O'Hara v. O'Hara

44 A.2d 169, 137 N.J. Eq. 369, 166 A.L.R. 365, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 434
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 169 (O'Hara v. O'Hara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Hara v. O'Hara, 44 A.2d 169, 137 N.J. Eq. 369, 166 A.L.R. 365, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 434 (N.J. 1945).

Opinion

*370 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Perskie, J.

The basic question for decision on the facts of this case is whether the general release, given by respondent to appellant, after the entry of final decree for absolute divorce from appellant, bars her asserted right to a modification of the existing order for her maintenance and support.

The following are the facts which give rise to the stated question.

In a former suit by respondent, Marion Helen O’Hara, for the support and maintenance of herself and the child of their marriage, Marion Irene O’Hara, then a minor, a final decree was entered on February 24th, 1937, fixing the alimony awarded respondent. Pursuant to the reservation in that decree for leave to apply for a variance or modification of alimony which respondent contemplated to invoke in the suit which she was about to institute against appellant, George Kenneth O’Hara, for an absolute divorce for the cause of desertion, respondent and appellant and Edward A. Markley, trustee for respondent, did, on February 21st, 1938, make and execute an agreement in writing composing appellant’s financial liability incidental to his marital relationship.

It would serve no useful purpose to detail the provisions of that lengthy agreement. It should suffice, in light of the posed question requiring decision, to state that, in addition to all other provisions, the agreement provided that appellant deposit $7,000 with the trustee who was to hold same in escrow pending the entry of the decree nisi in respondent’s contemplated suit for absolute divorce when the trustee was to pay it to respondent as therein provided, that appellant was to make weekly payments in the amounts and under.the contingencies provided for the support of respondent and their daughter, that respondent and the daughter were to have the right to reside in the premises known as 49 Sommer Avenue, Maplewood, New Jersey, and appellant was to pay all expenses for its upkeep, and if for any reason respondent and the daughter had to give up the premises, respondent was to be provided with additional funds to the extent of *371 $100 a month for the rental of a home elsewhere, that when the daughter shall have reached the age of twenty-one years, the property (49 Sommer Avenue) was to he deeded over to her, free and clear, as absolute owner thereof to do with it as she might please, that the payments m.ade and covenants satisfied by appellant under the agreement were to be taken and accepted by respondent “as settlement in foil for all alimony, temporary or permanent, support and maintenance, past, present or future” for herself and the daughter, that respondent agreed “to execute and deliver [to appellant] at the time of the taking of the final decree,” in her divorce action a “release” releasing him from any and all liability which might be based on rights incident to their marital relationship, and that this agreement was not to be binding upon tiie parties until same was approved by the Court of Chancery. If not approved, the moneys deposited with the trustee were to be returned to appellant; his obligations under the agreement were to come to an end, and there should remain in force only the provisions of the decree dated February 24th, 1937.

Respondent filed her suit for absolute divorce against appellant for the cause of desertion. The decree nisi was entered on April 20th, 1938. By the terms of that decree respondent and appellant were divorced from the bonds of matrimony. The decree nisi recites that the agreement of February 21st, 1938, was determined to be for the benefit of respondent and the daughter, suitable and adequate for their maintenance and support. Those determinations, so the decree recites, were the result of the consideration given to the agreement and investigation made of the position and circumstances of the parties, although there is nothing in the record to indicate the nature or manner of the investigation made. At all events, the agreement was approved and made part of the decree nisi. The final decree, entered on July 21st, 1938, made the decree nisi absolute and the marriage of the parties was dissolved accordingly. On July 25th, 1938, respondent executed and delivered to appellant the general release pursuant to her undertaking under the agreement of February 21st, 1938. It is admitted that appellant has met all of his *372 obligations under the stated agreement even though he questions the asserted obligation on his part to pay the taxes and upkeep of the Sommer Avenue property, after it had been conveyed to the daughter, pending the judicial determination thereof.

On June 6th, 1944, respondent filed a petition to modify the decree nisi (April 20th, 1938). Broadly stated, she alleged that she was fortv-three years of age, that she was under the doctor’s care and unable gainfully to bo employed, that she had exhausted all but $150 of the $7,000 fund for doctors’ bills and other expenses, that she was otherwise without money or other assets save an automobile valued at $100 and certain other property which she neither details nor values, and that since the making of the agreement, the law obliged her to pay an income tax on the alimony which she receives. She further alleged that appellant’s income, since the making of the agreement, has been greatly increased by “reason of the demise of his father,” the true amount of which was unknown to her. Accordingly, she prayed for the additional sum of $600 per annum to meet her income tax requirements, that appellant make discovery under oath of his income and assets in his name or held for him, that since her daughter with whom she lives had since become of age and had married, appellant should give respondent $100 a month as and for her rent and for the use and occupation of a home for her, that appellant should pay $75 a week for her support and maintenance instead of $55 a week, and that appellant should continue to pay the taxes and costs of the upkeep of the Sommer Avenue property.

Appellant answered denying respondent’s asserted right to a modification of the provisions of the decree nisi. He also set down three answers in lieu of plea. We are only concerned with the second which pleads the general release as a bar to the relief prayed for, save such obligations as may be recognized by virtue of the agreement of February 21st, 1938. Appellant also filed a counter-claim against respondent and against his daughter, Marion Irene Evans, and Waldo Evans, her husband, and appellant’s mother, Julia O’Hara, who were made parties to the suit by order of court. In his counter *373 claim appellant alleged, in substance, that he fully performed his obligations relying upon the validity of the agreement, the decree nisi and the final decree, that to perform his undertakings he was obliged to and did borrow moneys from his father and induced his mother to convey the Sommer Avenue property, which he neither owned nor in which he ever had a financial interest, to his daughter from whom no consideration passed for the conveyance, and that respondent, by instituting these jjroceedings, violated and repudiated her agreement and thus the consideration for his payment of the $7,000 failed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 169, 137 N.J. Eq. 369, 166 A.L.R. 365, 1945 N.J. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohara-v-ohara-nj-1945.