275 A.D.2d 269 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1949
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from an order denying a motion to increase alimony granted under a separation decree on the ground of change of the husband’s financial ability to pay.
On January 19,1942, the plaintiff, after a trial in the Supreme Court, New York County, in which the issues were contested, obtained a judgment of permanent separation from bed and board of the defendant on the ground of his willful abandonment of the plaintiff since February 12, 1941, without any cause or
Since the judgment of judicial separation the parties have never lived together. Plaintiff was given custody of the child of the marriage, a daughter then about fourteen years old, with broad rights of visitation to the father. After an appeal to the Appellate Division (264 App. Div. 857), alimony was fixed at $85 a week for the support of wife and child, with the proviso that either party might apply for a modification upon showing a change of circumstances. The alimony was paid by the defendant until shortly before the argument of this appeal, when, in reliance on the holding below, he believed himself to be relieved of any obligation for support.
In April, 1943, the husband filed suit in Nevada against his wife for a divorce, the wife being served in New York City on April 6, 1943. In his complaint, he set forth that he was, and for six weeks prior thereto had been, a bona fide resident of the city of Beno, State of Nevada; he recited his marriage with the plaintiff in this action in the State of New York and alleged £ 1 That during the married life time of the parties, the defendant [wife] began and continued a course of extreme cruelty against the plaintiff, which course of conduct of extreme cruelty persisted and continued subsequent to January 22, 1942 [the date when the judgment of separation in New York was filed], and thereby caused him intense mental pain, anguish and suffering,. and seriously interfered with and impaired his health.”
After being served with the summons in New York City, the wife retained a Nevada lawyer to appear for her and interpose a defense in her behalf in the divorce action. By her answer in the.Nevada action she put in issue the allegations of the complaint with respect to residence and with respect to cruel and inhuman treatment, and set up as a separate and distinct defense the judgment of separation which she had obtained in New York in 1942, including the findings of fact, the conclusions of law and the decree of separation. On her behalf a demand was made for a bill of particulars concerning the allegations of extreme cruelty alleged in the husband’s complaint,
The depositions of two witnesses were taken and appear as part of the judgment roll. The deposition of one Monroe Schlichter, apparently a fellow employee of the husband, was to the effect that, between the 20th and 30th of September, 1942, he accompanied the husband to the wife’s apartment so that the husband could remove his belongings before the apartment was vacated because of expiration of the lease; that there was an altercation between the husband and wife; that “ out of curiosity, I looked into the bedroom and saw Mrs. Lynn pick up a large cane which was enclosed in a sheath and aim a blow at Mr. Lynn. However, Mr. Lynn was able to wrest the cane from Mrs. Lynn in time to avoid the blow. After that we hurriedly gathered up Mr. Lynn’s belongings and left the apartment. During all of this time Mrs. Lyn was hurling abuses at Mr. Lynn.”
The deposition of Eoberta Luterman was to the effect that she was a registered nurse who was in charge of Janet Lynn (the daughter of the parties), a patient suffering from diabetes in the private pavilion of the Jewish Hospital in Brooklyn. The nurse recounted the refusal of Mrs. Lynn to allow the husband to visit the sick daughter and her attempted deception of him concerning the child’s physical condition.
The case then went to trial in Nevada on the issue of cruel and inhuman treatment, the bona fides of the husband’s residence not being contested although denied in the answer. The trial took several days; the minutes are not before us, but, in any
Before the findings were signed, the last sentence (which is italicized above) was stricken by the court and the change initialed by him. As part of the conclusions of law submitted to the court, there was a provision reading as follows: ‘ ‘ and that the defendant be denied relief by way of alimony, maintenance or support, or for the maintenance or support of the minor child of the parties.” That provision was stricken out and the change likewise initialed by the court.
Two days after he obtained his decree of divorce, this resident of Reno, Nevada, returned to New York City, took out a license to remarry, giving a New York City address, and he was married here on July 18,1943. So far as the record shows, he has lived here ever since, as he had before he went to Reno.
In June, 1948, the plaintiff in this action, the first wife, applied to the court for an order amending the final judgment of separation so as to provide that the defendant pay her the sum of $6,046.63 to defray medical and nursing expenses incurred by .plaintiff for herself and her daughter, and for an increase in alimony to $200 per week. This was contested by the husband, the defendant in this action, on the ground that the decree of divorce obtained by him in Nevada not only severed the marital relationship between the parties, but relieved him of his obligation to support his wife. The court below sustained this contention, and the motion was denied in its entirety, and the appeal is now before us. The defendant continued to pay the $85 a week provided in the separation judgment until shortly before the argument of the appeal and has since stopped all payment of alimony. The daughter, in the meantime, has become of age.
