Levin v. Levin

22 A.2d 885, 130 N.J. Eq. 459
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 5, 1941
DocketDocket 139/282
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 A.2d 885 (Levin v. Levin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levin v. Levin, 22 A.2d 885, 130 N.J. Eq. 459 (N.J. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Complainant seeks to establish an equitable debt against the defendant in an amount equal to the moneys expended by complainant for medical services and expenses attending the last illness of complainant's mother, as well as for her burial expenses.

The complainant and defendant are father and son. Defendant and his wife, now deceased, separated in June of 1929 and continued to live apart thereafter. The wife died in July of 1941. The last illness of the deceased spouse started in November of 1940, when she was admitted to a hospital and underwent a major operation. She recovered from the effects of this operation but was compelled to return in June of 1941, where she remained until her death, caused by sarcoma of the uterus.

The allegation of the bill is that during the time of the wife's illness as aforesaid, she "had no means to provide" and defendant failed and refused to provide for her the expenses,c., incident to an attempt to cure her.

Defendant insists that during the separation of his wife and himself he made suitable provisions for the support and maintenance of the wife and his credit was not pledged by the wife, but that complainant expended the moneys in question "through filial sympathy, voluntarily, independent of agreement or contract, expressed or implied."

Defendant says that when the separation occurred the provision made for his wife's support was that he agreed to permit her to collect and retain all the rents and profits arising from the operation of two properties situate at 209 North New Hampshire Avenue and 229 South Congress Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey, "which properties were originally purchased by defendant with his own funds, and that since 1929 complainant's mother did collect said rents and profits and applied the money to her own use."

The evidence justifies a finding that as of the date of the separation between husband and wife, they were the owners by the entirety of the two properties above mentioned and that these properties had been acquired since the marriage of the parties in 1909; that during their married life and while *Page 461 the parties remained together, the wife rented rooms in both properties, and that the husband and wife, with their children, occupied very limited quarters in one of the properties in order to increase the income therefrom; that they otherwise lived frugally. The husband was a tailor and during a portion of the years 1920 and 1921 says he made in excess of $100 per week in his business. He says it was his money that purchased the real estate and I believe that it was. His contributions to the support of the household were not liberal but were augmented by the room rents. Checks of Mrs. Levin produced at the final hearing showed that the purchase price for the Congress Avenue property came through her bank account, but even so, I am satisfied that the moneys were actually those of the husband. It was he who at that time was the money-earner and not his wife. It is true that the wife took over the room rents, but I am satisfied that these moneys were used, in the main, for household expenses.

We are not particularly concerned with the above details, but direct our main inquiry as to whether, when the final separation came, the husband made arrangements to provide for the maintenance of the wife and children. As to the cause leading up to the separation, if the testimony of the husband is to be believed, he was justified in leaving the home. Of course, no living person can deny his version of the causes for separation, but even if the fault was his and he abandoned his wife unjustifiably, still, if he made suitable provision for her support and that of the children, this action will not lie.

Defendant says that shortly after he had left the home he and his wife agreed that she should have the income from the properties aforesaid for her support and that of the children, and that he would not return to the home again. No living person may deny this, even though the two boys (now men) did give some testimony which might throw some doubt on defendant's version. However, when we realize that from June, 1929, to the end of the mother's days, approximately twelve years, the mother and father remained apart, and that during all that time she managed the properties, collected the rents and kept them as her own, without a further demand *Page 462 on her part for assistance from the defendant, we must conclude that she did so either in accord with an express understanding, as contended for by the defendant, or at least under an implied understanding of that character. It is also quite evident that though the boys tried to make it appear otherwise, the income derived by the wife was ample for her needs and those of her children. She was enabled not only to provide a home and the necessities of life and clothing for herself and the two children, but she paid for a college education for one boy at the University of Pennsylvania and for the other boy at the University of Michigan, and in addition to this, accumulated a bank account which in 1933 was over $500, and also an interest in building and loan shares with a withdrawal value of approximately $600. In addition to this, she carried a $1,000 life insurance policy on her own life, with complainant as beneficiary, and may have and probably did insure the lives of the sons.

It is true that the sons testified that the income from the properties had diminished in 1940 and 1941, but even so, the mother did not seek greater assistance from the defendant and in so far as she was concerned, by her silence, gave assent to the continuance of the maintenance arrangement.

After the sons graduated from college, their financial assistance to the mother was not demanded by her and they contributed nothing more than would be expected as voluntary offerings, and these contributions, to their credit, were spontaneously made. The mother had weathered the storm of the college years and I am satisfied was able to carry on thereafter through her own resources, gained from the aforesaid properties and augmented by some other income from a property she had purchased, and it is sure that she did not seek out the husband for greater assistance.

It is argued that inasmuch as the wife was an owner by the entirety of the realty, she was not receiving support from the husband but was, in fact, earning her support and that of the children through her own work in managing the realty, renting rooms, c. She was undoubtedly contributing her work and efforts but she was assisted by the contribution of the husband's interest in the properties, and by his assent. *Page 463 Both the husband and wife were satisfied with the separation arrangement.

In this posture of affairs, the wife became ill in November of 1940 and on November 11th of that year entered a hospital and was operated upon, returning to her home in February of 1941. She returned to the hospital in June of 1941 and was operated upon again and died July 24th, 1941. During the interval between November and June, the wife was able to be about. She was ailing but was mentally capable and physically able to call upon defendant for financial assistance, which she never did, and during this same time she lived in the property and received its income, the amount of which does not appear, and she also received other income from property owned by her, as well as from additional property which she rented.

Complainant testified that he never talked with his mother about the expense of her treatment in the hospital or otherwise, so that she could not have pledged the credit of her husband therefor, and so that she did not even know, in fact, whether she was expected to eventually pay them herself.

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Related

Grieco v. Grieco
120 A.2d 260 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1956)
Levin v. Levine
24 A.2d 849 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 A.2d 885, 130 N.J. Eq. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levin-v-levin-njsuperctappdiv-1941.