15 N.J. Misc. 691 | New York Court of Chancery | 1937
I am asked to advise an order annulling past-due alimony, and past-due maintenance for a child of the parties, both provided in an order duly made, pending this suit for divorce, under section 25 of our Divorce act, on the ground that the husband cannot pay these past-due sums. The application conies really in answer to a motion to have the husband adjudged to be in contempt for failure to comply with the order.
I must deny the application.
The jurisdiction of the court of chancery in matters of alimony in divorce suits is purely statutory. Alimony may he awarded pending a suit for divorce or nullity of marriage, or after a decree of divorce, under section 25 of the Divorce act of 1907 (Comp. Stat., p. 2021) which section I quote in full that I may the more clearly show the reasons for my decision:
*692 “Pending- a suit for divorce or nullity, or after decree of divorce, it shall be lawful for the court of chancery to make such order touching the alimony of the wife, and also touching the care, custody, education and maintenance of the children, or any of them, as the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case shall be rendered fit, reasonable and just, and to require reasonable security for the due observance of such orders, and upon neglect or refusal to give such reasonable security, as shall be required, or upon default in complying with the order, to award and issue process for the immediate sequestration of the personal estate, and the rents and profits of the real estate of the party so charged, and to appoint a receiver thereof, and cause such personal estate and the rents and profits of such real estate, or so much thereof as shall be necessary, to be applied toward such alimony and maintenance as to the said court shall from time to time seem reasonable and just, or to enforce the performance of the said orders by such other lawful ways and means as is usual, and according- to the course and practice of the court of chancery; orders so made may be revised and altered by the court from time to time as circumstances may require.”
This section was left unchanged through all the years until 1933, when it was amended, but only to provide with respect to the remarriage of a wife subsequently to a decree. P. L. 1933 p. 296; N. J. Stat. Annual 1988 p. 124 § 62-26.
Our Divorce act of 1907 is “the Uniform Divorce act.” See Thompson v. Thompson, 89 N. J. Eq. 70 (at p. 74); 103 Atl Rep. 856. Unfortunately, this Uniform act has been adopted in only a few states, for it was drafted as the fruit of tentative drafts and many conferences, and it represents the experience and judgment of a select body of lawyers chosen from every part of the country. Dean Pound wrote an article in 1908 {21 Harvard, Law Review 406) in which he asked this rhetorical question, “are any judicial decisions more deliberately worked out or more carefully adjusted to the circumstances to which .they are to be applied than the draft acts proposed by the conference of commissioners on uniform state laws, or the national congress on divorce legislation?”
One who is familiar with the subject of alimony sees that section 25 of our Divorce act itself reveals that it was drafted by lawyers who knew that a proceeding for alimony in a divorce suit is not an essential part of the cause of action for divorce; that such a proceeding is “collateral” to the issue of divorce {2 Bishop {6th ed.) 487) ; that an alimony proceeding is merely “an appendage” of the action for divorce
The words of section 25 plainly tell us that any order touching the alimony of a wife, and also any order touching the maintenance of a child, where there is pending a suit for divorce, may be enforced not only by sequestration, but also “by such other lawful ways and means as is usual and according to the course and practice of the court of chancery;” and this includes enforcement by execution, because section 44 of the Chancery act (Comp. Stat. p. 1/25) provides as follows;
“The decree of the court of chancery shall, from the time of its being signed, have the force, operation and effect of a judgment at law in the supreme court, from the time of the actual entry of such judgment; and all decrees and orders of the court of chancery, whereby any sum of money shall be ordered to be paid by one person to another, shall have the force, operation and effect of a judgment at law in the supreme court, from the time of the actual entry of such judgment, and the chancellor may order such executions thereon as in other cases.”
The chancellor made it clear in White v. While, 94 N. J. Eq. 278; 120 Atl. Rep. 419, that the supplement to “An act respecting any execution,” enacted in 1916 (P. L. 1016 ch. 113 p. 21/2; Cum. Supp. Comp. Stat. 1911-1921/ p. 1207 § 71-9 l) which provides for an installment execution, applies to orders of the court of chancery whereby any sum of money
I, myself, have never doubted that there was a vested right in sums past due under an order for alimony or an order for the maintenance of a child, which order happened to be included in a decree of divorce, or which was made after a decree of divorce, in time; nor have I had any doubt that a subsequent order of modification cannot operate retroactively to disturb such vested right. Any doubts that may have been held are now removed by ■the decision in Hatch v. Hatch, 15 N. J. Mis. R. 461; 192 Atl. Rep. 241, > where Advisoiy Master Herr declared that on a consideration of the court’s power to modify orders for alimony made in divorce suits, “the answer must be found in section 25 of the Divorce act, and the construction to be given to that section.” And I note in this decision by Advisory Master Herr that the vested character of accrued “permanent” alimony, that is, alimony provided after a decree of divorce has been recognized by Advisory Master Child in an unreported decision (Spahn v. Spahn — Docket 56-57), by Advisory Master Campbell in Williams v. Williams, 12 N. J. Mis. R. 641, 644; 174 Atl. Rep. 423, and by Advisory Master Grosman in Flavell v. Flavell, 15 N. J. Mis. R. 167, 176; 189 Atl. Rep. 639. It should be said here that Wilson v. Wilson, 14 N. J. Mis. R. 33; 181 Atl. Rep. 257, was a maintenance suit brought under section 26 of our Divorce act, and that what Advisory Master Herr said in deciding that case concerning the inherent power of this court is not pertinent in the consideration of the order I am dealing with, which order was made under section 25 of our Divorce act. The court has no inherent jurisdiction to grant alimonj in a divorce suit. Wigdor v. Wigdor, 14 N. J. Mis. R. 880; 188 Atl. Rep. 235.