The Nevada divorce decree cannot be collaterally attacked on the ground that the husband’s residence there was sham and spurious and that in asserting its bona fides he practiced a fraud upon her and the court. (Davis v. Davis, 305 U. S. 32; Sherrer v. Sherrer, 334 U. S. 343; Coe v. Coe, 334 U. S. 378; Frost v. Frost, 260 App. Div. 694.) The wife appeared in the Nevada action, she defended it there; by her answer she put in issue the allegations of the complaint as to residence, although at the trial she did not contest the bona fides of the husband’s residence; and the court made an affirmative finding concerning domicile in favor of the husband.
The plaintiff wife here contends, however, that the support provisions of the prior separation judgment were not obliterated for at least three reasons:
1. No issue concerning alimony was considered in the Nevada court; that court did not pass upon any question of support and in effect disclaimed any such exercise.of jurisdiction.
2. The husband, by his subsequent conduct, is estopped from now asserting that the question of support was determined in Nevada.
3. Basically, the Nevada decree, notwithstanding the wife’s personal appearance there, is not entitled to full faith and credit, even with respect to the dissolution of the marital status, because on its face the Nevada decree was inconsistent with the prior New York judgment of separation, ignored its legal effect, and failed to accord it full faith and credit.
In Estin v. Estin (296 N. Y. 308, affd. 334 U. S. 541), a wife had obtained a judgment of separation, with support provisions, from her husband in New York on the ground of his abandonment. Both parties were residents of this State, and both appeared in the action. Thereafter, the husband went to Nevada, established a bona fide residence there, and obtained an ex parte divorce from his wife on the ground of “ three years continual separation, without cohabitation.” The husband contended that this ex parte divorce superseded the separation judgment and terminated his obligation for support thereunder. The Court of Appeals held that the Nevada statutes authorize the granting of a divorce upon the ground of three years’
However, the Court of Appeals squarely held that while Nevada had jurisdiction to sever the marital relationship, it had no power, not having acquired in personam jurisdiction over the wife, to adjudicate upon her support rights under the prior New York judgment, and that the Nevada decree should not be held in our courts as having any such effect; that, under New York law, in the circumstances presented, the support provisions of our prior separation judgment survived the husband’s ex parte foreign divorce.
The Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the holding of the New York Court of Appeals, giving effect to the Nevada decree so far as it related to marital status, but granting the former wife judgment for arrears of alimony under a prior New York decree of separation, did not deny the full faith and credit to which the Nevada decree was entitled; that “ the highest court in New York has held in this case that a support order can survive divorce and that this one has survived petitioner’s divorce ”, and that New York has power to make such a ruling despite the Nevada decree (Estin v. Estin, 334 U. S. 541, 544). The prevailing opinion of Mr. Justice Douglas summed up the problem as follows: “ The result in this situation is to make the divorce divisible — to give effect to the Nevada decree in so far as it affects marital status and to make it ineffective on the issue of alimony. It accommodates the interests of both Nevada and New York in this broken marriage by restricting each State to the matters of her dominant concern.” (P.549.)
Significantly, the court went on to say: “ Since Nevada had no jurisdiction to alter respondent’s rights in the New York judgment, we do not reach the further question whether in any event that judgment would be entitled to full faith and credit in Nevada.” (See, also, Kreiger v. Kreiger, 297 N. Y. 530.)
Though on first impression startling, what has come to be known as “ a divisible divorce,” that is, a dissolution of the
Clearly, therefore, if the wronged wife in this case had stayed away from Nevada, even assuming that an ex parte divorce obtained there against her would have been recognized in our courts as valid, her alimony rights under our prior separation judgment would have been secure. Instead, in a spirit of righteous indignation, she went to Nevada to fight “ a hopeless battle ” there.
Did her appearance in Nevada, under the circumstances of this case, obliterate her right to support under the earlier New York judgment? We hold that it did not.
Although the Nevada court in this case had personal jurisdiction over both parties, it was not required to exercise that jurisdiction with respect to both the marital status and the husband’s obligation to support. In fact, in this case, as appears from the statement of facts, the Nevada court expressly refrained from doing so. (See Flood v. Thiesing, 273 App. Div. 548, affd. 298 N. Y. 700.)
