Merrick v. Merrick

194 N.E. 55, 266 N.Y. 120, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 891
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 194 N.E. 55 (Merrick v. Merrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrick v. Merrick, 194 N.E. 55, 266 N.Y. 120, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 891 (N.Y. 1934).

Opinions

O’Brien, J.

Respondent Elizabeth Merrick was the wife of William H. Merrick and in the year 1920 he obtained against her in this State a decree of absolute divorce. That decree forbade her to remarry during Merrick’s life. Power resided in the court, after the lapse *122 of three years from the rendition of the decree, to modify the judgment upon proof of defendant’s good conduct subsequent to the dissolution of the marriage (Dom. Rel. Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 14], § 8, as amd. by Laws 1919, ch. 265), but, without procuring such a modification, respondent in 1925, during the lifetime of Merrick, married appellant George F. Bartlett. The conclusion is justified that her omission was due merely to ignorance of the law.

Bartlett instituted an action to annul his marriage with respondent upon the ground that it was void by reason of the decree forbidding remarriage and upon the additional ground that he had fraudulently been induced to marry respondent by her misrepresentation that she had been plaintiff in the divorce action. During the pendency of the annulment action in May, 1933, respondent moved at Special Term 'for an order nunc pro tune as of November 16, 1925, permitting her marriage with Bartlett and on June 16, 1933, her motion was granted.

Irregularity in procedure may, of course, be corrected by orders nunc pro tune. (Mishkind-Feinberg Realty Co. v. Sidorsky, 189 N. Y. 402.) When a ruling has in fact been made but is improperly evidenced by a defective mandate, or by no mandate at all, an appropriate and suitable order or judgment which manifests the existence of a determination may subsequently be granted to take effect as of the date of such determination. It cannot record a fact as of a prior date when the fact did not then exist. (Guarantee Trust Co. v. Philadelphia, Reading & N. E. R. R. Co., 160 N. Y. 1, 7.) An order may not be made nunc pro tune which will supply a jurisdictional defect by requiring something to be done which has not been done. (Stock v. Mann, 255 N. Y. 100, 103.)

The validity of a marriage by respondent with appellant in November, 1925, depended upon a previous modification by the Supreme Court of the decree in Merrick v. Merrick, and no such modification had been *123 made. New rights, arising out of a matrimonial relationship, cannot be created by a judicial declaration in 1933 concerning an assumed fact which concededly did not exist in 1925 and the existence of which was an essential element of a lawful marriage.

The order of the Appellate Division and that of the Special Term should be reversed, without costs, the motion denied, the first, second and third questions answered in the negative and the fourth question not answered.

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Bluebook (online)
194 N.E. 55, 266 N.Y. 120, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrick-v-merrick-ny-1934.