Hollinrake v. Hollinrake

40 Haw. 397, 1953 Haw. LEXIS 22
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1953
DocketNO. 2887.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 Haw. 397 (Hollinrake v. Hollinrake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollinrake v. Hollinrake, 40 Haw. 397, 1953 Haw. LEXIS 22 (haw 1953).

Opinion

*398 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

STAINBACK, J.

Petitioner herein filed a bill to establish a foreign decree of divorce as a decree in equity in this jurisdiction and for incidental relief.

The petition alleged in substance that the petitioner and the respondent were married in June, 1941; that respondent in November, 1950, being then a resident and citizen of the State of Nevada, instituted divorce proceedings against petitioner, in which proceedings petitioner appeared and filed answer; that on December 19, 1950, a decree of absolute divorce was awarded to respondent herein; a copy of the decree was attached to the petition and made a part thereof by reference. The petition further alleged that since the rendition of the said divorce decree respondent had removed from the State of Nevada and become a resident of the Territory of Hawaii; that the said decree had never been vacated, modified or set aside, and that respondent had failed and refused to comply with certain terms of the said divorce decree.

The decree of divorce recites, among other things, that petitioner and respondent on the 9th day of December, 1950, had entered into an agreement settling their property rights and making provision for the future support and maintenance of petitioner, and that the said agreement of the parties was by the terms of the divorce decree expressly approved, ratified and made a *399 part thereof; that the said decree by express provision reserved to the court of Nevada jurisdiction over the parties to modify provisions for the monthly support of petitioner pursuant to the agreement between the parties.

The provisions of the agreement between the parties incorporated in the divorce decree of the State of Nevada and thereby having the same force and effect as the decree (Richards v. Richards, 69 S. E. [2d] 911; Koster v. Koster, 81 A. [2d] 355) and alleged to have been breached by the respondent, are in substance that respondent should obtain within ninety days a 1951 Dodge automobile, fully insured, and pay for the same, paying not less than one third down and the balance within twenty-four months, and that if respondent were unable to secure such a car he should deliver to petitioner the Dodge automobile belonging to the business of the respondent and his partner; that commencing on the 5th day of January, 1951, and until respondent should have paid the full purchase price of said car, respondent should pay petitioner the sum of $100 per month for at least twenty-four months from January 5, 1951, and thereafter the sum of $150 per month, and that respondent should send a certain number of boxes of household goods to petitioner to any designated point in the United States.

Petitioner alleged that respondent had breached said agreement and said terms of the decree of divorce by failing and refusing to deliver to petitioner a 1951 Dodge automobile and certain boxes of personal effects and to make to petitioner the monthly payments specified in said divorce decree in the sum of $300. Petitioner alleged that by removal of the respondent from the State of Nevada she was unable to secure the enforcement of the said decree in that State; that she had no plain, adequate and complete remedy at law, and prayed that *400 the aforesaid decree of divorce entered in the State of Nevada be established as a foreign judgment and enforced in the manner provided by law, and that respondent be ordered and directed to comply with the terms and orders of the said decree, and that it be adjudged that there was now due and owing petitioner from respondent the sum of $300, her costs and attorney’s fees.

Respondent interposed a demurrer to the bill.

The court sustained the demurrer on the ground that petitioner had failed to state any grounds for relief in equity and had an adequate remedy at law. The petition was ordered dimissed without leave to amend.

The chancellor, in a very able and learned discussion of the authorities as to whether or not the courts of one State may establish in equity a decree of divorce awarded by the courts of another State, and upon principles of comity enforce it by equitable remedies, pointed out the marked conflict of the authorities upon this question. The chancellor further pointed out that the question was not one as to the full faith and credit to be accorded to the divorce decree of the State of Nevada under the provisions of the United States Constitution as the full faith and credit clause related only to the substance of the judgment of another State and not to the procedural manner of its enforcement, citing Lynde v. Lynde, 181 U. S. 183.

One of the grounds for sustaining the demurrer was that the petitioner had an adequate remedy at law as the installments of alimony accrued under the Nevada decree were final and not within the rule of Getz v. Getz, 30 Haw. 637; that these installments were a debt of record entitled to recognition of the courts of this Territory under the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution of the United States, and that petitioner would have an adequate remedy in the courts of law in the Ter *401 ritory with all the machinery to enforce such judgment as she might obtain.

Assuming that the remedy at law was adequate, the chancellor erred in dismissing the case without leave to amend; under our statute an action at law erroneously begun in equity should not be dismissed but transferred to the law side and be there proceeded with, with only such alterations in the pleadings as shall be essential. (B. L. H. 1945, § 12408.)

In dealing with enforcement of foreign judgments of divorce we first note that the Constitution of the United States (Art. 4, § 1; Code, § 1-401) provides: “Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Becords, and judicial Proceedings of every other State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Becords and Proceedings shall be proved, and the Effect thereof.”

Further, the Act of Congress provides that “judicial proceedings” may be proved or admitted in other courts of the United States and its territories and possessions by the attestation of the clerk and a certificate of the judge of the court that the attestation is in proper form, and that such judicial proceedings will have the same “full faith and credit” in every court within the United States and its territories and possessions as they have in the courts in such State or Territory or Possession from which they were taken.

The case of Barber v. Barber, 21 Howard 582, decided in 1858, is one of the earliest cases dealing with the enforcement of a decree of alimony in a State other than that in which the original decree was made. The case held that where a New York decree of divorce from bed and board allowed alimony to the wife and the husband removed to Wisconsin without having paid any part of the alimony or leaving any estate of any kind in New *402

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Related

Cooper v. Smith
776 P.2d 1178 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1989)
In Re Burns, for a Writ of Habeas Corpus
407 P.2d 885 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1965)
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41 Haw. 246 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1955)
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41 Haw. 106 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1955)
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41 Haw. 89 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Haw. 397, 1953 Haw. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollinrake-v-hollinrake-haw-1953.