Knight v. Knight

31 A.D.2d 267, 296 N.Y.S.2d 1007, 1969 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4669
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 3, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 31 A.D.2d 267 (Knight v. Knight) 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
Knight v. Knight, 31 A.D.2d 267, 296 N.Y.S.2d 1007, 1969 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4669 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinions

Hopkies, J.

The action is in partition. The plaintiffs are the children of the defendant. They claim to be tenants in common with the defendant in the one-family home acquired in 1947 by the defendant and their mother, now deceased, as tenants by the entirety. Their interests are alleged to have arisen in their capacity as distributees of the estate of their mother, who died intestate.

If no more' were contained in the complaint, it would have to be dismissed as insufficient. On the death of one tenant by the entirety, the other becomes the sole owner of the property through the original grant (Hiles v. Fisher, 144 N. Y. 306; Matter of Klatzl, 216 N. Y. 83). But the complaint alleges more.

The plaintiffs state that in 1959 the defendant obtained a Mexican divorce against their mother, dissolving the marriage, and that thereafter he married another woman. Hence, at that time, so the complaint alleges, the defendant and their mother were transformed into tenants in common of the property, as the divorce, in dissolving the marriage bond, destroyed as w:ell the tenancy by the entirety dependent on the unity of the spouses under their marriage (Yax v. Yax, 240 N. Y. 590; Hosford v. Hosford, 273 App. Div. 659), and so authorized the partition of the property (Chew v. Sheldon, 214 N. Y. 344, 348).

[269]*269The defendant does not share this conception of his legal rights. He moved to dismiss the complaint (CPLR 3012, subd. [b]; 3211, subd. [a], par. 7; Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, § 901), stating by affidavit that the Mexican divorce he had obtained was ex parte. He argued that the divorce was therefore powerless to affect the title of the property held by himself and his first wife as tenants by the entirety.

Moreover, he alleged that his first wife, subsequent to the divorce, had brought proceedings against him, as a result of which in 1962 a County Court of Hew Jersey had issued an order directing him to pay $100 every two weeks for her support.1 Indeed, according to him, she had consistently contended during her lifetime that her marriage to him remained in full force.

The plaintiffs did not dispute the defendant’s allegations of fact. Bather, they opposed the motion on the theory that the defendant, having procured the divorce, having remarried in reliance on the divorce, and having failed since the divorce to support their mother or them properly, was estopped from now asserting that the divorce was invalid.

Special Term denied the motion, holding that the complaint stated a cause of action.

The defendant’s appeal reiterates his claim before Special Term that the void divorce could not alter the tenancy by the entirety. Moreover, he resists the charge of estoppel against him, first by maintaining that no grounds for its establishment exist, and second by countering with a contention that the plaintiffs are themselves estopped from pleading the validity of the divorce as a consequence of the conduct of their mother who had always challenged it.

The defendant’s first argument has the attraction of logic. If the void decree of divorce is useless for any purpose, then the tenancy by the entirety could not be reduced to a tenancy in common and the plaintiffs’ suit fails (Vollaro v. Vollaro, 144 App. Div. 242). Yet the argument cuts against the grain of the realities. The defendant invoked the jurisdiction of the Mexican court for a divorce, after abandoning his wife and the marital abode; he caused the entry of the decree granting the divorce and did not return to his wife; and shortly after the entry of the decree he remarried. Though logic may be [270]*270on the side of the defendant, the truth is that he has acted as though his marriage with the plaintiffs ’ mother had ended with the entry of the Mexican decree.

Our courts have not treated the maneuvers of disenchanted spouses in seeking foreign divorces with the exercise of such an unyielding and lifeless logic. The defendant’s premise that the foreign decree is void for all purposes mistakes the rule. A foreign decree, though void for lack of jurisdiction, may still form the body of an estoppel against the party who caused it to be issued as to a private claim or demand arising out of the marriage (Starbuck v. Starbuck, 173 N. Y. 503; Hynes v. Title Guar. & Trust Co., 273 N. Y. 612).2 The defendant’s premise in point of law is strictly confined to the impotence of the decree to affect the marital status itself (Querze v. Querze, 290 N. Y. 13, 17; cf. Lynn v. Lynn, 302 N. Y. 193, 200-203; Vanderbilt v. Vanderbilt, 1 N Y 2d 342, 351). The distinction, though criticized (Clark, Estoppel Against Jurisdictional Attack on Decrees of Divorce, 70 Yale L. J. 45, 50), recognizes the difference, for example, between a claim for alimony as arising out of the marital status, and thus without the benefit of estoppel (Vose v. Vose, 280 N. Y. 779), and a claim for a distributive share of a deceased spouse’s estate as a private demand and thus entitled to the benefit of estoppel (Starbuck v. Starbuck, supra).3

Indeed, the rule in Starbuck has hardened into public policy by the enactment of section 50 of the former Decedent Estate Law4 (L. 1965, ch. 245; § 1), clause (b) of which (now EPTL 5-1.2, subd. [a], par. [3]) removed from a spouse who had obtained a foreign divorce not recognized as valid in this State the right to a distributive share of his deceased spouse’s estate and other rights conferred by statute on a surviving spouse (cf. Matter of Rathscheck, 300 N. Y. 346, 350-351).5 Although the right of exclusive title of a surviving tenant by the entirety was not derived from the former Decedent Estate. Law, it [271]*271retained many of the characteristics of the rights which sprang from the statute in that title to the property passed on the death of a spouse. On the other hand, the right of a surviving spouse under the tenancy is not a statutory incident of the marital status as is alimony (cf. Querze v. Querze, 290 N. Y. 13, 17, supra).

The defendant focuses his attack on the use of estoppel against him hy noting that his first wife did not change her position to her prejudice in reliance on his act in procuring the invalid divorce. A true estoppel, he urges, requires a change in position and consequent injury by the party claiming estoppel. True, an equitable estoppel often embraces the elements of reliance and prejudice, particularly in commercial transactions (see, e.g., Byrne v. Barrett, 268 N. Y. 199; First Nat. Bank of Morrisville v. Starke Design, 11 A D 2d 595). But the estoppel which arises from the inconsistent positions taken by a party in present or subsequent litigation assumes a different character. “ A party cannot avail himself of a defense or of a right to recover by means of an invalid decree or judgment obtained by him; hut, on the other hand, he may not be heard to impeach a decree or judgment which he himself has procured to he entered in his own favor ” (Starbuck v. Starbuck, 173 N. Y. 503, 508, supra; cf. Horn v. Bennett, 253 App. Div. 630, 631).

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Bluebook (online)
31 A.D.2d 267, 296 N.Y.S.2d 1007, 1969 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-knight-nyappdiv-1969.