Guyette v. Haley

286 A.D. 451, 144 N.Y.S.2d 493, 1955 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4059
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 21, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 286 A.D. 451 (Guyette v. Haley) 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
Guyette v. Haley, 286 A.D. 451, 144 N.Y.S.2d 493, 1955 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4059 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Bergan, J.

In 1943 Wilbur Joseph Guyette, Jr., and Lou Ada Dick were married at Denver, Colorado. Thereafter they lived in New York together. Two children were born in this State, one now about eleven years old and the other about seven years old. On December 28,1952, the parties separated. The wife took the two children with her and went to Colorado where she had resided before the marriage. The husband continued to reside in New York.

After the wife and the children had been in Colorado for several months, the wife instituted a proceeding in the District Court of Denver which has a general jurisdiction in Colorado which includes the authority to make provision for the care and custody of children. The proceeding resulted in a decree April 23, 1953, awarding custody and control of the children to the wife and directing the husband to pay $120 a month for the support of the children.

The wife then took the children to Wyoming, at a date which does not appear on the record before us, and there instituted in the Wyoming District Court an action for divorce against the husband. No personal jurisdiction of the husband was obtained by the Wyoming court and he did not appear in the action. On December 12, 1953, the Wyoming court entered a judgment of divorce against the husband dissolving the marriage. The [454]*454judgment further provided “ That the plaintiff be and she is hereby granted the full and complete care, custody and control of said two minor children ”.

During the pendency of the action for divorce in Wyoming there was pending in the New York Supreme Court, Clinton County, an action instituted by the husband for a judicial separation. A judgment by default was entered in the New York action in favor of the husband on December 30, 1953. Personal jurisdiction of the wife was not obtained by the New York court; she was served with process outside the State and she did not appear in the action. We are not advised when this action was instituted but we assume from the sequence of dates that both the Wyoming and the New York actions were pending in parallel courses together during some period before the entry of either judgment.

The New York judgment recited the finding that the wife had abandoned the husband and granted judgment of judicial separation on that ground. It adjudged that the plaintiff be, and he hereby is, awarded sole care, custody and control ” of the children. It is not disputed that the court found the wife as well as the husband to be a resident of New York and to have abandoned the husband in New York.

Within two months of the entry of the Wyoming judgment, the wife having remarried and alleging her residence to be in Denver, filed on February 4, 1954, a complaint in the Colorado District Court as Lou Ada Guyette Dovel for relief which becomes material in the appeal before us. The complaint shows the proceedings for custody both in Colorado and in Wyoming as well as the proceedings before the New York Supreme Court; allegés the husband to be in arrears under the earlier Colorado . decree in the sum of $960 and that the children, living in Colorado, are “ in dire need of the care, support and financial assistance ” ¡applied for and that the husband is able to provide such support.

The complaint asks the Colorado court to act as a court in the initiating state ” under the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act which both Colorado and New York have enacted (Colorado Rev. Stat. [1953], 43-2-1; L. 1951, ch. 151 [Colo.]; L. 1949, ch. 807, as amd. [N. Y.]) and to transmit the papers required by the reciprocal statutes to the Children’s Court of Clinton County and that the husband be required to pay for the support of the children.

The District Court ordered that copies of the wife’s complaint and certain other papers relating to the Colorado statute be [455]*455transmitted to the Clinton County Children’s Court “ for appropriate action under this act and under the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act * * * of New York ” and that the husband be compelled to furnish support.” This is in conformity with the procedural requirement of New York’s statute. (§ 6.) The underlying policy of the State so far as it is material here is expressed in section 3. It is that ‘ ‘ A husband in one state is hereby declared to be liable for the support of # * any child or children under seventeen years of age *' * * residing or found * * * in another state having substantially similar or reciprocal laws ”.

The statute sets up carefully framed safeguards by which the husband in New York may controvert the allegations of the complaint in the initiating State and authorizes the entry of such an order granting or denying a direction for support as may seem proper to the New York court on a fully developed record permitting examination and cross-examination of witnesses by deposition or interrogatories between the two States. (§ 6.)

The Clinton Children’s Court on receiving the Colorado order of reference issued a summons which was served upon the husband who appeared with counsel and objected to the jurisdiction of the court by virtue of the prior judgment of separation in the Supreme Court. While his motion for dismissal on this ground was pending undetermined, the present article 78 proceeding was instituted by the father ag’ainst the Children’s Court Judge to prohibit him from acting in the matter of support of the children.

A final order has been entered by the Special Term prohibiting the Children’s Court Judge from acting in the matter of the support of the children and restraining him from continuing jurisdiction ”. The final order of prohibition is without prejudice to the wife’s right to reapply for relief in the event the judgment of separation shall be modified in respect of the custody of the children. From this order the intervenor appeals.

The existence on the record of the outstanding New York judgment of judicial separation awarding the husband custody of the children creates the problem. Without it the court would at once proceed to make inquiry into the question of the husband’s ability and obligation to support the children in Colorado in pursuance of our undertaking under the terms and authority of the reciprocal statute to which this State has given adherence.

[456]*456The power of the New York Supreme Court to adjudicate the custody of children in an action between husband and wife is limited to a matrimonial action (Finlay v. Finlay, 240 N. Y. 429; Langerman v. Langerman, 303 N. Y. 465; Davis v. Davis, 75 N. Y. 221). Whether the court had power to grant the judgment of separation after the actual date of the Wyoming judgment of divorce without dealing directly with the jurisdiction of the Wyoming court becomes important here. We are required to afford full faith and credit to the Wyoming judgment (Williams v. North Carolina, 317 U. S. 287).

There is a narrowly circumscribed group of circumstances where the effect, the result, or the judicial remedy afforded by a prior New York judgment of separation between the parties will be deemed to survive a valid judgment of another State which terminates the marriage itself. We look into these cases to see if they may form an analogue in principle to the case before us.

In Estin v. Estin (296 N. Y. 308, affd.

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286 A.D. 451, 144 N.Y.S.2d 493, 1955 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guyette-v-haley-nyappdiv-1955.