Chue v. Clark

46 Misc. 3d 973, 999 N.Y.S.2d 676
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 46 Misc. 3d 973 (Chue v. Clark) 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
Chue v. Clark, 46 Misc. 3d 973, 999 N.Y.S.2d 676 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard A. Dollinger, J.

Foreign custody judgments have their own enforcement rules in New York but, at times, New York’s homegrown rules for evaluating justice and fairness in custody determinations carry the day in resolving a foreign national’s access to his children. In this matter, a father moves to enforce a judgment of divorce from Singapore which, according to the father, allows him unsupervised time with his two children. He seeks to have the judgment registered in New York, and further seeks contempt against his ex-wife (the mother) for wilfully interfering with his access to his children and other associated relief. The mother cross-moves to vacate the Singapore divorce decree, and for other associated relief.

In 2005 the couple were married in Singapore. For six years, the couple resided in Singapore where the father’s family resides. The couple’s two children were born in Singapore. In 2011, the wife announced that she wanted to return to Rochester, her family’s home. The husband avers that he agreed to permit the relocation provided he had “liberal and unhampered” access to this children “whenever I traveled to New York to visit” and provided further that they would occasionally visit him in Singapore, “where my entire family resides.” The husband provides no further specifics on the extent of the alleged agreement with his wife regarding his access to his children after they returned to the United States. The husband describes this arrangement as an oral agreement between himself and his ex-wife verbalized in the fall of 2011. There is no evidence in this record of any written agreement between the husband and wife setting forth the “liberal and unhampered” visitation.

In September 2011, the husband commenced a divorce action in Singapore under Singapore law. In his application to this [976]*976court, the husband includes a “writ of divorce,” filed with the Singapore courts on October 19, 2011. The writ is addressed to the wife and states that a writ of summons was issued by the husband against the wife. The writ states that a series of documents were delivered with the writ.1 Among the documents delivered with the writ was a “proposed parenting plan.” The parenting plan contains, in parentheses, the words “(by plaintiff [father]).” The plan describes the children and includes a section marked as “current arrangements” and when describing those arrangements states, “there is currently no fixed access.” In the “proposed arrangements” section, the parenting plan proposed by the father states that the wife will have “care and control” of the children and the father will have “reasonable access.”2 In the text of the writ of divorce, the wife is given the option, if she disagrees with the “proposed parenting plan,” to “state your own proposed arrangements for the children,” file the alternate proposal with the court, and serve a copy of the proposal upon the husband’s attorney. The papers delivered with the writ also contain another proposed pleading entitled “defendant’s agreement to proposed parenting plan (by plaintiff [father]).” In this document, the first paragraph states that the defendant wife “agree[s] with the following orders sought in paragraph 4 of the Proposed parenting plan (by plaintiff [father]).” This document includes blank spaces for the wife’s name, her signature, passport number and date. In the documents before this court, this document is unsigned. There is no allegation before this court that the wife signed this document. The wife does not dispute that she received a copy of this writ.

[977]*977As part of the litigation, the wife went with her husband to an attorney, where she signed a consent to grant judgment on three years’ separation on October 19, 2011—the same day that the writ was filed with the Singapore courts. The “consent” document is a single page, and the wife’s signature is not notarized. The wife acknowledges that she signed the document and does not dispute that the signature on the document is authentic. The document simply states that the wife “consented] to the judgment being granted.” The document makes no reference to any other document. Two days after she signed the consent, the wife was sent an email from the husband’s attorneys. The email stated that the papers had been approved for filing and invited the wife to come to the attorney’s office to “accept the papers” and sign the acknowledgment of service and a “memorandum of appearance.” The wife has produced a blank copy of the acknowledgment of service and the memorandum of appearance. There is no evidence before this court that the wife signed either document. However, according to her affidavit before this court, on October 27, 2011, she went to her husband’s attorney’s office and signed a memorandum of appearance which she acknowledges stated that she would not contest the divorce. The wife never mentions the acknowledgment of service. She admits that she had “agreed to the terms of the proposed parenting plan,” but there is no evidence that she signed any document indicating her explicit approval. She states that she “had very little choice as I had no money.”

Three days later, on October 30, 2011, the wife left Singapore and took her children with her. What followed in Singapore is undisputed. The consent to grant judgment, signed by the wife, was converted into an “interim judgment” on November 17, 2011. Neither party was present when the interim judgment was rendered. The judgment reads that “further orders” were made by the judge “by consent.” The document gives no evidence regarding what was meant “by consent” and there is no reference to any other document. The judgment gave “care and control” of the children to the wife and then indicated that the wife could remove the children from Singapore.3 The judgment gave the husband the “liberal unsupervised visitation” including overnight access, reasonable vacation periods during holidays, electronic access through Skype, and other means and the right for the husband to bring the children back to Singa[978]*978pore on vacation. He was required to give two weeks’ notice of his visitation and to pay the travel expenses. There is no document before this court, signed by the wife, in which she agreed to these specific terms. Thereafter, a final judgment of divorce was issued in 2012. The final judgment made no reference to the father’s visitation or consent by either party—it simply dissolved the marriage.

In his current application, the husband argues that the wife has denied him access to the children, interfered with potential visits with him in Rochester (when the father came to see his children) by scheduling conflicting events, interrupted telephone communication, and denied him access to the children’s report cards and other school information. The husband contends that when he comes to Rochester to visit his children, the mother refuses to allow the children to spend overnights with him. He also alleges that his ex-wife denied him access on Christmas Day in 2011, denied overnight visits on Easter 2012 and 2013, denied overnight visits during the summer of 2013, and denied reasonable access to the children on Christmas 2013. The husband alleges that the wife limits Skyping or other electronic communication to only once a week. Lastly, the husband argues the wife has not permitted his children to visit him in Singapore.

In the mother’s response, she initially seeks to vacate the Singapore decree of divorce, claiming that she was a victim of domestic violence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Misc. 3d 973, 999 N.Y.S.2d 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chue-v-clark-nysupct-2014.