Hayes v. Hayes

74 Misc. 533, 134 N.Y.S. 482
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 74 Misc. 533 (Hayes v. Hayes) 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
Hayes v. Hayes, 74 Misc. 533, 134 N.Y.S. 482 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Maddox, J.

Defendant seeks a reargument of a motion upon which an order has been made and entered, holding him in contempt of court for failing to comply with its order directing the payment of alimony.

On the argument of that motion it was, among other things, urged, and counsel here contends, that the court was without jurisdiction to adjudge the defendant guilty of contempt for the non-payment of past due alimony, on the ground that the divorce action had been previously terminated by dismissal of the action, because of plaintiff’s default in appearing when the case was reached for trial.

As to the suggestion of condonation, that has been resolved against defendant’s contention. It is unnecessary to again go into that; but, if there had been any good reason for urging that claim, the defendant had his remedy — not to wait until charged with contumacious disobedience, but to have moved to be relieved from the operation of the alimony order. The other matters urged will not be gone into — only the jurisdictional question, the power and authority of the court to entertain the motion to punisli for contempt and to so adjudge the defendant if he be shown to be guilty thereof.

This action, to obtain a divorce, w.as commenced in 1906; issue was joined July tenth of that year; and, by an order bearing date July 25, 1906, duly served on defendant, he was directed to pay to plaintiff $15 “ each and every week ” during the pendency of the action as alimony.

In December, 1906, and again in October, 1908, proceedings to adjudge defendant in contempt for failing tó pay arrears of alimony, awarded by said order were instituted; and in' both proceedings defendant paid such arrearages before said motions were determined. In December, 1909, an application of like nature was resorted to; and the motion [535]*535was denied, but with leave to renew. On December 30, 1909, a similar proceeding was again instituted, plaintiff alleging defendant to be $1,080 in arrears of alimony; and the order to show cause was returnable on January 3, 1910, when the motion was adjourned to January nineteenth, which after argument was denied, hut again with leave to renew. Thus is shown the conduct of the defendant in his disregard and disobedience of the plain provisions of the order directing him to pay alimony.

That the court had authority to make the. alimony order was not questioned; and, even if, for the argument only, the court erred in making such order, then defendant’s remedy was by review, not by contumaciously disobeying its. direction.

The action was, it appears', dismissed upon plaintiff’s default on January 4, 1910, the day after the adjournment of the then pending proceeding, and judgment, of dismissal was entered on February 14, 1910.

It must be remembered that actions such as this are neither actions at law nor suits in equity, but are statutory actions modeled largely upon equity procedure. Both power and practice depend on the statute except that where the statute is silent the practice usually follows the rule in equity.’’ People ex rel. Levine v. Shea, 201 N. Y. 471-478.

■Section 1769 of the 'Code provides that, during the pend-ency of an action brought for a separation or a divorce, the court may by order require a husband, by way of alimony, to provide for the support of his wife. Such an order may be made only during the pendency of the action, during which period only is the wife entitled to support and maintenance by way of alimony' thus awarded, in other words, by way of temporary alimony. By sections 1759 and 1766, the court is authorized to make provision in and by the final judgment in such actions for payment of permanent alimony for the support and maintenance of the wife, having regard to the ' circumstances of the respective parties; and the husband’s marital duty, thus measured and fixed by the court, is continued.

Since Romaine v. Chauncey, 129 N. Y. 566, 570, was de[536]*536cided, it has been the settled law in this State that alimony, whether granted by an order pendente lite or by final judgment, when awarded, is not so much in the nature of the payment of a debt as in that of the performance of a duty. During the marriage the husband owes to the wife the duty of support and maintenance although owing her no debt in the legal sense of the word. * * * The divorce with its incidental allowance of alimony simply continues his duty beyond the decree and compels him to perform it, but does not change its nature. * * * The form and measure of the duty are indeed changed, but its substance remains unchanged. The allowance becomes a debt only in the sense that the general duty over which the defendant had a discretionary control has been changed into a specific duty over which, not he, but the court, presides.” See also Wetmore v. Wetmore, 149 N. Y. 520, 527, 528; People ex rel. Comrs. of Charities v. Cullen, 153 id. 629, 635, 636; Wilson v. Hinman, 182 id. 408, 411; Audubon v. Shufelt, 181 U. S. 575, 577-579; Wetmore v. Markoe, 196 id. 68, 73-76; Maisner v. Maisner, 62 App. Div. 286; also the dissenting opinion of Ingraham, J., with whom O’Brien, J., concurred, in Matter of Thrall, 12 id. 235, 238.

As said above it is not a debt in the legal sense of the word.” Arrears of alimony are not provable in bankruptcy or barred by the husband’s discharge therein (Audubon v. Shufelt, supra; Maisner v. Maisner, supra); and as held in the Thrall case, supra, a delinquent husband’s assignee for benefit of creditors may not by motion be compelled to pay, from the. assigned estate remaining after satisfying all claims of creditors, arrears of alimony awarded pendente lite. It is true that there the matrimonial action had been previously discontinued upon the wife’s consent and that Van Brunt, J., in the course of his opinion (page 237), said that “ all proceedings to compel the payment of alimony pendente lite must be taken in the action in which the order for alimony was granted; and there being no action, the order for the payment of alimony necessarily fell.” It will be found, however, that that learned justice concurred in the opinions in Mercer v. Mercer, 73 Hun, 192, and Shepard v. Shepard, 99 App. Div. 308, both referred to below.

[537]*537A judgment of dismissal of an action, as well as a final judgment, terminates the ordinary action at law and in equity; and the relation of attorney and client thereupon ceases, save as to the attorney’s authority within the specified period of time to discharge a money judgment. But, as said above, an action for separation or divorce is statutory in character and is not within either of the ordinary or usual classes of litigation. In matrimonial actions either form of judgment would, upon entry, terminate and end the duty of the husband, so measured and fixed by the court, thereafter to pay subsequently accruing alimony under an interlocutory order requiring such payment pendente lite.

We find that the provisions of subdivision 2, section 1759, of the Code contemplate an application or a proceeding in such an action at any time after final judgment ” to annul, vary or modify a direction in the judgment and likewise in section 1767 to revoke a judgment of separation.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Misc. 533, 134 N.Y.S. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-hayes-nysupct-1911.