187 Misc. 150 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1946
The plaintiff brings this action to partition the property which the parties formerly held as tenants by the entirety. The parties were married in the year 1922, and in 1926 the defendant purchased the property in question. At that time, the plaintiff insisted that the property be taken in the names of both parties, giving as her reason that if it were not, the defendant’s son by a previous marriage would in case of the defendant’s death have certain rights in the property and she told the defendant that unless her name was on the deed, there would be trouble between them. He at length consented and the property was taken in the name of both parties. Thereafter and in 1937, the plaintiff without good, cause deserted the defendant, taking with her their son who was born in 1928. She went to Florida and there secured a divorce from defendant by publication of the summons, after which she married her present husband and lives with him in Cleveland, Ohio.
When the defendant learned of this, he brought an action in this State against the plaintiff for divorce and a decree was entered granting to him a divorce and the custody of their son, which provided that the plaintiff would have the right to see her son on Saturdays and Sundays of each and every week at the home of the defendant. The plaintiff was “ to have custody of said child for the month of July of each year provided the said child cares to go with his mother, subject to the further order of the court.”
In 1939, the plaintiff asked that the boy spend the summer with her and the defendant took him to Ohio for that purpose, but he insisted that she sign an agreement to return him in time for school that year. She refused to sign the agreement and he brought his son back with him. Then the plaintiff came to the defendant’s home again and said she was willing to sign said agreement, which she did, and thereupon, the defendant delivered his son to plaintiff. She took him to Cleveland but did not return him as she had promised, but secreted him so that the defendant has never been able to see his son again,
He then sets up in said counterclaim the abandonment without provocation and the divorce which' was awarded in this State dissolving his marriage with the plaintiff and asks that this court declare him in equity the sole owner, of said premises and direct the plaintiff to reconvey legal title of the same to the defendant. The plaintiff moved to strike this counterclaim and the next, of which I will speak later, and it was so ordered by the court at Special Term. On appeal, the Appellate Division reversed the order, holding that both were proper counterclaims (268 App. Div. 888).
Upon the trial before a jury of an agreed question of fact submitted, it was stipulated that this court should also try the question of fact involved in this first counterclaim.
I am of the opinion that the evidence does not warrant me in declaring the title to the property to be in the defendant. The plaintiff insisted that the property be deeded to them as tenants by the entirety and she wás guilty of no fraudulent representations in so doing. She stated that she wanted the defendant’s son by a previous marriage cut off from any interest in the property, and this was done. Thereafter the parties' lived together as husband and wife for a number of years and a son was born to them. I appreciate- there is nothing sacrosanct about a title by the entirety, but the courts have held that where property is deeded to husband and wife, they become tenants in common upon the dissolution of the ■ marriage, even at the fault of the wife (Yax v. Yax, 125 Misc. 851, affd. 211 App. Div. 872, affd. 240 N. Y. 590). I am not unmindful that equity will go to great length to prevent an unjust enrichment such as the plaintiff here seeks, but I cannot believe that any constructive trust can be spelled out by the wife’s misconduct years after the original taking of title and therefore I find that she is entitled to pursue her remedy to partition the property. •
The defendant also set up a third separate defense as a counterclaim to the alleged cause of action in the complaint, alleging the judgment of divorce granted to him and the custody of his infant child in which action the plaintiff appeared person
The judgment of the court is that said real property be sold by or under its direction and conveyance given to the purchaser; that out of the moneys arising from said sale, the defendant receive the sum of $1,203.45, together with the costs and disbursements of this action, and that the residue of the money arising from said sale, after the expenses of this proceeding-have been paid, be divided between the j la intiff and defendant equally.