20 N.W.2d 583 | N.D. | 1945
In the complaint plaintiff alleges: that on June 25, 1922 a summons and complaint were served personally upon *166 the defendant in an action brought by the plaintiff in the superior court of Stanislaus county, California, to secure a judgment for divorce and for support and maintenance of the plaintiff and their minor children; that this court is a court of record and of general jurisdiction; that upon the hearing the court "duly rendered and made a judgment in favor of the plaintiff — adjudging and decreeing that the marriage between plaintiff — and the defendant — be dissolved — and it was further adjudged and decreed that the Defendant — pay the Plaintiff the sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars per month for the support and maintenance of the plaintiff and her four minor children . . ." to be paid monthly "until the further order of the Court;" that the only modification of the judgment for alimony and maintenance was permission given to the defendant to make payment semi-monthly at his option; that the defendant complied with the order for several years; but has failed and refused to make any payments due on or after April 4, 1932, and there is due her under the decree of the court the sum of $11,725.00.
Part of the monthly payments to be paid was for the support of the children all of whom are now of age. But we are not now concerned with this or several other allegations which may be controverted, as the complaint, on its face, shows that a substantial part of the sum demanded is accrued alimony and unpaid.
The defendant demurred, alleging the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. From the order sustaining the demurrer the plaintiff appeals.
Much is said about the duty of this court to give full faith and credit to the California decree and judgment under the provisions of Art. 4, § 1, of the United States Constitution which provides:
"Full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. And the congress may by general laws prescribe the manner in which such acts, records, and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof." *167
The defendant argues strenuously that this requirement applies to a final judgment only; that this claim for accrued alimony is based on a judgment and a decree of divorce over which the superior court of California has continuing jurisdiction to modify and change the provisions dealing with the payment of money for alimony and maintenance, and therefore the judgment is not a final judgment.
There is nothing in the complaint which specifically sets out this continuing jurisdiction; but assuming the law of California is the same as that of this state, we consider this feature in passing on the demurrer.
There is no allegation showing the claim for accrued alimony was reduced to judgment in California. This is not an action on such a judgment. It is an action to have the judgment of the California court established here and to have judgment for the accrued alimony in accordance with the provisions of the California judgment and to be enforced here.
Defendant questions the extent of the full faith and credit which this court must give to the decrees and judgments of the courts of California. This federal constitutional provision is the minimum requirement; but a state may widen the scope if it sees fit. Our statute provides: that,
"Copies of . . . judicial proceedings of any court . . . of any state of the United States shall be admissible as evidence in this state when attested by the clerk, with the seal of the court annexed, if there is a seal, . . . and the said records and judicial proceedings so authenticated shall have such faith and credit given them in every court within this state as they have by law or usage in the courts of . . . the state . . . from which they are taken." Rev Code, § 31-0902.
Thus the faith and credit to be given to the judicial records of California do not rest alone on the Federal Constitution.
The real issue of finality is centered upon whether, because these payments are due and unpaid, the plaintiff has such a vested interest in them, or in a portion of them, so that she may recover a judgment in this state on each item as it becomes due *168 or on the aggregate debt, the defendant being a resident of this state.
The construction which the California courts give to such a matter, with reference to its own judgments and as applied by these courts with reference to similar judgments from other states, is enlightening. In Keck v. Keck,
In Van Cleave v. Bucher,
The rule which California applies to its own judgments it applies to the judgments for alimony as entered by the courts of other states.
In Cummings v. Cummings,
"Such an allegation is not necessary. A judgment for alimony is not subject to modification as to sums already accrued and past due. This is the law of California and New York. (Citing cases.) Plaintiff's complaint shows that she had a vested right in past due payments of alimony."
In Bruton v. Tearle,
The New York court had on two different occasions modified the judgment as to alimony. The wife commenced an action in California against the husband to recover the amount accrued and unpaid, which action was continued by the administrator of her estate. This amount that was due and unpaid had not been reduced to a final judgment in New York; but the wife desired such judgment established in California just as in the case at bar the plaintiff seeks to recover accrued and unpaid alimony granted her by the California court.
This Bruton v. Tearle controversy aforementioned was before the California court again (Cal App) 51 P.2d 1169, and the court held that such a judgment for the accrued and unpaid alimony is an "ordinary money judgment."
The case of Bruton v. Tearle (Cal) supra, was before the *170
Supreme Court of California at a later date. In
In Creager v. Superior Ct.
We cite these cases to show the holdings of the California courts in regard to their own judgments as to the status of alimony payments in arrears and the effect of a judgment therefor in other states. Clearly in California the courts have no power to modify the judgment in so far as it affects alimony in arrears. The California judgment is final as to these amounts and not subject to modification therefor.
The same rule is followed in other jurisdictions. In German v. German,
"that no judgment might be entered in the case other than an ordinary judgment at law for the amount of the alimony in arrears, and further, that the judgment in New York might be altered, modified or annulled by its courts and therefore was not entitled to enforcement in the courts of this state."