Virtually all that I have to say applies with equal force to an order for the maintenance of a child pending a divorce suit, as well as to an order for alimony provided for a wife
A proceeding for alimony pending a suit for divorce, while based upon the pendency of the action for divorce, is independent of the cau§e of action for divorce. The proceeding is initiated by a petition which raises an issue separate from and independent of the issue of divorce, and this issue is decided on proof special to this issue. As Vice-Chancellor Backes pointed out in Swallow v. Swallow, 84 N. J. Eq. 109 (at p. 111) ; 92 Atl. Rep. 872, the petitioner usually alleges that she is destitute of the means of supporting herself pending the suit, and she prays that the husband be required to pay her a proper allowance for her support and maintenance "until the termination of this suit.” The application may be heard orally or by affidavits. The issue is a narrow one; and usually it may properly be decided on affidavits, where affidavits are submitted and no request is made for an oral hearing. See' Sulphen v. Sulphen, supra; Cropsey v. Cropsey, 104 N. J. Eq. 187; 144 Atl. Rep. 621. The application is not for any relief in connection with the final judgment in the action for divorce. The application does not need, and it cannot get, any support from, nor can it give any support to, the decree of divorce, on the cause of action for divorce, in any interlocutory way.
The court manifests its adjudication of the separate issue by an order which is positive, and not at all provisional, which directs the unconditional payment of money, usually by the husband to the wife, and she may be either the defendant or the petitioner. This order to pay is a judgment which may be enforced by execution. This order is in no way preliminary to, or a step towards, a decree of divorce, and it settles nothing whatever respecting the cause of action for divorce. Indeed, the issue of alimony raised by the petition may be, and often is, decided against the party to the suit in whose favor a decree for divorce afterwards is made. The order may be executed, even if there is no decree in the action
Vice-Chancellor Buchanan saw all this clearly when he was deciding Suiphen v. Suiphen, supra, but he expressed himself only to the extent appropriate to a consideration of the facts of the case before him, when he said: “The wife is not necessarily entitled to alimony merely because of bringing the suit or because of obtaining a decree of divorce. Whether or not a wife, even if successful in obtaining a decree of divorce, is entitled to decree for permanent alimony, and if so, for what amount, is an issue separate and distinct from the issue as to the divorce, and involving for its determination matters of evidence different from, or at least additional to, the evidence required for the determination of the divorce issue * * *. All that has been said as to the right or claim to permanent alimony applies equally to the right or claim to temporary alimony” * * *.
To begin with, a husband owes his wife a duty of support. If there is a divorce suit pending, brought by either against the other, the wife comes into court with an application to enforce this existing duty pending the suit. Unless there be exceptional circumstances, the court orders the husband to pay to the wife a specified amount of money, usually an amount to be paid weekly. This specified weekly sum vests weekly. If it did not the court’s order would not only be an empty performance, but there would be a failure, an extinguishment, of the duty of support, and a sanctioning of such failure or extinguishment by the court. The court cannot take away the performance of this existing and continuing duty, which by its order it has found to exist, and the amount of which it has fixed, until it further finds that the duty does not exist. The performance of the duty may be afterwards fixed by the court at a different amount. The termination of the duty, or the amount to be paid in performance of the duty, may be evidenced by the further order of the court.
An order for alimony made pending a suit for divorce and an order made after a decree of divorce are not legally distinguishable in any way. As to both, the jurisdiction of the court comes alone from section 25 of our Divorce act; they have the same nature and purpose, that is to say, the support of the wife under the husband’s continuing duty of support; and the orders may be enforced in the same way, that is, by executions. The court’s continuous power to modify both is the same. A decree of divorce in the suit for divorce does not raise any difference. All that the decree of divorce does is to terminate the payments, so that no payments become due after the entry of the decree.
An order for alimony made after a decree does not necessarily belong in the decree, for it is no part of the decree on the cause of action for divorce. A provision for alimony is often placed in the divorce decree nisi, for convenience, so to speak, but the order is still only “an order touching the alimony of the wife.” The placing of this order in the decree of divorce does not make the decree of divorce a decree for alimony. Sometimes a decree of divorce is silent as to alimony, and an order for alimony is actually made after the decree, that is, after, in time, by a separate paper which evidences itself outside of the decree of divorce, and which has no relation to the decree of divorce, except only that it is made after the decree of divorce, in accordance with section 25 of our Divorce act.
