citing Meo v. Meo, and saying that a review of the cases in that case showed that the wuight of authority was against the application. But there, undoubtedly, the motion would have been denied as a matter of discretion, for the fact that the wife found herself a party to a voidable marriage was her own fault.
In Hopper v. Hopper, 92 Hun, 415, where the husband brought the action on the ground that the wife had a former
In Appleton v. Warner, 51 Barb. 270, the defendant wife was denied alimony because it was conceded by both her and her husband that the marriage was void because she had a former husband living.
The above cases are the particular decisions holding that alimony should not be granted in this class of cases, and it will be noted that they rest upon two foundations, (1) Bartlett v. Bartlett, which held that there was no authority to grant alimony in actions to annul a marriage, but the court had no sympathy with the plaintiff and would not exercise a doubtful authority if it existed, and (2) The case of Griffin v. Griffin, which necessarily overrules Bartlett v. Bartlett, as it does grant suit money in an action brought by the husband to dissolve the marriage with the wife. So that all these cases, for their authority, rest upon a case which has been overruled, and, in any event, rested solely in discretion, and the obiter dictum of Judge Rapallo in Griffin v. Griffin. This, in face of the fact that the English courts are directly to the contrary, and that we have practically adopted their practice in these respects.
It seems to me that Allen v. Allen and Anonymous, above cited, state the correct rule, and that the Court of Appeals in Higgins v. Sharp, 164 N. Y. 4, laying down the broad proposition, which is the English rule upon the subject which we are supposed to have adopted, “ That actions to annul a marriage are governed with respect to alimony and counsel fees by the same principle as all other actions for divorce,” has deprived the cases holding that there is no power in this class of cases of any authority they may have had before that time. It will be observed the Court of Appeals adopt, in substance, the expression of Davis, J., in Anonymous, above, and use an expression equally strong with that found in Shelford, supra. As a matter of principle the power ought to exist. The marriage is not void, but there is. for all legal intents and purposes a legal marriage. Bntil set
Ordered accordingly. ,