Bamboschek v. Bamboschek

150 Misc. 885, 270 N.Y.S. 741, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1206
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 Misc. 885 (Bamboschek v. Bamboschek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bamboschek v. Bamboschek, 150 Misc. 885, 270 N.Y.S. 741, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1206 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Cotillo, J.

This proceeding has arisen from an attempt upon the part of the plaintiff to secure an order holding the defendant in contempt for impeding, impairing, prejudicing and defeating the rights and remedies of the plaintiff by bis contumacious conduct in [886]*886willfully failing and refusing to pay alimony, as provided in a judgment of divorce granted by this court on the 13 th day of January, 1930. The plaintiff claims that, at the time the order to show cause was granted, the stun of $12,918 of unpaid alimony had accrued. On the return day of the motion the defendant appeared and by cross-motion applied for counter relief under section 1172-a of the Civil Practice Act.

The summons and complaint in the divorce action, verified the 26th day of September, 1929, reveal that the parties were married on the 27th day of March, 1928, and that there are no children of the marriage. The action was undefended and the official referee, basing the award of alimony upon nothing but a bare estimate by the plaintiff of the defendant’s earnings, fixed the alimony at $100 a week. The short time intervening between the marriage and the conclusion of the undefended divorce action lends great weight to the claim of the defendant that the plaintiff, who was represented by her uncle, had agreed, if no defense were offered, to ask for no alimony.

The defendant is a musician and at one time was a conductor employed by the Metropolitan Opera House. He began as a musician at the age of seventeen years, at which time he earned $10 a week as an assistant conductor. He was with the Metropolitan Opera House for seventeen years, his employment ceasing in 1929. He was employed as conductor and general musical secretary. His salary at that time was $7,000 per annum. For nine months, after severing his connection with the Metropolitan, he had no employment. In 1930 he began to act as accompanist to the artist Martinelli. Up to the present time his engagement has been at intervals and his income very limited. Because of inability to pay the alimony awarded by the decree, he was imprisoned in 1930. He was released upon his payment of $250 to the attorney for his wife. In 1931, having obtained a contract to act as accompanist to Lily Pons, he assigned fifty per cent of his wages to his wife. In 1932 he again was employed by Miss Pons and made the same arrangement. The defendant has no bank accounts, either saving or checking; he has no jewelry, and is heavily in debt, and has several large judgments entered against him, and at the present time is being examined in proceedings supplementary to execution on one of the judgments. He has no life insurance and is now practically being supported by his second wife. He owes a number of small bills to such as the laundryman and cleaner. The defendant is evidently a neurotic, a fact which is militating against his earning a large amount of money. He is living at the present time with his second wife in a furnished room for which the wife is paying the rent, [887]*887which amounts to twelve dollars weekly. The plaintiff is a young woman, enjoying good health, of a fair education and well able to work, and in fact is engaged with her mother in conducting an insurance agency inherited from her father. The plaintiff and her mother are living in a Central Park West apartment.

Defendant’s prayer for cross relief under section 1172-a necessarily challenges plaintiff’s claim that the failure to pay was willful and, therefore, contumacious. Defendant by his papers has shown himself fully entitled, by reason of his financial inability to comply with the terms of the decree, and is, therefore, entitled to the relief under section 1172-a. The extent of the relief must be measured by the provisions of that section which reads as follows:

“ § 1172-a. Provisions respecting persons financially unable to comply with orders or judgments directing the payment of alimony.

“ 1. Any person who, by an order or judgment made or entered in an action for divorce or separation or an action for the enforcement in this state of a judgment for divorce or separation rendered in another state, is directed to make payment of any sum or sums of money and against whom an order to punish for a contempt of court has been made pursuant to the provisions of section eleven hundred and seventy-two of this act or the judiciary law may, if financially unable to comply with the order or judgment to make such payment, upon such notice to such parties as the court may direct, make application to the court for an order relieving him from such payment and such contempt order. The court, upon the hearing of such application, if satisfied from the proofs and evidence offered and submitted that the applicant is financially unable to make such payment may, in its discretion, until further order of the court, modify the order or judgment to make such payment and relieve him from such contempt order.

2. Whenever, upon application to the court by any interested party, it appears to the satisfaction of the court that any person, who has been relieved totally or partially from making any such payment pursuant to the provisions of this section, is no longer financially unable to comply with the order or judgment to make such payment, then the court may, in its discretion, modify or revoke its order relieving him totally or partially from making such payment.

3. Any person may assert his financial inability to comply with the directions contained in an order or judgment made or entered in an action for divorce or separation or an action for the enforcement in this state of a judgment for divorce or separation rendered in another state, as a defense in a proceeding instituted against him under section eleven hundred and seventy-two of this act or under [888]*888the judiciary law to punish him for his failure to comply with such directions and, if. the court, upon the hearing of such contempt proceeding, is satisfied from the proofs and evidence offered and submitted that the defendant is financially unable to comply with such order or judgment, it may, in its discretion, until further order of the court, make an order modifying such order or judgment and denying the application to punish the defendant for contempt.” (Added by Laws of 1933, chap. 685, in effect September 1, 1933.)

To understand the provisions of that section in their proper perspective it is necessary to view the remedies of a wife against a husband who has failed in paying alimony awarded by the court. Sections 1171 and 1172 give the wife extraordinary remedies of sequestration and contempt, on the husband’s failure to pay the sums decreed. Section 1170 provides for a modification of the provisions of the final judgment or order. Under the latter section, for example, defendant in the absence of section 1172-a might have made an application to the court for leave to apply for a modification of the alimony decree. Assuming he could have obtained such leave in face of the fact that he was indebted for past alimony and technically in contempt, the effect of a favorable entertainment of his application and a decision in his favor upon the facts, would have been to relieve him of the further payment of alimony by reason of his straitened financial circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
150 Misc. 885, 270 N.Y.S. 741, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bamboschek-v-bamboschek-nysupct-1934.