That is not only our interpretation of what was done in the Nevada action, that is the way the parties construed it in practical application. The husband himself for many years recognized this, because he not only continued to comply with the New York alimony provision but he took advantage of the provision for alimony in the New York judgment to make deductions therefor from his income tax. It was not until after the decision below on the wife’s application to amend the New York judgment of separation that payments of alimony thereunder ceased and that the husband disclaimed liability therefor. “New York was rightly concerned lest the abandoned spouse be left impoverished and perhaps become a public charge. The problem of her livelihood and support is plainly a matter in which her community had a legitimate interest. The New York court,
In the next place, we hold that under the circumstances of this case the husband is estopped from asserting the doctrine of res judicata so far as alimony under the New York judgment is concerned. Our attention has been called to rule XLV of the Rules of the District Court of Nevada, reading as follows: “ No judgment, order, or other judicial act or proceeding, shall be vacated, amended, modified, or corrected by the court or judge rendering, making, or ordering the same, unless the party desiring such vacation, amendment, modification, or correction shall give notice to the adverse party of a motion therefor, within six months after such judgment was rendered, order made, or action or proceeding taken.”
That means that the wife could have applied to the Nevada court for a modification of its decree so as to make provision for her support and maintenance. The husband’s continued payments lulled her into a false sense of security. If the order below be sustained, the wife is helpless. She cannot obtain relief in Nevada, and the provisions in the New York judgment are obliterated. She was misled, to her detriment. Hardship would be done and good conscience offended by a tardily awakened activity on the part of the husband. (Rothschild v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co,. 204 N. Y. 458.)
We have thus far discussed the case from the point of view of considering what was actually litigated in Nevada and have found that the Nevada court deliberately did not decide any question as to the support due the wife. The question of full faith and credit in relation to this judgment, however, goes much deeper and involves matters of general importance as
In the Vickers case Dr. and Mrs. Vickers lived in West Virginia. Mrs. Vickers sued in West Virginia for a separation on the ground of extreme cruelty. Her husband was personally served in West Virginia, appeared in the action and contested it. A judgment of separation, with alimony, was granted to Mrs. Vickers. The husband then went to Nevada and in due course sued for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. Mrs. Vickers appeared in person and set up the judgment of the West Virginia court as a bar to Dr. Vickers’ divorce action. The Supreme Court of Nevada held that the prior judgment of separation granted by the West Virginia court was a bar to the Nevada divorce action and dismissed the husband’s complaint. In making this decision, the Nevada Supreme Court cited and followed Harding v. Harding (198 U. S. 317). In that case, the Hardings lived in Illinois and Mrs. Harding was granted a separation, with provision for alimony, in an Illinois action, on grounds of cruelty and adultery. The husband thereafter moved to California and commenced an action for divorce on the grounds of willful desertion. Mrs. Harding denied the allegations and pleaded the Illinois deerée. The Supreme Court of the United States held that the issues in the Illinois case and the California case were practically the same and that under the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution the California court should have held that the Illinois judgment was an estoppel against the assertion of the husband that the wife’s living apart from bim was through any fault on her part or amounted to desertion. The Supreme Court held that the California court had failed to give due faith and credit to the decree of the Illinois court and thereby violated the Constitution of the United States. (See, also, Atherton v. Atherton, 181 U. S. 155.)
With these decisions in mind, it is obvious that the Nevada decree which is before us, and the contents of which have been quoted above, failed, on its face, to give full faith and credit to the New York decree of permanent separation theretofore
There is no statute of Nevada, or any principle of common law, holding that, once a wife has obtained a valid judgment of separation from bed and board adjudicating that she herself was not guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment but was willfully abandoned without justification by her husband, that husband may nevertheless obtain relief in a later matrimonial action because of what are said to have been cruelties committed by the wife after the judgment of separation pursuant to which the parties were living apart. We therefore hold that the Nevada decree in this case is not entitled to full faith and credit in the State of New York because, on its face, it has failed to give due credit to a prior New York judgment governing the same matter.
It may be urged that if Mrs. Lynn was dissatisfied with the decree of the Nevada court she is required to pursue her remedies by appeal in that State and ultimately perhaps to the Supreme Court of the United States. Of course she could have resorted to that costly procedure. But the State of New York also has an interest of paramount importance in maintaining, within constitutional limitations, the validity and integrity of its own judgments, in matrimonial actions especially, because of the danger of the wife and children becoming public charges, and because of the general policy of the State limiting divorce to one statutory ground, that of adultery. There is no reason, either in the Constitution or in conceptions of general policy, why the courts of New York should be prevented from determining, in the first instance, that a Nevada judgment which is presented to it as entitled to full faith and credit nevertheless, on its face, shows that it is not entitled to such credit.
