Seligmann v. Mandel

16 Misc. 2d 1026, 185 N.Y.S.2d 484, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4154
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 Misc. 2d 1026 (Seligmann v. Mandel) 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
Seligmann v. Mandel, 16 Misc. 2d 1026, 185 N.Y.S.2d 484, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4154 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Edgar J. Nathan, J.

Plaintiff brings this action to recover damages for unpaid installments claimed to be due under a separation agreement.

This agreement was entered into between the parties on November 29,1932, in the State of Illinois and was subsequently incorporated into a decree of divorce granted on December 30 of the same year. Custody of the children born of the marriage, a son, Leon Handel III, and daughter, Noel Handel Reid, then four and five years of age, respectively, was awarded to the plaintiff herein. Plaintiff has since remarried, as has defendant. Each of the two children are married and living apart from plaintiff in their respective homes.

The agreement, which is to be construed under the law of Illinois, provides for monthly support and maintenance payments to plaintiff for herself and the children, for the children’s education, and for medical expenses until the children’s marriage or their reaching the age of 25. In consideration of these payments, plaintiff agreed to provide a home for the children, together with reasonable maintenance and support. At such time as plaintiff remarried the monthly payments by defendant to her are reduced to $833.33 for the children only and continuing beyond their infancy. Paragraph 6 of article 3 of the agreement provides as follows: “ In the event that at any time hereafter, income shall be paid to the wife out of and from any inheritance, gift, trust or estate established or created for the benefit and use of either child, then the amount received by the wife for the use of the child from the income of such estate, [1029]*1029gift, trust or inheritance (established or created for the benefit of such child) shall be deductible from the amount to be paid to the wife by the husband, but only to the extent of Four Hundred Sixteen Dollars and Sixty-six Cents ($416.66) per month for each child for whom such income is so received by the wife for the use of such child.”

Plaintiff claims, and it is not disputed, that under the terms of the separation agreement she is entitled to receive the sum of $833.33 per month for the benefit of the two children, and that defendant has refused to make such payments since June, 1955. Defendant interposes by way of affirmative defense and counterclaim that he is entitled by the agreement to offset against the payments due thereunder, ‘ ‘ income from ’ ’ trusts established for the benefit of the children, the gifts or principal received by the children on the termination of the trusts, and profits realized on the sale of the securities comprising the principal of the trust. In addition, defendant claims an offset for miscellaneous cash gifts received by the children from plaintiff and her family over the years. Defendant’s answer also alleges an affirmative defense and counterclaim that plaintiff’s willful and fraudulent concealment of this ‘ ‘ income ’ ’ received by the children constitutes a breach of the contract, rendering it void in its entirety.

Defendant has withdrawn the third counterclaim whereby he claimed that plaintiff did not provide proper support and maintenance for the children.

The first and second counterclaims are based principally upon the trusts established on March 4, 1943 for the benefit of the two children by their maternal grandparents, the plaintiff being designated as a trustee. These trusts earned dividend income until they terminated on the children’s 21st birthdays, August 28, 1949 and March 25, 1948, respectively, when the securities comprising the principal thereof were distributed outright to the children together with the accumulated income less expenses. It is the alleged concealment of this trust income as well as other miscellaneous gifts which form the bases of the affirmative defenses and counterclaims. Assuming plaintiff failed to notify defendant of trust income in violation of an implied covenant to make such fact known, this would not constitute such a substantial breach of the terms of the separation agreement as to render it void in its entirety. This is especially so where the separation agreement covered other valuable property rights of the parties, in addition to the provision for maintenance and support. In any event, defendant elected to [1030]*1030continue to make his monthly payments under the agreement for at least two years after obtaining knowledge of some facts, which he now claims as a defense. It is clear, therefore, that he recognized the agreement as valid and subsisting and cannot now claim the agreement is completely void. (See Guhl v. Guhl, 376 IE. 100.)

Defendant contends further, however, that plaintiff’s breach of the implied covenant is, at the very least, a defense to this claim upon the defendant’s covenant to make monthly payments. In order for a breach of such an implied covenant, if any, to work a forfeiture of plaintiff’s benefits under another covenant, the respective covenants must be dependent upon one another, the breach must be substantial and it must have been committed in bad faith. (Smith v. Smith, 225 N. C. 189; Verdier v. Verdier, 133 Cal. App. 2d 325.)

Plaintiff was required to carry out all of the terms of the separation agreement in good faith. This included the duty to inform defendant of any facts within her knowledge which she might reasonably believe would entitle him to a reduction of the monthly payments. The evidence, however, fails to disclose that she had knowledge of such facts. Plaintiff, as trustee, executed a full power of attorney to her father, one of the settlors, who managed the trusts. While she signed the documents necessary to the administration of the trust, and must have realized that the trust was income producing, there was no direct knowledge on her part as to the terms of the trusts, the amounts involved, or the disposition of the trust income. The only knowledge attributable to her in this regard was that with which she is charged by virtue of her status as a trustee. Nor did the children know of the existence of the trusts or receive any income therefrom until the termination of the trusts, when the principal and accumulated income were paid over to them.

Under these circumstances, the evidence is insufficient to establish that plaintiff willfully concealed offset income under the agreement. Such evidence must be compelling to require a forfeiture of the rights under the agreement which plaintiff seeks to protect solely for the benefit of the children. Furthermore, the tendency of the Illinois courts is to avoid a forfeiture where a breach can be compensated by way of recoupment or setoff. (Foreman State Trust & Sav. Bank v. Tauber, 348 Ill. 280.) Defendant has failed to meet the burden of proving the second affirmative defense and second counterclaim, but may set off or recoup such sums as he may be entitled to under the first counterclaim.

[1031]*1031Defendant contends that under paragraph 6 of article 3 of the separation agreement {supra), he is permitted to deduct from payments due plaintiff thereunder the dividend income earned by the trusts as well as direct gifts to the children of the securities comprising the principal of the trust; the capital appreciation thereof; and other miscellaneous cash gifts over the years.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Misc. 2d 1026, 185 N.Y.S.2d 484, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seligmann-v-mandel-nysupct-1959.