17 Misc. 2d 432 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1958
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in defendants’ favor entered upon a nonsuit directed at the close of the plaintiff’s case. Since the judgment was so directed it is elementary that upon this appeal the evidence adduced by the plaintiff must be considered in the light most favorable to him and that he be accorded the benefit of every favorable inference which could be drawn therefrom (Philpot v. Brooklyn Baseball Club, 303 N. Y. 116). With this fundamental principle as a guide it may be said that the record establishes the following facts and inferences:
Defendants Joseph J. C-and May E. C- are the parents of defendant Rose G. B-. The latter and plaintiff Joseph L. W-were married on June 13, 1942. This relationship was terminated by a decree of annulment entered in Kings County on September 25, 1947. The decree embodied a provision of a separation agreement entered into between the parties on August 12, 1947, that the plaintiff (in this action) pay to defendant the sum of $11 weekly for her support and maintenance, “ said payments to continue until the remarriage of the said plaintiff pursuant to agreement marked Plaintiff’s Exhibit #1.” It is to be noted that neither the separation agreement nor the decree designated the place where the payments were to be made.
The evidence further discloses that subsequent to her remarriage defendant B — —- received- the checks either when she called at her parents’ home or when they visited her in her new marital abode first in Brooklyn and thereafter at her successive residences in Suffolk County. The checks were never deposited by defendant B--— in any account. At no time after indorsing the checks “ B. Gr. C-” did she add as an indorsement her new married name “ B-.” When the checks were indorsed by her they were then either cashed in Brooklyn banks or various establishments in Brooklyn, many of them at S’s grocery store in the vicinity of Decatur Street. Some of the checks, after having been indorsed by the
Defendant B-conceded that after her remarriage and departure from the parental home no personal mail, other than plaintiff’s remittances, were addressed to her at the Decatur Street address. She also conceded that she was fully aware of the provision of the separation agreement and the decree of annulment and that plaintiff’s obligation to contribute to her maintenance and support by the payments of $11 a week terminated upon her remarriage.
Upon the foregoing facts and circumstances plaintiff brought this action framed in fraud and conspiracy against his former wife and her parents. The propriety of the dismissal of the complaint as to the latter need not detain us. Clearly no cause of action was presented by the proof as against them. Plaintiff failed to establish that they knew of the terms of the separation agreement or of the provision of the decree that plaintiff’s obligation to support the defendant B-terminated upon her remarriage. As to defendant Bose G-B-, plaintiff cogently urges that from the evidence adduced at the trial and the inferences that a jury could draw therefrom, a prima facie cause of action for fraud — deception by concealment — was established. It is the opinion of this court that this contention is meritorious. Defendant urges that she was under no duty to speak and that therefore her failure to notify plaintiff of her marriage does not constitute fraud. In reply to this, it may be said that: ‘ ‘ Silence may, however, constitute fraud and deception where [a party] has notice that [another] is acting upon a mistaken belief as to a material fact. It depends upon the circumstances of each case whether failure to disclose is consistent with honest dealing. Where failure to disclose a material fact is calculated to induce a false belief, the distinction between concealment and affirmative misrepresentation is tenuous. Both are fraudulent.” (Donovan v. Aeolian Co., 270 N. Y. 267, 271; see, also, Bank v. Board of Educ. of City of N. Y., 305 N. Y. 119, 134.)
It has also been stated that: ‘ ‘ The law requires disclosure to be made * * * when * * * the undisclosed fact is material, and is known to the one party, and not to the other [and] * * * the party to whom it is known, knows that
It is immaterial whether the fraud is accomplished by words or acts (Noved Realty Corp. v. A. A. P. Co., 250 App. Div. 1). These statements are particularly apt when viewed in the light of the fact that a jury could readily infer from the proof adduced that defendant resorted to an artifice to frustrate plaintiff’s becoming informed of her remarriage. The circumstances of permitting the continuance of the remittances to her parents’ home after her departure therefrom while no other personal mail was received there by her, her failure to indorse with her married name any one of the 285 checks sent to her after her remarriage, the cashing of the checks in Brooklyn, either directly or through her mother as an intermediary while she was resident in Suffolk County, constitute affirmative action — or trick or device to conceal from the plaintiff the fact of her remarriage — at least a jury might so find. A jury might further find a “ consciousness of guilt ” from the circumstances that immediately upon her discovery that plaintiff was investigating the matter she wrote to him to discontinue payments. (Cf. Garippa v. Wisotsky, 108 N. Y. S. 2d 67, affd. 280 App. Div. 807, affd. 305 N. Y. 571.)
Defendant B- in seeking to sustain the dismissal maintains that the rules of law with respect to fraud in a “ matrimonial situation,” and particularly with reference to the recovery from the wife of alimony payments made pursuant to the decree terminating a marriage, differ from those relating to commercial transactions. The short answer to this contention is that fraud is fraud, and if practiced a remedy should be afforded to an injured party, otherwise an immoral and unjust result ensues. Law and morality should at all times coincide. The cardinal principle of the common law is to afford a remedy for all wrongs. (Cf. Schuster v. City of New York, 5 N Y 2d 75, 83_ _
_ _ Defendant maintains that plaintiff is not entitled to restitution of the moneys paid after her remarriage and cites many eases which hold that a motion for restitution of temporary or final alimony after reversal of an order or judgment is not maintainable to recover payments theretofore made. Defendant also cites the case of Kirkbride v. Van Note (275 N. Y. 244) for the proposition that though a decree will be amended nunc pro tunc as of the time of a remarriage with respect to unpaid alimony, restitution will not be ordered as to alimony paid subsequent to the remarriage. These cases are not in point.
Having reached the conclusion herein it is unnecessary to determine whether the separation agreement was merged in the decree so that plaintiff may be said to seek to recover moneys paid pursuant to the agreement rather than for moneys paid in compliance with the mandate of the decree.
The judgment appealed from should be modified to the extent of granting a new trial as to defendant Rose G. B-, with costs to plaintiff to abide the event, and as so modified affirmed.
Pette and Hart, JJ., concur.
Judgment modified, etc.