Graves v. Graves

177 Misc. 2d 358, 675 N.Y.S.2d 843, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 272
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 177 Misc. 2d 358 (Graves v. Graves) 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
Graves v. Graves, 177 Misc. 2d 358, 675 N.Y.S.2d 843, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 272 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Joseph J. Maltese, J.

The defendant mother by order to show cause moves for: (a) an upward modification of maintenance of this court’s pendente lite decision and order, dated October 14, 1997; (b) a judgment in arrears of $600; (c) a qualified domestic relations order [359]*359(QDRO) directing the automatic deduction of child support and maintenance from the plaintiffs pension; (d) an award of college tuition; (e) an award of counsel fees in the sum of $17,050; (f) sanctions; and (g) an order directing the plaintiff to cooperate in the refinancing of the marital home or naming Joan Graves as receiver of the property.

Factual Background

The parties were married on June 16, 1979. There is one child of the marriage, Gregory, age 18. The defendant mother is 44 years old. She receives approximately $847 per month from Social Security due to a disability. The plaintiff father is 54 years old and receives $3,749 per month from a New York Police Department three-quarter disability pension.

The plaintiff father commenced a divorce action on July 31, 1990. Litigation proceeded and discovery was had on this action. It appears that this action was abandoned by the plaintiff and a new action for divorce based on abandonment was started on February 10, 1996. This court on October 14, 1997 awarded the defendant $400 per month in temporary maintenance and $636 per month in child support. The court also ordered the plaintiff to pay his son’s high school tuition and ordered that college tuition would be paid pro rata based on the parties’ income limited by the tuition charges of the State University of New York or the City University of New York, whichever is greater.

On January 28, 1998, this court after trial dismissed the plaintiffs action. The plaintiff alleged that his wife abandoned him when she received a temporary order of protection from the Family Court barring him from the marital home. In this case the defendant wife did not use self-help, but proceeded correctly by obtaining an order of protection from the Family Court, rather than “locking out” the defendant as he alleged.

To say that a Family Court order of protection creates a cause of action is contrary to the intent of the Legislature.1 The claim of actual abandonment is created when there is an [360]*360unjustified, voluntary separation or departure with an intention on the part of the separating or departing spouse not to return (Bazant v Bazant, 80 AD2d 310 [4th Dept 1981]). While an action for abandonment also is created when one spouse unjustifiably excludes the other from the marital home, that is not the case here (Schine v Schine, 31 NY2d 113 [1972]). When a spouse, however, is justified by fear for her life or safety her action of barring her husband from the marital home by changing the locks is not an abandonment (Yaron v Yaron, 84 Misc 2d 644 [Sup Ct, NY County 1975]).

The Legislature did not create an action for divorce by authorizing the Family Court to issue temporary orders of protection. This court enunciated on the record that “It is ludicrous to take that position.” It now reiterates that finding. The public policy of this State as pronounced in its statutes, duly enacted by the Legislature and the Governor, has not created in Domestic Relations Law § 170 (2) a cause of action for divorce based upon the abandonment by the wife of the husband where she seeks the assistance of the Family Court which orders the husband removed from the marital home by way of an order of protection. To assert that such dramatic action by a court to protect a spouse from the harassment, abuse, or potential assault of the other spouse creates a cause of action in abandonment is absurd.

Rather than abandon this position, the plaintiff husband demanded a trial on the merits with the obvious result that his cause of action was dismissed for failure to make out a cause of action (CPLR 3211 [a] [7]; Domestic Relations Law § 170 [2]).

On June 2, 1998, the plaintiff father moved to Florida. The plaintiff may later seek to obtain a dissolution of the marriage in Florida. However, since the wife and child of the parties, together with the other marital assets, are all located in New York, this court will retain jurisdiction over the maintenance (alimony), child support, equitable distribution and other ancillary matters concerning the parties.

Postdismissal Relief

The Supreme Court of the State of New York is a State-wide court of unlimited original general jurisdiction (NY Const, art VI, § 7 [a]). The Supreme Court also has exclusive subject matter jurisdiction over divorce actions. While the issues of maintenance, child support, custody and visitation may be handled by the Family Court, especially where there is no action for divorce pending in the Supreme Court, the Supreme Court is not without power to adjudicate these issues.

[361]*361A court may make an award of maintenance, even permanent maintenance, notwithstanding the fact that it dismissed the plaintiffs divorce action (Domestic Relations Law § 236 [B] [8] [b]; King v King, 230 AD2d 775 [2d Dept 1996]; Dong Kim v Yong Ja Kim, 170 Misc 2d 968 [Sup Ct, Suffolk County 1996]). Additionally, the pendente lite order does not lapse upon the dismissal of the divorce action (King v King, supra).

Maintenance

At the time this court awarded temporary maintenance the defendant mother was receiving $424 per month more in Social Security disability than she is now. On May 7, 1998, her son reached 18 years old and the portion of her benefits attributable to him was terminated. The defendant mother currently receives $847 per month in Social Security. The defendant mother’s monthly expenses are $4,000. The defendant asks that this court increase her maintenance award by the $424 she “lost” when her son turned 18.

The plaintiff states that since his son will be living in a dormitory at Siena College she does not need this extra money which was for Gregory’s benefit. He also states that the defendant had worked as a store manager for a tanning and nail salon from September 1988 until July 1997 when she left to return to school at the Seymour Joseph Institute of American Sign Language. Attached as an exhibit to his motion is a copy of the defendant’s resume which lists her as the receptionist/ manager of Sun Sational Tanning and Nail Salon from September 1988 to July 1997.

The defendant contests the legitimacy of this resume. However, she does say in her reply papers that this document might have been obtained from her son’s hard-drive while the husband was fixing her son’s computer. Joan Graves states that she “prepared a resume that resembled the resume” which the plaintiff provided the court “for the sole purpose of meeting with an individual to volunteer as a sign language interpreter.” She states that she never worked at the Sun Sational Tanning and Nail Salon and attaches an affidavit from an owner of the salon swearing that she never worked there.

This court has insufficient evidence to impute any income to the wife. The amounts of “additional” money the defendant mother received from Social Security were for the benefit of the parties’ son. Since the parties’ son will no longer be living at home for the majority of the year and will be away at school, her request for an upward modification of maintenance is denied.

[362]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 Misc. 2d 358, 675 N.Y.S.2d 843, 1998 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-graves-nysupct-1998.