The Connecticut court held the plaintiff had two remedies in Connecticut and as the same court in Connecticut could administer both equitable and legal rights the plaintiff could maintain an equitable action. The plain import of the opinion is that the plaintiff had the option of bringing equitable proceedings or could have, as the defendant insisted, "an ordinary judgment *172 at law" for the amount of the alimony in arrears. The court stated however:
"The New York decree for alimony could not be enforced by Connecticut courts as regards payments falling due in future, in view of New York rule that alimony decree could be modified as regards payments falling due in future."
In Livingston v. Livingston,
"Where defendant in divorce is adjudged to pay a certain sum annually for plaintiff's support and that of her children, it creates substantial rights, which constitute property of the plaintiff, of which she cannot be deprived without due process of law."
See also Sammis v. Medbury,
See also Mayer v. Mayer,
"A decree for alimony in a divorce a vinculo, made without reserve, though payable in installments, is final and cannot be modified after enrollment of the decree, in the absence of statutory authority or a reservation of power in the decree itself."
The court upheld the judgment of the lower court on an Oklahoma decree for installments in arrears for the support of the wife, saying: "We think the decree for the arrears due the wife is within the authority of the court, and should be affirmed." (P 892.)
But the court differentiated between the arrears due the wife personally and arrears due to her for maintenance of minors. It affirmed the first, saying, "We think the decree for arrears due the wife is within the authority of the court (the trial court in Michigan) and should be affirmed." This was on the theory that the award for the children's support was subject to modification under the Oklahoma statutes and therefore an action *173
for such alimony would not lie in Michigan. Other courts made a distinction between arrears in alimony and allowances for maintenance for minors based on local law. See Rowe v. Rowe,
In Shibley v. Shibley,
In Rule v. Rule,
That provisions for alimony and support of minor children, provided for in a decree of divorce in one state, may be enforced in a sister state, as a judgment of that state is upheld in McDuffie v. McDuffie,
"The order to pay was a positive one. It was of course subject to any modification the court might later see fit to make . . . but, as no change was in fact made and it remained in force until the litigation was ended, it has the effect of an unsatisfied judgment. . . . The obligation thus created had the effect of a judgment. . . ."
Massachusetts, in Wells v. Wells,
But the court shows clearly that accrued unpaid alimony is "a fixed sum" for it upholds plaintiff's complaint for arrears.
The decisions in Glanton v. Renner,
The supreme court of Minnesota holds, Ostrander v. Ostrander,
In New Jersey a wife obtained a divorce by default from her husband who was not a resident of the state. Later she moved the court for an amendment of the decree, by the addition of a clause reserving to the New Jersey court the right to allow alimony. The motion was served on the husband in New Jersey and he appeared in opposition alleging he was a resident of New York, and the decree was purposely drawn to omit alimony. But the motion was granted and the amendment made. Lynde v. Lynde, 54 NJ Eq 473, 35 A. 641. This decision was unanimously affirmed by the Court of Appeals. 55 NJ Eq 591, 39 A. 1114. Plaintiff then commenced an action in New York to enforce the judgment. In Lynde v. Lynde,
The case found its way to the Supreme Court of the United States (Lynde v. Lynde,
"By the Constitution and the act of Congress requiring the faith and credit to be given to a judgment of the court of another state that it has in the state where it was rendered, it was long ago declared by this court: `The judgment is made a debt of record, not examinable upon its merit; but it does not carry with it into another state the efficacy of a judgment upon property or persons, to be enforced by execution. To give it the force of a judgment in another state, it must be made a judgment *177 there, and can only be executed in the latter as its laws may permit.'"
Defendant cites Hunt v. Monroe,
Defendant cites three decisions of the United States court dealing with the full faith and credit provision in the Federal Constitution. We will deal with these. In Sistare v. Sistare,
"A decree for the future payment of alimony is, as to installments past due and unpaid, within the protection of the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution, provided that no modification of the decree was made prior to the maturity of such installments, unless by the law of the state in which the decree was rendered, its enforcement is so completely within the discretion of the courts of that state that they may annul *178 or modify the decree, even as to overdue and unsatisfied installments."
As a general principle, before the court may modify provisions in a judgment rendered or revoke any provisions therein made, so far as accrued and unpaid installments of alimony are concerned, there must be power and authority granted to the courts to do so. As said in Barber v. Barber,
"`every reasonable implication must be resorted to against theexistence of' a power to modify or revoke installments of alimonyalready accrued `in the absence of clear language manifesting an intention to confer it.'"
While this case cited involved the question of a suit brought in Tennessee upon a North Carolina judgment for arrears of alimony, whereas in the case at bar no judgment was entered in California for the claimed arrears, yet the principle is the same, when we are considering the vested rights if any, which the plaintiff has.
