Doe v. Doe

37 Misc. 2d 788, 234 N.Y.S.2d 688, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2272
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Misc. 2d 788 (Doe v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Doe, 37 Misc. 2d 788, 234 N.Y.S.2d 688, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2272 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Millard L. Midonick, J.

This memorandum is written for the purpose of extending the use of payroll deduction orders directed to employers for the support of wives and children of their employees.

This court is frequently faced by the undesirable alternatives of compelling a defaulting husband and father to comply with an order of support by committing him to jail forthwith (Family Ct. Act, § 454); by suspending such order of commitment on condition that the respondent post cash bond or other security and comply in the future (Family Ct. Act, § 455); by ordering probation for respondent under conditions of posting cash bond or other security, and by ordering commitment to jail for violation of conditions of probation (Family Ct. Act, §§ 454, 456); by requiring an undertaking with sufficient surety approved by the court, and for the want of sufficient security, committing the respondent to jail (Family Ct. Act, §§ 471, 479).

All alternatives to payroll deduction orders which result in jail commitments, are undesirable because of:

1. The adverse effect of confinement itself upon the respondent and his family.

2. The burden thrown upon the taxpayer of supporting the respondent’s dependents while he is unable to earn money.

3. The relative uncertainty of continuing compliance by respondent even if a Workhouse term is threatened.

The threat of confinement is in a substantial number of cases quite ineffective to control defaulting respondents because of personality inadequacies which manifest themselves in such overindulgence in alcohol, gambling, and other pursuits involving excessive spending, as to leave their dependents destitute.

The remedy of choice in many cases has been found to be the rechanneling of respondent’s pay at the payroll source, receiving directly from the employer such moneys in the Support Bureau [789]*789of the court, and paying over such funds to the dependents, under section 49-b of the Personal Property Law.

The use by this court of such payroll deduction orders and wage assignments has been curtailed because of the reluctance of the court to give employers a motive to discharge or lay off the employee respondent.

Testimony of such employees has revealed, however, that a large proportion of the ones who appear before this court in New York City are protected against unwarranted employer reprisals by labor union contracts and such finding can be expressly made as part of each order for the following reasons which are too lengthy to set out in each order:

1. Collective labor agreements, almost without exception, contain binding arbitration clauses.

2. Collective labor agreements, almost without exception, contain the provision in substance or in so many exact words, that no employee shall be discharged except for “good cause ” or “ just cause”, on pain of arbitration of a grievance which, if upheld, subjects the employer to an arbitrator’s enforeible and nonappealable award directing inevitable reinstatement and almost invariable back pay.

3. Any retailiation whatever against any respondent employee protected by such a standard labor agreement clause, merely because of a payroll deduction order is generally held by an arbitrator not to be sufficient cause for discipline of any kind, and the employer would foresee being faced with a grievance brought by the union, the result of which would be costly reinstatement with back pay. This is usually the plight of the employer who with perhaps some justification attempts to discharge as a “ nuisance ” an improvident or financially disorganized employee who is subjected to a multiplicity of garnishees. (Cf. Stone, “Labor-Management Contracts at Work ”, Harper’s, 1961, pp. 228, 229; American Machine & Foundry Corp. and United Automobile Workers, 17 Amer. Arbitration Assn. Rep. 6; Watkins and Jewelry Int. Union, 14 L A 787; Borg-Warner and United Automobile Workers, 14 L A 745.) No such reported decision favoring the employer has been found.

The present case is illustrative of most of the facets of this problem.

On August, 6, 1962 this matter, which has been active in this court for three years, came on for a hearing on allegations that the respondent father was $383 in arrears under an order of $19 per week plus $1 per week on arrears, for the support of his three children.

[790]*790The history of the proceeding indicates that respondent had been before this court in former hearings on 14 occasions since the inception of the case on August 8, 1959. Each hearing involved a complaint by the petitioning wife and mother of nonsupport of respondent’s children, born June 5, 1954, August 12, 1946 and November 16, 1947. Because of reluctance to endanger the employee’s job, prior to the August 6, 1962 wage assignment herein, none of the 14 previous hearings had resulted in invoicing the 1958 law authorizing wage deductions (L. 1958, ch. 659, enacting Personal Property Law, § 49-b).

In a case such as that now here, where a payroll deduction order does not run because the employer is situated in the State of New Jersey, a wage assignment by the employee respondent can be required.

This employee consented to and promptly made such assignment, and So ordered” was indorsed by the court. In the event of refusal by an employee to make a wage assignment on his out-of-State employer, the court can require such regularization of support by means of conditional suspended sentence, or probation on such condition. Such condition can be written in such a way as to protect an employee until five days after first default by the employer. The employee respondent is thus placed in the position that if he should quit or countermand his wage assignment (and in the case of a New York employer, if the employee should quit after a court payroll deduction order), the employee is subject to the revocation, for good cause shown, of the suspension of the order of commitment to jail (Family Ct. Act, § 455), or the revocation of probation, where circumstances warrant it, and resulting commitment to jail (Family Ct. Act, §§ 456, 454, subd. [a]).

The practice of asking employer approval of a payroll deduction order by a probation officer seems to result in triggering disapproval. While it may be of value in nonunion plants, the practice of making such an inquiry of a union employer is counterindieated.

The benefits from thus assuring a steady support directly from the employer wage source, whether it be a wage order directed to a New York State employer or a wage assignment directed to an out-of-State employer, are several: (a) unreliable employee respondents are no longer summoned into this court repeatedly, thus saving the time and effort of our judicial and nonjudieial personnel in unnecessary hearings; (b) wives and children dependent on court orders for the necessities of life are not repeatedly subjected to deprivation and uncertainty; [791]*791(c) large sums in public welfare funds will be saved annually if such respondents are thus successfully required to support their dependents, using this appropriate remedy rather than the relatively clumsy method of civil jail, which can cost the husband his job and the taxpayers the financial burden of the family unit.

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72 A.D.2d 9 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1979)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Misc. 2d 788, 234 N.Y.S.2d 688, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-doe-nycfamct-1962.