In conclusion, we hold that, under the circumstances of this case, so far as the provisions for alimony are concerned at any
The order appealed from should be reversed with costs, and the matter referred to an official referee to hear and report thereon to the Special Term with his recommendations.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Appearance of both spouses in a divorce proceeding in a State where plaintiff is domiciled, gives the divorce court complete jurisdiction of the marriage status and its incidents (Yarborough v. Yarborough, 290 U. S. 202, 212) and a divorce decree of a foreign State, when so rendered on the appearance of both parties, is entitled to full faith and credit in the courts of this State. The case of Estin v. Estin (334 U. S. 541, affg. 296 N. Y. 308) holds that where a wife does not appear in a foreign divorce proceeding the divorce decree obtained by the husband in the foreign State does not wipe out a prior separation judgment obtained here. However, it seems clear that where she does appear in the foreign State, the divorce is conclusive between them on all incidents of the marriage and vitiates a prior separation judgment obtained in New York. ’ The point in Estin v. Estin (supra) does not appear to have been that the question of alimony was not litigated in Nevada, but rather that it could not have been litigated there for the reason that the Nevada court lacked jurisdiction of the person of the husband.
Here both husband and wife have appeared in the Nevada court, the wife had full opportunity to contest, but the wife voluntarily elected not to apply for alimony although the Nevada court had power to grant it. Unlike the situation in the Estin case, the Nevada court here had jurisdiction both in rem and in personam. Therefore the alimony provisions of the prior New York separation decree were necessarily superseded by the Nevada adjudication dissolving the marriage.
In his opinion in Estin v. Estin, Mr. Justice Douglas calls attention to the fact (p. 547) that the State of Nevada follows the rule that dissolution of a marriage puts an end to a support order, citing Herrick v. Herrick (55 Nev. 59). In the Herrick case which involved the question as to whether a prior decree obtained by a wife in the State of California providing for her maintenance and support survived a decree of divorce granted by the State of Nevada, the court, at page 68, said: “ Appel
By failing to seek alimony in the divorce action in Nevada, where plaintiff appeared and actively contested the suit, she is barred from claiming alimony in another proceeding in this State. If she had felt aggrieved by the decree of the Nevada court, her remedy lay in appeal to the Nevada courts and not in the courts of this State. To secure an allowance for maintenance and support, her relief, if any, rests with the Nevada courts (Schacht v. Schacht, 295 N. Y. 439, 442; Hoyt v. Hoyt, 265 App. Div. 223, 224, motion for leave to appeal denied, 290 N. Y. 931).
Had the Nevada court denied an application by the wife for alimony, would the New York separation decree stand? The conclusion is inevitable that it would not. A judgment in an action is conclusive “ not only as to any matters actually litigated therein, but also as to any that might have been so litigated, when the two causes of action have such a measure of identity that a different judgment in the second would destroy or impair rights or interests established by the first ” (Schuylkill Fuel Corp. v. Nieberg Realty Corp., 250 N. Y. 304, 306, Cabdozo, Ch. J.). Certainly, money directed to be paid for the support of a wife by a New York judgment of separation would have such a measure of identity with a direction for the payment of alimony in a divorce decree rendered by a court of a sister State that in the language of the Schuylkill Fuel Corp. case, “ a different judgment in the second would destroy or impair rights or interests established by the first ”.
After the Nevada decree had dissolved the marriage, the wife could not move in the prior New York separation action, as she has done here, for an increase in the support therein provided. Whatever continuing effect the prior New York separation decree might have had under Estin v. Estin, it was of no effect after the Nevada decree of absolute divorce had been entered on the appearance of both parties. Obviously it could not be modified after the marriage had been dissolved
In effect, this attempt on the part of the wife to revive the allowance of alimony here is a collateral attack on the divorce decree of the court of Nevada. In Sherrer v. Sherrer (334 U. S. 343) the Supreme Court held that the requirements of full faith and credit bar a defendant from collaterally attacking a divorce decree on jurisdictional grounds in the courts of a sister State in which the plaintiff therein was domiciled where there has been participation by the defendant in the divorce proceedings. The court there observed that if the application of the full faith and credit clause to cases of this nature requires that local policy be subordinated, that is a part of the price of our Federal system. At page 356 Chief Justice Vinson used the following apposite language: “ That vital interests are involved in divorce litigation indicates to us that it is a matter of greater rather than lesser importance that there should be a place to end such litigation. And where a decree of divorce is rendered by a competent court under the circumstances of this case, the obligation of full faith and credit requires that such litigation should end in the courts of the State in which the judgment was rendered (Emphasis ours.) (See, also, Coe v. Coe, 334 U. S. 378; Davis v. Davis, 305 U. S. 32.)
The order should be affirmed.
Peck, P. J., and Does, J., concur with Shientag, JJ.; Cohn, J., dissents in opinion in which Van Voobhis, J., concurs.
Order reversed, with $20 costs and disbursements to the appellant and the matter remitted to an official referee to hear and report to Special Term with his recommendations. Settle order on notice. [See post, p. 933.]