Stoddard v. . Stoddard

124 N.E. 91, 227 N.Y. 13, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 640
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 124 N.E. 91 (Stoddard v. . Stoddard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoddard v. . Stoddard, 124 N.E. 91, 227 N.Y. 13, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 640 (N.Y. 1919).

Opinion

Hiscock, Ch. J.

The plaintiff and defendant, being husband and wife and then living apart, several years ago entered into a separation agreement which has been assumed to be valid. It contained many provisions of the general character usually found in such an agreement and amongst them those to the effect that plaintiff each *15 month should pay to the defendant the sum of $700, $500 to be used for her own support and maintenance and $200 to be expended by her for the support and maintenance of two children. In -addition to these usual provisions it contained an unusual one which read as follows: In the event that there should be any material change in the circumstances of either of the parties hereto either party hereto shall have the right to apply to any court of competent jurisdiction for a modification of the provisions herein regarding the amounts to be paid hereunder by the party of the first part (the husband) to the party of the second part hereto (the wife).”

After making the payments provided in said agreement for several years plaintiff brought this action wherein in addition to allegations of a formal nature and concerning the sufficiency of which no question arises, he alleged in substance that his income had become greatly impaired and that of his wife considerably increased, that he was no longer able to make the payments in the agreement provided and had attempted to procure his wife to accept those of a lesser amount but that she had refused so to do, insisting that she would bring actions from month to month to enforce payment of the sums mentioned in the agreement and that in fact she had already brought one or more of such actions. The separation agreement was set forth in full and upon the allegations stated and in reliance upon the clause which has been quoted he in substance prayed relief that the amount required by him to be paid under the original terms of the agreement might be reduced in amount and, if the court should determine that it was without jurisdiction to grant this relief, that it might be adjudged that the separation agreement was no longer in force and the defendant be enjoined from prosecuting any action thereunder against the plaintiff.

By demurrer the defendant has presented the question whether this complaint states a cause of action and witlj *16 the answer given by the order appealed from that it does not we agree.

Originally there seems to have been considerable uncertainty and debate concerning the character to be ascribed to this action as bearing on the right of plaintiff to maintain it. Our consideration, however, is freed from the necessity for much of this discussion by the concessions now made and the position now assumed by the plaintiff.

It is conceded, as it undoubtedly .otherwise must have been held, that this is not a matrimonial action or in the nature of a matrimonial action under the provisions of the Code to have the court decree a separation and fix an amount for the support and maintenance of the wife. The most cursory examination of the allegations of the complaint also shows that it was not brought as an action to have the agreement set aside as vitiated by fraud or misunderstanding and that it is not an action to have the instrument so reformed as to conform to an agreement actually made by the parties but through mistake not properly reduced to writing.

The plaintiff adopts as its character that of an action to enforce specific performance. He says that the contract comprehends the agreements: (1) That upon a material change in the circumstances of either party the particular allowance specified in the contract shall no longer be paid.” (2) “ That from thenceforth the plaintiff should pay and defendant should accept such amount as the court should (ought to) prescribe according to its course and practice in matrimonial actions having in view the resources and income of the respective parties,” and he, therefore, prays specific performance and enforcement of the contract on that interpretation.

It is to be noted that the plaintiff does not for any recognized reason in any manner directly or indirectly assail the agreement as a whole or ask that it be set aside. He simply asks that the court shall fix a new amount which *17 shall be inserted in certain provisions of the contract as the amount thenceforth to be paid by plaintiff to defendant and in that respect make a new agreement for the parties. It is true that in the attempt to sustain the action on the theory of one of specific performance it is sought to extend the real purpose of this action. It is suggested that the court shall make a judgment fixing this new amount and compelling defendant thenceforth to accept it and the plaintiff thenceforth to pay it. These latter propositions in our judgment, however, amount merely to an attempt to extend by mere words what is the real and substantial purpose of the action. Plaintiff has no interest in an action to compel defendant to accept some money from him and he has no need for an action to compel himself to pay money to defendant, if he wants to. The real and only purpose is to have the court fix a new amount in the contract which the plaintiff 'will be' bound to pay and which the defendant can collect if she wants to. If this amount is thus fixed the whole difficulty from plaintiff’s standpoint is settled and there is no necessity for further provisions for specific performance of a contract which can be enforced at law.

Thus we come to the question already outlined whether the Supreme Court had jurisdiction to take hold of one of the provisions of this contract .and determine the reasonable amount to be paid by one of the parties to the other and in. that respect make a new agreement for them. We know of no principle and we have been cited to no authority which authorizes the court in this way in effect to write a clause in the contract for the parties. While the parties to this particular- contract have attempted to agree that the court might exercise this jurisdiction it really is not claimed that that agreement confers upon the court powers which it does not inherently possess. It seems to us that this ease is not other than it would be if two parties making a contract *18 for the sale of real estate at a fixed price to be executed at some distant day, should provide that if conditions changed in the meantime the court should determine ■what would be a fair sum to be inserted in the contract as the purchase price of the real estate. We think that it would scarcely be claimed with seriousness that the court could do this even on an agreement of the parties and it does not seem that the present proposal is any different in its nature.

The cases which have been cited in behalf of the plaintiff do not in our opinion at all sustain his contention. Cases are called to our attention where an agreement for the renewal of a lease on a rental to be fixed by arbitration was liable to fail through the failure of the arbitration and where the court has enforced specific performance of the contract, relieving one party, through ascertainment of its own, from the failure of the other party to submit to arbitration or from the failure of the arbitrators properly to act. Of these cases that of Kelso v. Kelly

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E. 91, 227 N.Y. 13, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoddard-v-stoddard-ny-1919.