126 N.Y.S. 936 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
Miller,J.:
' On the 19th of May, 1902, a judgment of absolute divorce on the, ground of adultery'was rendered in favor of. the plaintiff and against the defendant in the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Philadelphia, State of Pennsylvania. The judgment required the defendant to provide for the support of the plaintiff and to pay her alimony at the rate of $333.33 a month. Thereafter, the defendant absconded from the jurisdiction of the said court and became a resident of the State of New York. : On the 28th day of February, 1903, the plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant in the City Court of the city of New York for back alimony amounting to $1,999.98, and an execution issued thereon was returned unsatisfied. Thereafter this action was brought.and resulted in a judgment on the 29th of March,, 1910, adjudging that the Pennsylvania judgment be made the judgment and decree of this court; that the plaintiff recover back alimony amounting, with interest, to the sum of $35,234.71; that the defendant be required to pay the plaintiff at the rate of $333.33 per month ; that he be required to give an undertaking in the penalty of $60,000, conditioned upon compliance with the judgment, and with any further orders, judgments or decrees that may be made; that he be required, upon receiving the monthly installments of income from the executors and trustees of his father, late of the city of Philadelphia, in the" State of Pennsylvania, to pay over to the plaintiff the sum of $1,400 per month to be applied, $333.33 as the monthly installment of alimony, and the balance, after the payment of costs and disbursements, toward the payment of the back alimony until said sums be'fully paid, and thereafter the sum of $333.33 monthly during the natural life of the plaintiff,, and that, in default thereof, the plaintiff should be entitled to a further order at the foot of the judgment appointing a receiver and directing the defendant, immediately upon receiving said installments of income, or the checks therefor, to deliver them, indorsed, to the receiver to be applied by the latter, $1,000 a month to the defendant, which was adjudged to be sufficient and proper for his support, and the balance
We are not disposed to inquire into the judgment and order disobeyed further than to see whether the court had jurisdiction to grant them. If either be erroneous, except upon jurisdictional grounds, they are to be corrected upon appeal. Irregularities cannot be invoked as a defense in a contempt proceeding, especially when the decree disobeyed was entered upon the consent of a defendant who has absconded from the' jurisdiction of the court.
It is asserted upon the authority of Lynde v. Lynde (162 N. Y. 405 ; 181 U. S. 183) that the court only had jurisdiction to render a money judgment for the past alimony to be enforced like any other money judgment by execution. The point decided in that case was that the full faith and credit clause, of the Constitution of the United States (Art. 4, § 1) required effect to be given by one
It is settled in this State that a wife, who had obtained a judgment for a'divorce and alimony, after exhausting the remedy given her by the Code to obtain payment of alimony, is entitled <f through an action in equity, to subject the surplus income, over what is required for the husband’s support, of a testamentary trust created for the husband’s benefit without any valid direction for the accumulation of income, to the payment of her alimony both past due and to accrue? (Italics are mine.) (Wetmore v. Wetmore, 149 N. Y 520.) The court in this case found that the defendant has no personal or real property within the State of New York which can be seized or levied upon by virtue of an execution; that the plaintiff had exhausted all her remedies at law and in equity to enforce the Philadelphia decree and all her remedies under the New York City Court judgment prior to the commencement of this action.- By this judgment the court did not undertake to administer or interfere with the Pennsylvania trust. ' It has merely undertaken by a judgment in personam to compel the defendant to aqtply a part of the income, when received by him, to the support' of his wife, and the Wetmore case is authority for the proposition that it had jurisdiction to do that independently of the sections of the Code appli
' However, the defendant could be required to give the undertaking only perforce of said section 1772, which provides what may be done - upon the failure to give it, i. e., the court may cause the defendant’s personal property and the rents and profits of his .real property to be sequestered, and may appoint a receiver thereof. But the defendant could not be committed for contempt for failure to give the undertaking, (People ex rel. Ready v. Walsh, 132 App. Div. 462.) While seeking to get the benefit of the amendment to section 1772, the respondent contends that this is not a matrimonial action. We think that it was the intention of the Legislature to include actions on foreign judgments of divorce among matrimonial actions, and to make the equitable remedies provided by article 4 of title 1 of chapter 15 of the Code of Civil Procedure applicable, thereto. At any rate, we are aware of no other authority for requiring the undertaking.
The order should be modified by striking therefrom the provision adjudging the defendant in contempt for failure to give ‘the undertaking, and as thus modified- affirmed, without costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred; Laughlin, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
T dissent from the modification of the order upon the' ground that it was, in my opinion, competent for the court to require an undertaking as security for the payment of the alimony, and since the appeal is not from.the order or judgment requiring the security, the propriety of requiring it in this case is not presented for review. With all due deference to the decision in- People ex rel. Ready v. Walsh (132. App. Div. 462), I dissent from the view that'the failure to. give security, which may be required in matrimonial actions by virtue of the provisions of section 1772 of the Code of Civil Procedure, may not be punished as for a contempt of court, and that the plaintiff’s only remedy on such failure is sequestration of the-property of tlie defendant or contempt proceedings'for failure to pay any sum of money required to be
Order modified as directed in opinion and as modified affirmed, without costs. Settle order on notice.