Nichols v. Nichols
This text of 19 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 428 (Nichols v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff, in January, 1866, commenced an action to obtain 0 limited divorce from her husband in the City Court of Brooklyn upon charges of cruel and inhuman treatment by him to her. In March of that year the City Court made an order granting $500 counsel fee to plaintiff, $250 monthly for alimony and a gross sum of $1,000 to plaintiff to be paid within thirty days. The $1,00? has not been paid; only one-half of the counsel fee and only $500 for alimony, being for two months, have been paid.
In June, 1876, the plaintiff, who had then become a resident of the State of Connecticut, commenced her action in that State for the same cause, but asking for an absolute divorce which the laws of Connecticut give for cruel and inhuman treatment of a wife by a husband.
This action has been tried before a committee appointed under the laws of that State, who has made a report in favor of the plaintiff, finding the charges of cruel treatment proven and finding that the plaintiff is the proper person to have the care and custody of the children. No judgment has been entered upon this report as yet.
The plaintiff now seeks to collect the alimony and expenses awarded her under the City Court order. The defendant made a motion to vacate the order and to stay all proceedings in the City Court, unless the plaintiff discontinued the Connecticut action. The court denied the stay, allowed the money which became due under the order before June, 1876, to be collected at once, but stayed the operation of the order after June, 1876, with leave to plaintiff to move to enforce the payment should the circumstances of the case warrant the application.
I think the court erred in not vacating the order for alimony, [430]*430costs and the gross sum remaining unpaid. The order for alimony was an incident to the relief sought by the suit in the City Court. She has virtually abandoned that action and tried her cause in another tribunal. The relief she will be entitled to, if she succeeds, will' be greater than that allowed by our laws, and the- court of Connecticut may grant the wife, by the decree, one-third of defendant’s estate. While it is decided that only definitive judgments of another State bar proceedings for the same cause in this State, yet, upon an application to the discretion of the court based upon facts which show that possible injustice may operate therefrom, such court ought to stay or vacate an order until such time as it may be seen that no injustice can happen. If the same facts existed in this State and the plaintiff had commenced a suit in one county and obtained an order for alimony, and then had commenced and tried before a referee another action for the same cause in another county, I think it is clear that the court would vacate the order in the first suit unless the second was abandoned. The equity is the same in the present case, though inter-state law permits both actions.
The plaintiff should resort to one court or the other. She should not collect alimony and counsel fee in the City Court upon an application for a limited divorce, and at the same time obtain an absolute divorce on the same facts in Connecticut with possibly one-third of defendant’s estate awarded to her for her past and future support and maintenance.
I think the order should be reversed and an order granted staying proceedings on the order until the Connecticut suit is abandoned by the plaintiff. No costs to be allowed on this appeal.
Order reversed, without costs.
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19 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-nichols-nysupct-1877.