Peng v. Su Hsieh

31 Misc. 3d 528
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 Misc. 3d 528 (Peng v. Su Hsieh) 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.

Bluebook
Peng v. Su Hsieh, 31 Misc. 3d 528 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Matthew F. Cooper, J.

The issue before the court is whether this State must accord full faith and credit to a judgment of divorce previously entered in California where the petitioner in that proceeding appeared for and lost a motion to dismiss on personal jurisdiction grounds and later failed to appear at trial. Defendant husband moves for summary judgment on his counterclaim interposed in this action for divorce that was commenced in New York by plaintiff wife. Defendant seeks dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint on the basis of a final judgment of divorce having been previously entered by a California court (California judgment). He also seeks to enforce the California judgment in this state. Plaintiff opposes this application and asserts that the California judgment is unenforceable as to the distribution of marital property located in New York.

The parties were married in Taipei City, Taiwan, in 1999 and soon thereafter emigrated to the United States. While in the United States, the parties resided and acquired property in both California and New York. In August 2007, plaintiff commenced an action for divorce in Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles (California action and California court) citing irreconcilable differences as grounds.

Prior to plaintiffs commencement of the California action, the parties executed two separate separation agreements in anticipation of their impending divorce. The first agreement was executed in June 2006 in New York (New York agreement). This agreement references plaintiffs residence as New York City and expresses, all too prematurely, that it is an attempt to resolve all outstanding issues relating to the marriage.1 On August 14, 2008, the parties entered the second agreement in California (California agreement). The California agreement recites that the plaintiff “has resided in California for a period [530]*530in excess of 90 days prior to the filing of the Petition for Dissolution of Marriage” and that an action for a judgment of dissolution of marriage was pending between the parties in California. The California agreement was set aside by decision of October 30, 2009, on grounds of fraud and undue influence based on, among other things, that court’s finding that plaintiff forged defendant’s initials.

After issue was joined in the California action, plaintiff moved for and the court granted her motion to discontinue the California action on August 27, 2008 without prejudice. Plaintiff, asserting domicile in New York, then filed a new action for divorce in September 2008 in this state. After plaintiff commenced the New York action, the California court clerk’s office reinstated the previously discontinued divorce action. Plaintiff then moved to dismiss the California action based on lack of personal jurisdiction over herself and forum non conveniens.2 Plaintiffs application was denied after a hearing, with the California court finding that California was a more convenient forum and that by filing the action for divorce in California, plaintiff implicitly admitted to residency in California for at least six months, as required to commence an action for divorce under California law. The court further enjoined plaintiff from pursuing the New York action.

Trial in the California action was held on July 23-24 and August 20-21, 2009 in the voluntary absence of the plaintiff after she appeared by counsel on the motion to dismiss and failed to appear at a mandatory pretrial conference. On October 30, 2009, the California court entered a final judgment of dissolution of the marriage between the parties awarding defendant exclusive right and authority to possess and manage the parties’ New York City property located at 315 West 85th Street (New York property) and directed plaintiff to pay defendant $1,325,302.70. In the statement of decision filed concurrently with the California judgment, the court found that the parties’ California agreement, as it related to the New York property, was invalid as it confirmed a fraudulent transfer induced by plaintiffs misrepresentations to the defendant. The California court further found that it had personal and subject matter ju[531]*531risdiction over the plaintiff in light of plaintiffs admission in the petition commencing the action that “petitioner has been a resident of this State for at least six months and of this county for at least three months immediately preceding the filing of this Petition for Dissolution of Marriage,” her California Department of Motor Vehicles identification card listing the parties’ Rosemead, California property as her residence, and her admission of California residency in an answer to a previously commenced fraud action between the parties. The court, basing its determination on the testimony of the defendant, four witnesses, 75 exhibits, numerous written submissions filed by the plaintiff, and plaintiffs prior appearances, further found the plaintiff not credible, adjudged her in contempt of court for failing to comply with multiple orders of the court, sentenced her to serve five days in prison and to complete 120 hours of community service, and noted her general “disdain for court orders and for the judicial process.” (Peng v Hsieh [Super Ct, Los Angeles County, Cal, 2009, Meisinger, J.].)

Plaintiffs appeal of the California judgment is currently pending before the California Court of Appeal. No stay of the trial decision was granted. The California judgment was filed as a foreign judgment with the New York County Clerk’s office on November 10, 2009, in accordance with CPLR 5402.

The underlying complaint in the New York action for divorce was filed on September 2, 2008, when plaintiff allegedly thought the California action had been dismissed and marked off the calendar. Defendant interposed an answer and counterclaim to the New York action in January 2010 seeking to enforce the California judgment and dismiss the action. Defendant now moves by order to show cause to enforce those provisions of the California judgment awarding him title to the New York property and a money judgment of $1,325,302.70, to restrain plaintiff from commencing any further divorce actions against him, and for summary judgment to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint on grounds of res judicata and full faith and credit.

It is a firm principle of our federalist system of government that full faith and credit must be given by each state to those “public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State.” (US Const, art IV § 1.) This doctrine is premised on the notion that

“the judgment of a state court should have the same credit, validity and effect, in every other court in the United States, which it had in the state where it [532]*532was pronounced, and that whatever pleas would be good to a suit thereon in such state, and none others, could be pleaded in any other court in the United States.” (Hampton v McConnel, 3 Wheat [16 US] 234, 235 [1818]; see also Williams v North Carolina, 317 US 287 [1942].)

Accordingly, out-of-state judgments give res judicata effect to those issues conclusively decided, thereby avoiding relitigation of those previously decided issues in any other state. (See Cadle Co. v Tri-Angle Assoc., 18 AD3d 100, 103 [1st Dept 2005] [“The constitutional requirement of full faith and credit precludes any inquiry into the merits of the judgment, the logic or consistency of the decision underlying it or the validity of the legal principles on which it is based”];

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Bluebook (online)
31 Misc. 3d 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peng-v-su-hsieh-nysupct-2011.