31 A.D.2d 955 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1969
In an action for separation, in which the defendant husband counterclaimed inter alia, to declare the nullity of his marriage to plaintiff, plaintiff appeals from portions of a judgment of the Supreme Court, Queens County, entered October 11,1967, which, inter alia, dismissed the complaint, declared said marriage void, denied alimony for her, and granted a support allowance of $60 a week for plaintiff’s child, who had been adopted by the husband. By the notice of appeal, the portion of the judgment which awarded custody of the child to plaintiff was excepted from the appeal; and, by her brief, plaintiff has abandoned so much of the appeal as included the provisions of the judgment which dismissed the third and fourth counterclaims, granted the husband visitation rights as to the child, and directed the husband to make payments for support of the child and for an additional counsel fee. Judgment modified, on the law and the facts, by (1) striking therefrom the eleventh decretal paragraph, which denied alimony, and (2) providing, in lieu thereof, that defendant shall pay plaintiff alimony of $100 a week, for her support, commencing as of September 1, 1967, in the same manner as, and together with, the payments directed in the judgment to be made for support of the child. As so modified, judgment affirmed insofar as appealed from, with costs to appellant against respondent Harry Zeitlan. In 1958 the defendant husband (referred to herein as the defendant) obtained a unilateral Mexican divorce from his former wife, the codefendant, and one month later married plaintiff in Connecticut. In 1962 his former wife sued him in New York for a separation; he settled that action by an agreement which, inter alia, provided that his former wife would file an appearance and acceptance of the divorce decree in the Mexican action; and in 1962 the former wife did file such papers in the Mexican court and that court made an “ order ” recording her appearance and acceptance of the divorce decree. Plaintiff and defendant did not thereafter remarry, but continued to live together until 1966, when this separation action was instituted. On a prior appeal we held that defendant was not estopped to attack the Mexican divorce which he had himself procured unless the proof at trial would establish that he had induced plaintiff to marry him by fraudulent misrepresentations that the divorce was valid (Zeitlan v. Zeitlan, 27 A D 2d 846). After the trial, the trial court found that defendant had not induced plaintiff to marry him by any such fraudulent misrepresentations; and we agree with that finding. Nor do we find in this record any other grounds for estoppel that were not previously considered and overruled in the earlier appeal in this case or in Marum v. Marum (8 A D 2d 975) or in Alfaro v. Alfaro (5 A D 2d 770, affd. 7 N Y 2d 949). Hence, defendant is not estopped from attacking the validity of his Mexican divorce from his former wife. On this appeal, plaintiff for the first time contends that defendant’s counterclaim for a judgment declaring their marriage void, brought eight years after their marriage, is barred by the six-year Statute of Limitations (CPLR 213, subd. 1), applicable to actions which have no specific statutory time limitations. We find no merit in that contention. Subdivision (a) of section 140 of the Domestic Relations Law, which authorizes an action to declare the nullity of a bigamous marriage, provides that such action “may be maintained by either of the parties during the life-time of the other ”, Substantially the same language in predecessor and related sections was construed to mean that the only applicable time limitation was “ the lifetime of the parties ”