126 Misc. 443 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1925
Plaintiff brought this action against his wife for a divorce and she counterclaimed for a separation. Issues framed on the question of adultery were tried by a jury, who found in favor of the wife. Her counterclaim now comes on for trial and plaintiff moves for a dismissal on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction to render judgment against him. He says that as chancellor of the Consulate-General of France at New York he is immune from prosecution, except for crime, in any of the courts of this country by virtue of the provisions of article II of the Consular Convention with France of February 23, 1853.
By article II of the Convention of 1853,
But plaintiff has offered in evidence, without objection, two certificates of the Consul-General of France at New York. In these documents it is certified, among other things, that plaintiff is a consular officer of the French Republic duly commissioned as chancellor of the Consulate-General at New York; that his functions correspond to those known in the American consular service as those of a Vice-Consul; that he ranks only after the Consul-General and the Consul, and above the Deputy Consul; that it is the practice to have the exequatur of the President of the United States issued only to the Consul-General.
But the difficulty with these certificates is that if they were to be accepted as establishing that plaintiff’s office is virtually that of a Vice-Consul, and that he is, therefore, entitled to immunity notwithstanding a difference in nomenclature, the result would be to confer upon the Consul-General the power to grant immunity whenever in his-judgment an attaché of his office was performing functions corresponding to those of a Vice-Consul of the United States. A reference to articles I and V of the Convention of 1853 * will show that the intention of the contracting parties was that •each government should approve the appointments of persons accredited to it by the other before the appointees should have the status of consular officers. I do not say that it is necessary that the President shall issue an exequatur to each of these officials. But I do hold that before they can be recognized by the courts
_
10 U. S. Stat. at Large, 993, 994.— [Rep.
10 U. S. Stat. at Large, 992, 995.— [Rep.