Boissevain v. Boissevain

129 Misc. 5, 220 N.Y.S. 579, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 858
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 Misc. 5 (Boissevain v. Boissevain) 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
Boissevain v. Boissevain, 129 Misc. 5, 220 N.Y.S. 579, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 858 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Levy, J.

Plaintiff obtained a decree of absolute divorce from her husband in the Netherlands where both were domiciled, together with an allowance as alimony. Thereafter she obtained a judgment in this jurisdiction for arrears in alimony, and she now sues for additional arrears from the date of the previous judgment to the time of. the prospective entry of judgment in the present action, and also asks that the foreign decree be made the judgment of this court and enforcible in the same manner. Defendant moves to dismiss the complaint “as to the cause of action in equity ” on the ground of its insufficiency. There is only one cause of action stated in the complaint, but twofold relief is demanded, the second of which is undoubtedly in equity. The first demand might seem to imply an action at law for arrears in alimony. But as it does not seek a judgment for a definite sum, but for the amounts required to be paid between the 14th day of February, 1926, and the date of the entry of judgment, it would also seem to involve a demand for equitable relief. While the determination of this motion upon the pleading alone is not difficult, a certain interesting and novel question is raised in connection therewith, which seems to require elucidation because it is certain to arise again in the progress of this very cause, unless here decided. The defendant does not deny that an action at law for arrears in alimony under a judgment properly obtained in a foreign country is appropriate. But he urges that there is no authority for an action to make the decree of a foreign jurisdiction the judgment of this court, with all the equitable relief to which such a decree will entitle the plaintiff; that section 1171 of the Civil Practice Act in providing such relief to the successful plaintiff upon a judgment rendered in another State, was intended to confine its benefits to decrees obtained in another State of the Union and not to those granted in a foreign land. An intelligent consideration of this point requires a brief survey of the history of this legislation.

As the section originally read (section 1772 of the Code of Civil Procedure) the relief of sequestration and security in matrimonial [7]*7actions was construed to be limited to domestic decrees. Thus, in Lynde v. Lynde (41 App. Div. 280; affd., 162 N. Y. 405; 181 U. S. 183) the plaintiff in her suit to enforce the alimony provisions of a New Jersey decree of divorce obtained a judgment at Special Term reading that it be enforced “ with like force and effect as if the same were a judgment of this court.” The higher courts ruled that the judgment was erroneous in this respect, holding that the courts of this State will not enforce the alimony provisions of a foreign judgment except by an action at law to recover arrears. The Appellate Division in reaching this decision was very largely influenced by the learned opinion of Mr. Justice Pryor in Wood v. Wood (7 Misc. 579), in which he said (at p. 582): By the comity of nations this court will give effect to rights- acquired under a foreign law, but such effect is only that which its own sovereign prescribes, the lex fori. Gutta Percha, etc., Co. v. Mayor, 108 N. Y. 276; Rice v. Harbeson, 63 id. 493, 502. The lex fori-— the law of this State — gives effect to a right of alimony acquired abroad only by an action for its recovery. 108 N. Y. 276, 279. If the right were qualified by any element of chancery jurisdiction, equity might aid its enforcement by its peculiar procedure, but such is not the case. The French judgment of divorce is not, and cannot be made, a New York judgment of divorce, but only to execute its own judgment of divorce does the State provide for sequestration and security. Code, § 1772. The French judgment is no more enforcible here by this process than any foreign judgment is enforcible by our domestic writ of execution.”

Both the Wood and the Lynde cases were decided obviously under section 1772 of the Code as it then read, limiting the remedies of security and sequestration solely to domestic decrees. The effect of the amendment, however, which broadened the scope of that section may be gathered from the following language of Mr. Justice Clarke in Williamson v. Williamson (169 App. Div. 597, 599): After that decision section 1772 of the Code was amended so as to provide that where a judgment rendered in another State upon the ground of adultery upon which an action has been brought in this State and judgment rendered therein requires the husband to provide for the education or maintenance of any of the children of a marriage, or for the support of his wife, the court may, in its discretion, apply the same remedies for enforcement as to a judgment rendered in this State.”

Does the amendment now embodied in section 1171 of the Civil Practice Act limit the relief to a decree obtained only in another State of the United States, or is it comprehensive enough to embrace that of any foreign country? It seems to me the term [8]*8State ” is used in both senses. It is often employed to denote a political community organized under a distinct government recognized and conformed to by the people as supreme; a commonwealth; a nation.” (Standard Dictionary.) Frequently the context of a statute indicates that the sense of a term thus employed is to be limited. But at times the purpose of the legislation reveals that a wider scope was clearly intended. For example, in construing a statute which relieved domestic holders of stock of a corporation of another State from additional taxation in the -home State upon their holdings, the court in Foster v. Stevens (63 Vt. 175, 184) said: “ We think the word ‘ state ’ employed in the statute should be construed to mean a foreign state as well as one of the United States. The statute was enacted for the relief and benefit of stockholders; therefore upon the reason of the law shares of stock in a foreign corporation should be exempt as well as those in a corporation located in one of the states of this Union.”

The purpose of the statute in question studied in the light of the status of foreign divorces in this jurisdiction will, therefore, reveal the scope of the amendment of 1904 (Chapter 318 of the Laws of that year) enacted after the Lynde decision. It may be noted that there is no distinction between the attitude of the courts of this State toward a divorce properly obtained in a foreign country and one so granted in a sister State of the Union. A decree of divorce duly obtained in a foreign land where both parties submitted to the jurisdiction, will indeed be held a complete dissolution of the marriage contract and recognized as such in every other country. This necessarily follows from the principle of the comity of nations. On the other hand, the recognition in this State of the validity of divorces thus obtained in other States of the Union is based not only on the ground of comity but on the full faith and credit ” clause of the Federal Constitution contained in article 4, section 1. (Leshinsky v. Leshinsky, 5 Misc. 495.) A person suing for arrears in alimony on the judgment obtained in another State of this country is not in any more favored position, as I view it, than one seeking such relief under a judgment obtained in a foreign land. When the plaintiff in the Lynde

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Bluebook (online)
129 Misc. 5, 220 N.Y.S. 579, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boissevain-v-boissevain-nysupct-1927.