All orders for alimony, whether made pending the suit for divorce or after the decree of divorce — and they can be made at no other times — are based on the same concept, that is to
An order for alimony made pending a suit for divorce, and also an order made after a decree of divorce, both run until the further order of the court, whether they be so expressed or not. An order for alimony made pending a suit is terminated on the entry of the divorce decree nisi, if an order for alimony is included therein, or, if an order for alimony is not so included, and no order for alimony is made after the divorce decree nisi is made, the order for alimony made pending suit terminates on the entry of the final decree, that is to say, on the termination of the suit; but its “vitality,” to use the well chosen and self-explanatory word used by Vice-Chancellor Backes in Swallow v. Swallow, supra, for the enforcement of sums past due, survives the decree, for such sums are vested.
Section 25 of our Divorce act does not provide for a “decree” for alimony. We see that alimony, provided pending a suit for divorce, or after a decree of divorce, are alike provided by an “order.” I say this, because often we hear an order which has been made after a decree of divorce, which happens to be included in a decree of divorce, spoken of as a “permanent” order, or as a “decree” for alimony, and the alimony provided by such an order as “permanent” alimony. We should notice that these words are used only for easy or short reference, and to save the use of more words. The us.e of the words “decree” and “permanent,” as applied to an order for alimony made after a decree of divorce, have suggested the notion that such an order has more potency, that it is something of a higher degree, than an order for alimony made pending a suit for divorce. This notion includes the assumption, which is clearly fallacious, that an order for alimony made pending a suit for divorce is only an “interlocutory” order. Really, the only “permanent” thing about it all is the court’s continuous power to modify any order for alimony, no matter when made, as to the future.
The decisions in the states — and I think these states are in the minority — which hold that sums past due under an order for alimony made pendente lite are not vested, proceed either on an interpretation of statutes to that effect, or on an argument based on the erroneous premise that such an order is merely “interlocutory.” But I have not seen any case in any state so holding, nor would I expect to find one, where an execution may be issued on the order.
The “propriety” or the “finality” of a decree of divorce is not called in question by an application for modification of the order for payment of alimony which happens to be contained in the decree. The decree itself, as a decree on the cause of: action for divorce, remains undisturbed, both as to propriety and finality, after a modification of: such order for alimony.
Several times I have had New York decisions on alimony shortly cited to me by counsel on motion days, without any accompanying reference to the New York statutes under which the decisions were made. In New York, alimony pro
A consideration of New York decisions cannot help us in the interpretation of section 25 of our own Divorce act; and I cannot help saying that the earlier New York decisions on the subject of alimony pendente lite are unsatisfactory. There have been dissenting opinions, and opinions that the judges themselves have said could- not be reconciled. One appellate division judge declared that he did not “willingly” follow a preceding decision, because it was a wrong decision. The early New York case that perhaps stands out most, so far as citing in other jurisdictions is concerned, is Shepard v. Shepard, 99 App. Div. 309, where the precise question under discussion here was flatly before the court, and it was held, by a unanimous court, that alimony due under a New York order for alimony pendente lite is a fixed sum due and payable, and that a termination of the action does not.discharge the payment of past-due alimony. However, neither the early nor the later New York decisions on the subject of alimony should be shortly cited in New Jersey, when we are considering the subject of alimony .under section 25 of our Divorce act.
An order for alimony pendente lite was involved in Levine v. Levine (Ore.), 181 Pac. Rep. 609, where it was held that the order was a final judgment. One phase of the notorious and thoroughly-contested Sharon litigation is reported in Sharon v. Sharon, 7 Pac. Rep. 456; 67 Cal. 185, where wo find the court holding that an order for the payment of alimony and counsel fee was in the nature of a final judgment, “It possesses all the essential elements of a final judgment. Nothing remains to be done except to enforce it. Although the pendency of the action for divorce constituted the basis for the order, it was no part of the relief demanded by the plaintiff. She might at any time during the pendency of the action have applied to the court for such an order, and if granted it would not be affected by subsequent proceedings in the action. Its validity would not depend in any way on the results of the action. If the court had afterwards found that the marriage relation never existed between the parties that would not have affected the order for the payment of temporary alimony. It was to all intents and purposes a final judgment entered in the action quite as much as the decree of divorce in the case.”
An order for alimony pendente lite was involved in Daniels v. Daniels, 10 Pac. Rep. 657, where the court held that a judgment that is conclusive of any question in the case is
One of these other-state decisions, cited in the preceding paragraph hereof, holds that where the court directs the payment of sums of money, pendente lite, as a performance of the duty of the husband to support the wife, the duty is owed not only to the wife, but also to the public. The opinion does not explain this statement in anjway, but I should say that, apparently, the court had in mind the “triangular” characteristics of a divorce suit, and that the court was making an application of these characteristics to the effects of an order for alimony; that it considered that the interest of the public was