255 F. 497 | 3rd Cir. | 1919
This action is in assumpsit. The contract declared on was made by the parties in their relation of husband and wife. It was entered into when they were living separate and apart and hears date the day following the institution of proceed
A divorce a vinculo matrimonii was granted. In formulating the decree, the contract for support of the wife after divorce was not submitted to the court, but the court, nevertheless, incorporated its substance in a decree for alimony. After obeying the decree for five years, the husband ceased making payments, contending that the decree, in so far as it imposed alimony, was beyond the court’s jurisdiction.
In a proceeding of attachment, instituted by the wife to enforce the decree for alimony, the Court of Common Pleas No. 4 of Allegheny County — the court that entered the decree — dismissed the proceeding with a frank admission that the decree for alimony was inadvertently entered and was in excess of its jurisdiction. Appeal was taken to the Superior Court of the State of Pennsylvania — the appropriate appellate tribunal of last resort — where tire order of the Court of Common Pleas discharging the rule for attachment was affirmed on ap opinion holding that under the Constitution and statutes of that state, which had not changed the common law rule except where the husband is libelant, alimony cannot be awarded upon a divorce a vinculo matrimonii. Moore v. Moore, 64 Pa. Super. Ct. 192.
The divorced wife then abandoned her claim for alimony under the decree and brought in the court below this action for support under the contract between her husband and herself.
The defendant, by affidavit of defence — a proceeding in Pennsylvania under the Practice Act of 1915, P. L. 483, similar to the common law proceeding by demurrer — raised the question of law, whether the contract is on its face and on the plaintiff’s showing of facts invalid because contra bonos mores.
On this question, the District Court sustained the defendant and entered judgment accordingly. The plaintiff sued out this writ-of-error, asserting here, as below, the validity of the contract.
The plaintiff has relieved us of the necessity of discussing at length the general principles of law that bear on the question before us by conceding, “that an agreement which looks to a possible or intended future separation, or which might encourage such, is void; and that
To escape the application of these universally admitted principles to the contract sued on, the plaintiff takes two positions. Of these the first, in the language of her counsel, is, that “no one has brought upon the record the fact that the Common Pleas granted the divorce.” If this fact be excluded from the case, the suit ends here. But there are phases of the case of such serious import that we are not inclined to dispose of it summarily on this position.
In passing on the plaintiff’s contention that the fact of divorce is not in the record and therefore is not to be regarded as in the case, it may he sufficient to emphasize by repetition that the contract contains two undertakings by the defendant; first, to pay his wife a given sum for expenses and alimony pendente lite, and second, to pay her a like sum for “support or alimony” after a, decree of divorce has been granted. The plaintiff’s statement of claim does not show on which undertaking this action was brought. Manifestly it cannot at this date be brought on both. If brought on the first, that is, on the undertaking for alimony pendente lite, she cannot recover for her husband’s default in paying for her support, at a time five years after the litigation had ended; if on the second, that is, on the undertaking for “support or alimony” after divorce has been granted, she cannot recover unless the fact that a decree for divorce has been granted — the condition precedent on which her right of action is predicated — -is averred in her statement of claim and proved or is otherwise established.
Although the plaintiff has failed to plead this essential fact, we are not inclined to dispose of her case on this ground, for we prefer — as her counsel probably expected — to take judicial notice of the fact of divorce as established by public records and shown by published reports. In the discussion that is to follow, we shall consider that the divorce contemplated in the contract has been granted and that the event on which the husband’s undertaking was based, has occurred.
The second position which the plaintiff assumes in order to take the case from under the law applicable to a contract between husband, and wi fe having a tendency to aid or facilitate the granting of divorce is, that husband and wife may contract while married with reference to and in recognition of a present separation, and that such a contract is_ valid and effectual, both in law and equity, provided its object be actual and immediate, and not contingent or prospective. In urging this as the applicable law of the case, the plaintiff maintains, that the contract in suit, when entered into, had to do with an actual separation between the wife and husband then existing, and extended to the support of the wife during that separation as it continued in the future, as distinguished from a contract for support conditioned upon and following a decree for divorce.
We do not question this statement of the law; we question, rather, its application to the contract in this case and to the circumstances under which the contract was made. It is well settled both in Eng
It would appear, therefore, that the contract is void for want of consideration. But opposed to this view, the plaintiff cites and con
The question whether the contract is against public policy must be determined by its purpose- and tendency. 6 R. C. L. 707. Admitting this, the plaintiff maintains, that the purpose and tendency of the contract are questions for the jury, and, that, accordingly, the trial judge erred in deciding them himself. But, where the facts are-conceded, or are not in dispute, as on demurrer or on affidavit of defense under the Pennsylvania practice, or where the question does not depend upon the circumstances under which the contract was entered into, the question whether a particular contract contravenes public policy is to be determined by the court, not by the jury. 6 R. C. L. 710. The contract being before the court on pleadings that show all the facts, the question whether a contract which contemplates a future separation has a tendency to induce such separation in a manner that contravenes public policy is one of interpretation by the court. 6 R. C. L. 771, and cases.
It cannot be denied that the contract in this case contemplates separation in the future, that is, a separation that will follow future divorce. It looks to, not merely a possible, but an intended separation. The husband’s promise is enforceable, if at all, only after a divorce a vinculo matrimonii has been granted; therefore, his promise is conditioned on that event. Has the promise a tendency to induce that event? The promise was not made to cover merely a real or fancied obligation. A promise to discharge such an obligation,
The marital relation is regarded by the law as the basis of the social organization. The preservation of that relation is deemed essential to public welfare. Agreements between parties that are conditioned on divorce, Barngrover v. Pettigrew, 128 Iowa, 533, 104 N. W. 904, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 260, or that tend to destroy that relation by encouraging or facilitating the procuring of divorce, are against good morals and will not be enforced. The maxim, “Ex turpi contractu non oritur actio,” founded as it is on sound morals, has been long recognized by the courts in the administration of justice. The contract in suit, as we interpret it, is very different from contracts sustained by courts in some states where the husband’s obligation to support his wife continues after divorce and is provided for by alimony, and where such agreements are regarded by the courts as a satisfactory short cut to aid them in framing decrees. Hammerstein v. Equitable Trust Co., 156 App. Div. 644, 141 N. Y. Supp. 1065, 1070; Werner v. Wer
We regard the contract in suit void as tending to aid and facili!ate the obtaining of a divorce by encouraging the wife vigorously to prosecute her action, and that, being void, because opposed to public policy, the contract cannot be rendered valid either by the presence of an otherwise lawful consideration or by the mere ceremony of attaching a seal to it. Gaslight & Coke Co. v. Turner, 5 B. N. C. 675; Standard Lumber Co. v. Butler Ice Co. (C. C. A. 3d) 146 Fed. 359, 76 C. C. A. 639, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.) 467.
The judgment below is affirmed.