Gore v. Gore

92 N.Y.S. 634
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 N.Y.S. 634 (Gore v. Gore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gore v. Gore, 92 N.Y.S. 634 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The object of the action is the annulment of marriage on the ground of defendant’s impotency. The Special Term denied the plaintiff temporary alimony, but granted an allowance. Defendant here questions, not the amount of the allowance, but the power of the court to grant it.

Notwithstanding the fact that the provisions.of the Code in terms authorize the granting of alimony and counsel fee only in actions for divorce or separation, the law is now settled in this state that the same power exists, in actions for the annulment of marriage, as incidental to the jurisdiction of the court over such actions. In Higgins v. Sharp, 164 N. Y. 4, 58 N. E. 9, the Court of Appeals has held:

“The Supreme Court, in an action against a wife to annul a ceremonial marriage, has, in a proper case, as an incident to its jurisdiction to entertain the action, power to grant alimony and counsel fees pendente lite, although the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, § 1742 et seq., authorizing and regulating actions to annul a marriage, are silent as to alimony and counsel fees.”

The practice seems to have been borrowed, according to the authorities, from the practice of the courts of England in matrimonial actions, whether for divorce or for annulment of marriage.

While the defendant does not contest the right of the court, under the authorities, to grant alimony or counsel fee where the suit is brought by the husband against the wife for annulment, and the wife defends, insisting upon the legality of the marriage, he contends that where the wife herself brings the suit, and asserts the invalidity of the marriage, and asks for its dissolution, she has no standing in court to demand either support during the pendency of the action, or suit money for the purpose of prosecuting the same.

[635]*635If there be any authority for the allowance of alimony and counsel fee in an action for the annulment of a marriage, I am at a loss . to see why, upon principle, it should not be allowed to this plaintiff. Her marriage is a perfectly valid marriage until the judgment of the court shall dissolve the same. She may elect to waive her right of annulment, in which case both husband and wife have correlative marital property rights. Even though she elect to ask for the annulment of the marriage, until that annulment she bears to the defendant the legal relation of wife, to which are attached the husband’s obligation of support and maintenance. In fact, the right of alimony and counsel fee seems to be incidental to that obligation on the part of the husband to support his wife. In Bishop on Marriage & Divorce (6th Ed.), in section 387a, the text reads:

“We saw, In the first volume, that among the wife’s necessaries may be reckoned 'provision for her protection in society.’ Within this principle, when such protection involves a litigation with her husband, a third person may render to her needful services therein, and, at law, collect pay for them of him.”

In section 392 the author further says:

“Whatever view is accepted of the questions discussed in the last four sections (the right of the wife to charge the husband for counsel fee as necessaries), the doctrine affords no adequate help to a wife proceeding for a divorce or defending against her husband’s divorce. What she needs is, not merely the right to pledge his credit, or to recover her costs at the end of the litigation; it is to use money in the suit, the same as does her husband; it is to stand before the tribunal, which administers one law alike to husband and wife, on an equal and common ground with him. This, we shall more fully see as we proceed, the law in most of our states does give her.”

In section 387 the author says:

“Natural justice and policy of the law alike demand that, in any litigation between husband and wife, they shall have equal facilities for presenting their case before the tribunal. This requires that they shall have equal command of funds. So that, if she is without means, the law having vested the acquisitions of the two in him, he should be compelled to furnish them to her to an extent rendering her his equal in the suit. The doctrine is a part of the same whereon proceeds temporary alimony. And so the courts hold."

In Jones v. Jones, 2 Law R., Courts of Probate & Divorce, 337, in discussing the question of alimony upon appeal, Mellor, J., says:

“As regards alimony, under such circumstances as the present, so long as the wife continues a wife, there is no real reason why she should not have alimony, and it is due to her until on the petition there is a final decision against her.”

Brett, J., in discussing the same question, says:

“I am of the same opinion. The husband being bound to supply his wife with necessaries, it is, in fact, for his relief that an order for alimony should be made. As to the question of costs, I very much doubt whether in the ecclesiastical courts, after all, the rule went further than that the costs were in the discretion of the court.”

In Ottaway v. Hamilton, 3 Law R., Common Pleas Division, 398, in discussing the question of the liability of the husband for costs [636]*636to the wife’s solicitor in an action brought by her against him for limited divorce, the court says:

“Nevertheless, I think that a wife has now the same power of pledging her husband’s credit for the costs’ due to her solicitor in a suit for dissolution of the marriage as she formerly had for those due to her proctor in a suit in the ecclesiastical courts for a separation.”

These authorities are cited for the purpose of showing that from the existence of the marital relation flows the obligation of the husband to pay the costs of a suit brought by the wife against him, and the right of the court, as incidental-to that obligation, to order the costs of the suit to be paid in advance. Until the judgment of nullity in this case, the obligation of the husband to furnish necessities to his wife is just as strong as in an action for a separation, and,, by analogy, would seem to follow the right of the court to require the defendant to pay to her the costs to enable her to prepare for the suit. In the English courts this right in an action for nullity brought by the wife seems to have been recognized. B. v. B., 9 Law R., Probate Division, 80; T. v. D., 1 Law R, Courts of Probate & Divorce, 126.

In the courts of this state there has been some disagreement in¡ the decision. In Allen v. Allen, 59 How. Prac. 27, Judge Donahue, at chambers, granted alimony and counsel fee to a wife in an action-against her husband to annul a marriage on the ground of physical incapacity. In Bloodgood v. Bloodgood, 59 How. Prac. 42, it is held at Special Term that such allowance was unauthorized in a similar case. In Meo v. Meo (Sup.) 2 N. Y. Supp. 569, Justice O’Brien, at Special Term, held that the court was not authorized to-grant an allowance for alimony and counsel fee in an action brought by the wife against the husband to dissolve the marriage on the ground of fraud. Both of the cases deñying the power of a court to grant alimony to the plaintiff seem to be based largely upon the dictum of Judge Rapallo in Griffin v. Griffin, 47 N. Y. 134. That was an action brought by the husband against the wife to have the marriage declared void by reason of her former marriage.

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Related

Wigder v. Wigder
188 A. 235 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1936)
Jones v. Brinsmade
93 N.Y.S. 674 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y.S. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gore-v-gore-nyappdiv-1905.