91 P. 269 | Utah | 1907
The plaintiff, respondent in this court, filed his complaint in the district court of Salt Lake county, in which the following facts are alleged: “That at all the times hereinafter mentioned the district court, city and county of Denver, See-
Upon tbe foregoing allegations respondent prayed‘judgment for tbe amount of alimony that bad accrued up to tbe time of filing tbe complaint, and for such additional sum as would become due under tbe terms of tbe decree before final judgment in tbe action, and for costs. ' To this complaint tbe defendant, appellant in this court, appeared and filed a demurrer, basing it upon two grounds, to wit: (1) That it appears from tbe complaint that tbe plaintiff bas not legal capacity to sue, for tbe reason that upon the face of tbe complaint it appears that tbe plaintiff is not tbe reaí party in interest; and (2) that tbe complaint fails to state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action. Tbe demurrer was overruled, and, the appellant electing to stand thereon and declining to plead further, the court, upon proper proof being made,, found that there was due and unpaid of tbe alimony sued for tbe sum of $708, and entered judgment in favor of respondent and against appellant for said sum and for costs, from which judgment this appeal is taken.
Two questions are presented by the appeal: (1) Did tbe respondent have tbe legal right to maintain tbe action in bis own name? and (2) is tbe judgment or order sued on a final judgment on which an action can be maintained?
As to tbe first proposition the fact is palpable that the re-' spondent was neither a party, a beneficiary, nor assignee of tbe judgment sued on. He was not in any way related to nor . interested in tbe subject-matter of tbe original action, but was connected with tbe result thereof merely by being made tbe recipient of tbe money as tbe same was ordered to be
“We construe this decree to be in substance an order to the li-belee to pay to libelant the sum named, to be used by her in the support of herself and the child, and that the libelant could enforce against the libelee whatever duty was placed upon him by the decree. The provision that it should be paid to the attorney of the libelant, rather than to her in person, was doubtless inserted for the convenience of the parties.”
This, it must, be assumed, was the purpose with respect to the order in this case, and, while the respondent had full power to receive and receipt for the payments as they fell due, he had no control over the money and could not, without' anything further appearing from the record, sue for and recoyer the arrears in his own name. The allegations that the suit was instituted for the benefit of another did not alter his relation to- the judgment or order sued on, since such an allegation could not bind the real owner of the judgment, and she .might sue upon it, if a suit could be maintained thereon, regardless of respondent’s action. Of course, if respondent had obtained judgment, and Mary L. Monroe had taken the money realized therefrom, such fact might be set up as a defense in another action brought by her on the same judgment. This would be so by way of an estoppel, however, and not upon the ground of former adjudication. In 23 Oyc. 1501, the rule -with respect to parties to- actions on judgments is stated thus:
“An action on a judgment must be prosecuted by the real and beneficial owner of it, whose title to it must appear of record or by some formal transfer, and the suit cannot be maintained by a third person not answering these conditions, although the judgment may in some way define his rights or inure to his benefit or protection.”
But respondent insists that the question was not properly raised by demurrer, since in the demurrer the alleged ground was a want of legal capacity to sue. It may be conceded1 that
This brings us to the second proposition, which seems to us to be one of grave importance with respect to actions based on decrees and judgments of a sister state. It is urged bv appellant that the order or judgment for the accumulating alimony or maintenance sued for in this action is not a final judgment, order, or decree, and therefore is not the subject of an action, and does not fall within the protection of the full faith and. credit clause, of the federal Constitution. Upon the other hand, respondent strenuously contends that it is such a judgment, and entitled to full faith and credit in this states to the same extent and with like effect as it would have in the state of Colorado, where it was rendered. Authorities are
Respondent’s counsel, however, contend that, although the, judgment required the alimony to be paid in installments for future support, still the amount was fixed and certain; that while the amount was subject to change, or might be entirely withdrawn by the court, nevertheless the judgment was enforceable for the amount due and unpaid until modified by the court rendering it. It must be'conceded that there is much force in this contention, and that it is likewise supported by some courts of great learning and of the highest respectability, as is evidenced by the following cases: Barber v. Barber, 21 How. (U. S.) 582, 16 L. Ed. 226; Arrington v. Arrington, 127 N. C. 190, 37 S. E. 212, 52 L. R. A. 201, 80 Am. St. Rep. 791; Wagner v. Wayner, 26 R. I. 27, 57 Atl. 1058, 65 L. R. A. 816; Trowbridge v. Spinning, 23 Wash. 48, 62 Pac. 125, 54 L. R. A. 204, 83 Am. St. Rep. 806; Knapp v. Knapp (D. C.), 59 Fed. 641; Brisbane v. Dodson, 50 Mo. App. 170. While there are other eases cited by counsel for respondent in support of their contention, and in which similar judgments were enforced, the foregoing cases are all that diseuss and directly pass upon the question presented by this appeal. Upon the other hand, counsel for appellant contend that, since the decree or judgment sued on was subject to change or modification at any time by the court of Colorado, it therefore was not a final judgment, and an action could not be maintained thereon; that, not being final, it did not fall within the full faith and credit clause of the federal Constitution and was not protected thereby, and that the question presented is a federal question, upon which the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States are controlling, and to some extent, at least, binding on this court. In support of their contention they cite authorities of equal learning and respectability, as appears from the following cases: Lynde v. Lynde,
To start with, the cases of Trowbridge v. Spinning and Brisbane v. Dodson, supra, hardly fall within the class of the case at bar. In Trowbridge v. Spinning, the suit was for a fixed sum, payable as soon as the decree was entered, and hence comes within the rule announced by the Supreme Court of the United States in the Lynde Gase. In Brisbane v. Dodson the allegations of the complaint were to the effect that the judgment sued on was final, and not subject to change or modification by the court rendering it. This case, also, is not within the class to which the case at bar belongs. Arrington v. Arrington and Knapp v. Knapp were both decided before the Lynde Gase was passed on by the Supreme Court of the United States, and hence the latter, being a case from an inferior federal court, is overruled, by implication at least, by the Lynde Gase, while the former is by a divided court, and might not have been decided as it is if the court deciding it had been confronted with the decision of the court of last resort on federal questions. This brings us to the only remaining case, to wit, that of Wagner v. Wagner, decided by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island in 1904. This is the only case, decided after the Lynde Gase was passed on by the Supreme Court of the United States, which holds to the doctrine that a judgment like the one at bar may be sued on in a sister state before the state court in which it was rendered
Tbe question, as we understand it, in view of the decision in tbe Lynde Gase, may be stated thus: That an action upon a judgment or decree for alimony or maintenance rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction of one state, may be maintained in another court of competent jurisdiction of another state, where tbe amount due or payable is fixed, having a definite sum presently due and enforceable in tbe state where rendered ; but that alimony or maintenance becoming due in tbe future, payable in installments, is not a final judgment upon which an action can be brought, unless and until tbe court which rendered it passes upon and fixes tbe specific amount
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the district court to sustain the demurrer. Appellant to recover costs.