Hodson v. Picker

159 Misc. 356, 287 N.Y.S. 642, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1118
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedMay 6, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 159 Misc. 356 (Hodson v. Picker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodson v. Picker, 159 Misc. 356, 287 N.Y.S. 642, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1118 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Panken, J.

This petition is made by the commissioner of public welfare of the city of New York on behalf of a dependent spouse for an order to direct the respondent, the wife of the dependent spouse, to provide for fair and reasonable support.

While the petition is made by the commissioner of public welfare of the city of New York, the petitioner in fact, however, is the husband of the respondent. This is the first petition presented to me wherein a husband asks for support from his wife. As far as I am able to ascertain, no proceeding has heretofore been commenced in the Domestic Relations Court of the City of New York by a husband for an order to require his wife to provide fair and reasonable support for him.

The facts, in so far as they are material to the determination of the motion to dismiss the petition is concerned, are as follows:

George Picker married the respondent on or about the 14th day of June, 1934, and they continued to live as husband and wife until December of 1935 in the borough and county of the Bronx, city and State of New York. In December of 1935 they separated. They are now residents in the said borough, county and State. It is not necessary to determine as to who was at fault in the separation that took place between husband and wife, since the basis of the petition is that the petitioner is a public charge, and that the primary obligation to support the petitioner rests with the respondent, and she has sufficient ability to do so.

On the motion to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction, the court assumes that the facts necessary to establish the right of the petitioner to fair and reasonable support from his wife are established.

The question to be passed upon in the first instance is one of law rather than one of fact. The factual problem will be passed upon after the question of law is resolved.

It is contended by the respondent that the proceeding herein cannot be maintained on behalf of George Picker either under section 683 of the Greater New York Charter or under section 123 of the Public Welfare Law. Section 125 of the Public Welfare Law reads: “ Liability of relatives to support. The husband, wife, father, mother, grandparent, child or grandchild, of a recipient of public relief or of a person liable to become in need of public relief shall, if of sufficient ability, be responsible for the support of such person. Step-parents shall in like manner be responsible for the support of minor step-children.”

The provisions of section 125 make no distinction between husband and wife for the responsibility for the maintenance and support of either husband or wife if husband or wife is a recipient [358]*358of public relief or is liable to become in need of public relief. In either instance if the husband or wife be of sufficient ability the responsibility to support the dependent rests in the first instance with either husband or wife as the case may be.

The respondent directs my attention that the petitioner proceeded under both section 683 of the Greater New York Charter as well as under section 125 of the Public Welfare Law. Section 683 of the Greater New York Charter provides: “ The parents, grandparents, children and grandchildren, and husband or wife, of sufficient ability, of a poor person who is insane, blind, old, lame, sick, impotent or decrepit so as to be unable by work to maintain himself, and the parents and grandparents of a destitute child must at their own charge support him in a manner sufficient to prevent him from being, or to avoid the liability of his becoming, a charge upon the public.”

The husband on whose behalf the petition herein is presented is not disabled, crippled, sick or unable to work. Because of that it is argued on behalf of the respondent that she is not required, if she were financially able, to support her husband.

Section 125 of the Public Welfare Law does not limit liability of a person to support a dependent to only such who are disabled, crippled, sick or unable to work. As I read section 125 of the Public Welfare Law, a wife is required to support her husband if such husband is a recipient of public relief or is liable to become in need of public relief. Whether the husband becomes a public charge or is likely to become a public charge because of having been disabled, crippled, sick or is unable to work is not determinative of the obligation under the said section. The controlling factor is, has the husband properly become a public charge, or is he likely to become a-public charge. If he has properly become a public charge, or is likely to become one, and the wife is in a position financially to provide for him, the duty devolves upon her to do so in the first instance. Only where a dependent has no such relatives as are enumerated in section 125 of the Public Welfare Law, able to provide and support him or her, then the obligation to support the dependent falls upon the community.

It has been argued that the duty to support a wife was always upon the husband both under the common law and continues under the legislation removing marital disabilities of the wife.

The obligation to support one’s wife and one’s family is well grounded in the law and the husband has always been held responsible for the support of his spouse.. That, even though the wife was of sufficient means to support herself and was possessed of a separate estate. (Young v. Valentine, 177 N. Y. 347.)

[359]*359That obligation rests on sound public policy and in furtherance of the continuance of the basis of civilized society — the family unit, Both for physiological and social-reasons, the wife and the mother has been intrusted from time immemorial with the home-making and child-caring duties. To properly discharge her duties imposed upon her by physiological factors and assumed by her because of social needs, the burden to find support for herself or her children is removed from her shoulders and naturally falls to the lot of the husband and father.

Do these sound considerations relieve a wife of the obligation imposed upon her by law to provide for a dependent husband? I think not. A dependent husband, if not cared for by his wife or other relatives having ability to do so, will of necessity become a public charge.

Aside from the provisions of law as set forth in section 125 of the Public Welfare Law, it would seem that the same public policy which imposes the duty upon the husband to support his wife when she is in need and even when she in not in need, requires the wife to support the dependent husband when he is in actual need.

With the emancipation of woman and the con erring upon her by government and society of rights equal with those of the man, she must also assume and respond to obligations. When public policy and the law places obligations upon a husband to provide for his wife, a reciprocal obligation should be assumed by the wife if she is able to do so.

In Young v. Valentine (supra, at p. 352) the court says: “There is no doubt that in this State, as between husband and wife, the primary obligation to provide for the support of one’s wife and children rests upon the husband, and that the wife is not bound to maintain her husband and children, even though she may have a separate estate.”

As between husband and wife both having ability to support each other there is no obligation on the part of the wife to support her husband and her children.

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Bluebook (online)
159 Misc. 356, 287 N.Y.S. 642, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodson-v-picker-nyfamct-1936.