Schwarzman v. Schwarzman

88 Misc. 2d 866, 388 N.Y.S.2d 993, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2763
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 2d 866 (Schwarzman v. Schwarzman) 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
Schwarzman v. Schwarzman, 88 Misc. 2d 866, 388 N.Y.S.2d 993, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2763 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Eli Wager, J.

This motion by plaintiff former husband is brought to (1) modify an award of child support contained in the judgment of divorce of this court entered September 5, 1975; (2) to obtain an accounting for all moneys paid to the defendant for child support and for an injunction against her using such moneys for other than the infant issue of the marriage; (3) enjoining the defendant from "attempting to change the religion of the infant issue of the marriage” and requiring religious education for the three oldest children; (4) [867]*867to enforce visitation provisions contained in the separation agreement; (5) requiring the defendant to advise the plaintiff of the hospitalization of any child of the parties; (6) modifying visitation by increasing the frequency of same; and for such other and further relief, etc. The motion was referred to this court for a hearing on the issues and during the course thereof the court denied the second branch of the motion for reasons that will be hereinafter discussed. The lawyers for both sides agreed that the fourth, fifth and sixth branches of the motion are amenable to settlement between them without the aid of the court or with the court’s assistance if necessary, and testimony was taken in connection therewith with the full expectation that the matter would not require resolution in the form of a judicial determination. There remain only the first and third branches of the motion which are the most troublesome and on which extensive proof was taken.

This is a marriage of more than nine years’ duration during which four daughters were born to the parties, the oldest of which is now 10 years old and the others 8, 6 Vi and 2, respectively. The judgment provided, inter alia, that custody of the children was awarded to the defendant wife, alimony was to be paid to her in the sum of $40 weekly for an annual total of $2,080 and child support in the total sum of $60 weekly totaling $3,120. The child support was allocated at $15 per week per child. The decree further provided specific days and hours of visitation and made reference to a stipulation and modification thereof between the parties without merging the same into the judgment, the terms and conditions thereof specifically to survive the judgment.

Since the entry of the divorce judgment on September 5, 1975 there have been evident changes of circumstances affecting both parties. The former wife remarried and now resides with her current husband and her four infant children of the parties. The plaintiff former husband has suffered reverses in his employment, losing a job and sustaining sharply diminished income. It is on the basis of . his diminished income that he seeks relief from that portion of the judgment which he is still obligated to meet: to wit, $60 weekly for his four children.

The evidence established that plaintiff’s annual gross income has declined $5,500 as a result of his loss of job. During the same period of time he was relieved of the obligation for the payment of alimony, which was a net out-of-pocket disbursement of $40 weekly or $2,080 per annum. It would [868]*868therefore appear that his diminished income is at least balanced by a diminished requirement for alimony expenditure. Indeed his reduced payment obligation corresponds in the same proportion to his loss of gross income, as did his former alimony/support payments to his former gross income.

Furthermore, when the court contemplates the cost of raising four infant children on Long Island under current economic conditions and any minimal standard of living, one must acknowledge that $15 weekly per child is a mere pittance. With this in mind, the court denied from the Bench the plaintiff’s application for an accounting from his former wife as to how that pittance was expended in behalf of each of his four children. Such a request defies common sense and this court will not allow such harassment.

Accordingly, that branch of the motion which requests a downward modification of child support is similarly denied.

There remains that portion of this motion which has caused the court great concern since it involves the present and future well-being of the four infant children of the parties, and deals specifically with their religious orientation and their upbringing. The factual pattern, though not unique by any means, presents a vexing question for this court’s determination.

The testimony discloses that the plaintiff and defendant were married at a time when she was in the early stages of pregnancy. She was born and raised a Roman Catholic, he was Jewish. Her uncontroverted testimony was that he demanded her conversion to Judaism as a precondition to their marriage. She agreed, undertook instruction in the reform branch of Judaism and was converted by a reform rabbi. The parties were married, and their four children were born and named in the traditional Jewish child-naming ceremony which involves a ritual conducted in the synagogue. During their years of marriage the husband and wife infrequently attended religious services, were not members of any Jewish congregation and at the time of their separation and divorce had not enrolled any of the children in Hebrew school. He testified that because of the restrictive hours of his visitation he was unable to take the children to religious services during his visitations with them.

Subsequent to the divorce the defendant remarried. Her present husband is a Roman Catholic and she promptly returned to the faith of her birth, disavowing her conversion to [869]*869Judaism. She and her second husband apparently attend church regularly and have begun to bring the children or some of them to church and instructing their children in Catholic religious practices and dogma. The father protests that by so doing she is violating their Jewish faith. He demands that they be raised in the Jewish religion and given Jewish religious instruction as they become of age. The two older children are apparently of an age suitable for religious instruction.

There was testimony by the wife that during the negotiations which terminated in a stipulation of settlement of the matrimonial action, which stipulation survives the judgment of divorce, there had been discussion between the parties and their lawyers, the essence of which was, that the father demanded the children be raised as Jews. The wife then indicated, and it was not contradicted, that she would never agree to such a provision, apparently in the knowledge that she intended to return to her Catholic faith. The parties proceeded to a divorce without such an agreement.

The question is therefore posed for the court to determine whether the father of these four girls may require their custodian mother to raise them in his faith and in the faith in which they were named, absent any agreement or decree requiring the same.

I

The father claims that the children are Jewish by reason of his prenuptial oral agreement with his former wife and by reason of their ritual induction into the Jewish faith shortly after birth. This contention compels the court to seek the guidance of religious authorities, not for the purpose of disposing of the issues before us which are wholly secular, but rather for the determination of the validity of the children’s rights, if any, to be brought up within their own religious identity. The whole body of Jewish religious law (Halacha) determines the rights, obligations and prerogatives attached to membership in that ancient faith.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 2d 866, 388 N.Y.S.2d 993, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwarzman-v-schwarzman-nysupct-1976.