B.S. v. F.B.

25 Misc. 3d 520
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 Misc. 3d 520 (B.S. v. F.B.) 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
B.S. v. F.B., 25 Misc. 3d 520 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

[521]*521OPINION OF THE COURT

Sam D. Walker, J.

The following opinion addresses issues raised by the parties in connection with motion sequence Nos. 1 and 2. Motion sequence No. 1 concerns plaintiff application for pendente lite relief, including an order directing that the defendant pay the mortgage, taxes, insurance and all carrying charges on the residence, utilities and maintenance of the property, and automobile expenses; an order granting plaintiff exclusive use and occupancy of the residence; an appraisal of the defendant’s pension, the residence and other retirement benefits; an order of interim attorney fees; an order that defendant pay plaintiff pendente lite maintenance; unreimbursed medical and dental expenses; an order that defendant maintain adequate life insurance naming plaintiff beneficiary thereof; and an order restraining defendant from disposing of any assets or property or from encumbering any asset other than that necessary in the ordinary course of business. Motion sequence No. 2 is defendant’s pre-answer motion to dismiss the complaint for divorce based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a valid cause of action.

Plaintiff B.S. and defendant EB. reside together in a single-family residence in Yonkers, New York. They have lived together for over 14 years and in 1994 they both participated in a Buddhist “marriage” ceremony. In October 2003 the parties entered into a “civil union” in the State of Vermont. Plaintiff by summons with notice and verified complaint commenced an action in Westchester County Supreme Court seeking dissolution of “the marriage between the parties” on Domestic Relations Law § 170 (1) grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment.

Plaintiff alleges that defendant is a self-employed artist and receives income in excess of $150,000 per year from family trusts. Plaintiff states that she has a disability that permits her to perform only part-time work on a sporadic basis. She is currently employed as a data collection associate with only negligible earnings and receives disability benefits $1,306 per month. Plaintiff further states that throughout the relationship defendant paid virtually all the household bills and covered the cost of travel and entertainment. Plaintiff contributed as she was able to and devoted herself to promoting defendant’s art, maintaining the household and caring for their dogs. In addition, plaintiff alleges that the house the parties reside in was titled in the name of a trust defendant established for plaintiff s benefit.

[522]*522Plaintiff alleges that during the course of their relationship, defendant became an alcoholic and on numerous occasions became abusive both verbally and physically towards plaintiff. Plaintiff states that defendant began an intimate relationship with another woman and in October 2008 defendant told plaintiff that she wanted to divorce and wanted plaintiff to move out of the house.

On March 30, 2009 defendant had plaintiff served with an eviction notice that alleged plaintiff was a “tenant at will” and demanded that plaintiff vacate the premises in Yonkers, New York on or before May 8, 2009.1 Plaintiff states that defendant was intoxicated at the time plaintiff was served with the termination notice and that defendant yelled and cursed at plaintiff. As plaintiff attempted to retreat into a bedroom, defendant forced her way into the room, grabbed plaintiff in a headlock and tried to take plaintiffs cell phone from her hand to prevent her from calling for help. On April 2, 2009 plaintiff filed a petition in Westchester County Family Court alleging a family offense. On the return date of the family offense petition, defendant appeared in Family Court in Yonkers and consented to the issuance of a permanent order of protection. The order contained “refrain from”2 but no “stay away” provisions, and required that the defendant/respondent “not use, possess or be under the influence of alcohol, or any illegal drugs or controlled substance in the home.”

Plaintiff then commenced this action seeking a divorce from defendant. By order to show cause for pendente lite relief, plaintiff sought an order directing defendant to pay the mortgage payments, real estate taxes, insurance, all carrying charges, utilities and other expenses associated with maintaining the parties’ residence. Plaintiff also sought exclusive use and occupancy of the residence, appraisals of the residence and of defendant’s pension and retirement benefits, interim counsel fees, and for defendant to pay to plaintiff a reasonable amount of pendente lite maintenance.

Defendant has appeared in this action and moved to dismiss plaintiffs complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and [523]*523failure to state a valid cause of action. Defendant does not deny the 14-year relationship with plaintiff, the New Mexico “marriage” ceremony or that the parties entered into a civil union in Vermont. Defendant instead characterizes plaintiffs action as a frivolous contrivance in order to attempt to steal defendant’s real and personal property and to avoid her eviction from defendant’s home. She states that plaintiff has no legal rights to any of defendant’s property and that plaintiff has not contributed anything to defendant’s property. In addition, defendant maintains that as the parties are not legally “married” any relationship she has with any other person is not adultery but rather “my own business.”

Defendant states in her motion to dismiss that New York does not recognize same-sex marriage. Defendant also argues that as there is no valid out-of-state marriage entered into by the parties that New York could recognize as a matter of comity, plaintiff’s complaint must be dismissed. Defendant also maintains that the parties’ Vermont civil union is void and unenforceable. Defendant points to Vermont Statutes Annotated, title 15, § 1202, which is the statutory authority for civil unions established in Vermont. The statute provides that for a civil union to be valid, the parties may not be a party to another civil union or marriage. Defendant states that since plaintiff alleges a preexisting New Mexico “marriage,” their civil union in Vermont is null and void ah initio.

In an affidavit in support of her application for pendente lite relief and in opposition to defendant’s motion to dismiss, plaintiff states that while defendant denies the legitimacy of their union, defendant does not and cannot deny the promises made by defendant and the mutual commitments they made to each other. Plaintiff rejects any claim by defendant that she is plaintiffs landlord and furthermore points to the additional promises made by defendant that she would always provide for plaintiff and that plaintiff would always have a roof over her head. In counsel’s affirmation in opposition, plaintiff raises for the first time, an alternative relief which is for dissolution of the civil union entered into between the parties in the state of Vermont.

Defendant’s pre-answer motion to dismiss requires a determination of whether this court has subject matter jurisdiction to entertain the complaint herein. Plaintiff seeks a judgment of divorce from defendant; however, as defendant submits, and plaintiff cannot refute, the parties have not married in any [524]*524state or country that has a statute, ordinance or law that permits persons of the same sex to legally marry. Plaintiff states in her complaint that the parties were married in a religious ceremony in 1994.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Misc. 3d 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bs-v-fb-nysupct-2009.