In the Barber Case the court calls attention to its holding in the Sistare Case. Defendant urges that this case of Sistare v. Sistare is modified by or distinguished from the case of Barber v. Barber (US) supra. In the latter case the Supreme Court of the United States refers to the Sistare Case. It says:
"The Sistare Case considered the applicability of the full faith and credit clause, only as to decrees for future alimony some of the installments of which had accrued. The present suit was not brought upon a decree of that nature, but upon a money judgment for alimony already due and owing to the petitioner, as to which execution was ordered to issue. The Supreme Court of Tennessee applied to this money judgment the distinction taken in the Sistare Case as to decrees for future alimony. It concluded that by the law of North Carolina the judgment for the specific amount of alimony already accrued was subject to modification by the court which awarded it, that *179 it was not a final judgment under the rule of the Sistare Case, and therefore was not entitled to full faith and credit."
In this Barber Case the court holds that where the court of the state in which the judgment for alimony is entered has no power to modify the judgment with reference to accrued and unpaid alimony, it makes no difference what is the authorization in this respect in the state in which the action to recover the alimony is commenced. The court of North Carolina, according to the decision, not only had directed payment of alimony in the action for separation but thereafter had entered judgment for the amount of the alimony in arrears. The judgment creditor brought action in Tennessee on this judgment. The supreme court of Tennessee held that the judgment of the lower Tennessee court in favor of the judgment creditor should be reversed on the ground that the North Carolina judgment "was without the finality entitling it to credit under the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution." This holding was based upon the theory that the North Carolina courts had general power to modify provisions with reference to accrued alimony and that being so the North Carolina judgment was not a final judgment. However, in this Barber Case the Supreme Court of the United States held that the North Carolina court, which granted the decree of separation, had no power to modify the judgment in so far as it affected the alimony in arrears and that the provisions of the North Carolina statutes which authorized the court granting the decree of separation to modify or vacate it "at any time, on the application of either party or of anyone interested" applied only to payments not matured and therefore as the North Carolina court did not have power to modify the decree in so far as it affected alimony in arrears the Tennessee court was in error in refusing to give that judgment the full faith and credit required by the Federal Constitution. Thus the case at bar is practically identical with the situation in Barber v. Barber. In Sistare v. Sistare, the court holds specifically that the supreme court of Connecticut should have held that the plaintiff in that case could recover in the courts of Connecticut on the amount in arrears. *180
It will be noted in the Sistare Case that though the judgment authorizing alimony was the judgment of a court in New York, there was no subsequent judgment entered in New York granting judgment for the amount of the alimony in arrears. The suit in Connecticut was on the same footing as the case here at bar — an action commenced in Connecticut to recover the amount of alimony in arrears, based upon a New York judgment requiring the payment of alimony and showing that the payments were in arrears. The other case defendant cites is, Lynde v. Lynde, supra.
Heretofore we have not had occasion to determine whether under our statutes there is power in the court to modify accrued payments of alimony due under a decree of divorce. There is nothing in our statute which permits it.
In State ex rel. Hagert v. Templeton,
Our statutes dealing with an action for separate maintenance provide: "The judgment may be modified or vacated at any time upon the hearing of the parties." (§ 14-0806, Rev Code.) But this is not applicable to the case at bar. The status is different here. Alimony in a divorce a vinculo is on a different footing than maintenance in a decree of separation a mensa et thoro, as in this latter situation the parties are still husband and wife. Even if this statute cited could be construed to authorize modification of past due installments in maintenance proceedings, a point we do not decide, yet after complete divorce the parties are strangers to each other so far as the marriage relation is concerned. The liability of the defendant is no longer that of a husband but is that of a stranger owing an obligation that arises from the operation of law and "may be enforced *181 in the manner provided — by civil action or proceeding." § 9-0105, Rev Code.)
There being no statutory authorization for modification of a judgment for accrued and unpaid alimony we must hold that the creditor has a vested right therein.
It makes little difference whether it is argued this is an action to enforce a decree of the California court, or that this is an action to recover on a debt due and stated. Since the plaintiff has a vested right in the past due alimony then she has a claim against the defendant. We are required to give full faith and credit to the judgment and decree of the California court and thus make it our own and establish it here. The plaintiff could sue to recover a debt provable from the judgment in California and full faith and credit will be given to the record of the court in California. She may do this in one action here. We are not required to determine whether, after the establishment of the California judgment in this state, the provisions may be enforced in the manner set forth in the case of Creager v. Superior Ct.
The defendant has the right to show, if he can, that the California court modified its judgment before payments were due, or that he paid these amounts and thus the debt was discharged, or interpose any other defense he may have as to the payments sought to be recovered or any portion thereof. The complaint states a cause of action and the order sustaining the demurrer is reversed.
CHRISTIANSON, Ch. J., and MORRIS, BURKE and NUESSLE, JJ., concur. *182