Young v. Young

130 Misc. 2d 527, 496 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3234
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 130 Misc. 2d 527 (Young v. Young) 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
Young v. Young, 130 Misc. 2d 527, 496 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3234 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Edward J. Greenfield, J.

The obstinate refusal by a Family Court Judge to honor the mandate of this court has resulted in a motion to punish the Family Court Judge and the defendant wife for contempt and has brought to light a most unseemly and unfortunate intracourt conflict. This motion, together with pending motions to consolidate and for counsel fees, are joined together for disposition.

The controversy arises from an acrimonious marital dispute between the Youngs, who had been married for 12 years, and had a 10-year-old daughter. The wife, Milagros Young, had [528]*528commenced a support proceeding against her husband John Young in the Family Court. The husband thereupon brought this action in the Supreme Court for a divorce, and for a declaration of the rights of the parties with respect to the custody and support of their minor child and as to the possession and control of their cooperative apartment.

Since only the Supreme Court had the power to grant full relief to all the parties as to status, custody, and equitable remedies, the husband moved by order to show cause to remove the Family Court actioji and consolidate it with the action he had commenced in the Supreme Court, pursuant to CPLR 325, 326, and 602. On the return date of the motion at Special Term, Part I, by order of this court, the wife, her agents and representatives, and the Family Court of the City of New York were stayed from taking any and all further steps or proceedings in the Family Court action pending the hearing of the motion. A written order to that effect was signed by this court.

Some four days later, when a scheduled support hearing appeared on the calendar of the Family Court, despite this court’s order staying all proceedings, the Family Court Jhdge deliberately refused to recognize the order of this court as valid, challenged its authority, and the husband’s attorneys having declined to go forward in the face of the stay, the Family Court Judge proceeded with an inquest.

Plaintiff then moved by order to show cause and later a supplemental order to show cause to hold the defendant and the Family Court Judge in contempt pursuant to Judiciary Law § 753 and requesting sanctions, including civil imprisonment and reasonable attorney’s fees.

The Family Court Judge, in her short-form order, states that she held an inquest "after presentation of a supposed order staying the Family Court’s action, which is not from any Appellate Court” and concluded: "Opinion to follow on the subject of the Supreme Court’s inability to stay this court’s action on a petition for the support of a child which was filed and marked final in this court prior to any petition beginning in the state Supreme Court, that Court not having reached any final support decision on the action before it.”

This was followed up by an opinion in which the Family Court Judge held that the order of the Supreme Court was invalid, her theory being that the Family Court has coordinate jurisdiction with the Supreme Court in support proceed[529]*529ings, and hence that this court could not stay an action in Family Court, or issue orders to the Family Court, which she contends only an appellate court can do. The opinion goes on to state that the "only possible time” that the Supreme Court can stay a Family Court matter is in the context of a CPLR article 78 proceeding in which the Family Court has been made a party. Even then, she believes, the Supreme Court could not issue a writ of prohibition against the Family Court, since it was not acting or threatening to act beyond its jurisdiction.

The sole authority relied upon for this startling opinion and its strange view of the relative positions and relationships of the courts is Matter of Ardis S v Sanford S (88 Misc 2d 724 [Fam Ct, Kings County 1976]) in which another Family Court Judge, without appellate review or approval, proclaimed the independence of his court, and urged a "hands off” stance.

It should be unnecessary for this court to comment at length on the overbroad and wrongheaded opinions of the Family Court Judges here and in Ardis S (supra). It should be sufficient to note that the stay granted by this court as an incident to consolidation and removal involves neither an appellate review nor any kind of article 78 proceeding. The Family Court is not, as claimed in Ardis S (supra, p 726) "the only court in which exclusive original jurisdiction has been vested by statute”, when Family Court Act § 812 expressly gives it concurrent jurisdiction. The procedures there providing for family offense proceedings have nothing to do, of course, with such matrimonial issues as support, custody and status. The Judge in Ardis S bemoaned the "split jurisdiction” between the Family Court and the Supreme Court, ignoring the fact that the so-called split could be obviated by consolidation of all proceedings in a single court.

The NY Constitution, article VI, § 7 provides:

"a. The supreme court shall have general original jurisdiction in law and equity * * *
"c. * * * the legislature may provide that another court shall also have jurisdiction”.

The Supreme Court cannot be constitutionally ousted from its power over all classes of actions and proceedings, even if a lower court is given concurrent jurisdiction. (Matter of Seitz v Drogheo, 21 NY2d 181.) While a support proceeding may be commenced in the Family Court, if any party chooses to litigate in the Supreme Court, "that court is empowered to [530]*530'transfer any action or proceeding, except one over which it shall have exclusive jurisdiction * * * to any other court having jurisdiction of the subject matter’ (N. Y. Const., art. VI, § 19, subd. a)”. (Kagen v Kagen, 21 NY2d 532, 538.)

CPLR 325 (b) expressly permits the Supreme Court, as a court of unlimited jurisdiction, to remove to itself an action then pending in a court of limited jurisdiction where the lower court does not have the jurisdiction to grant all the relief to which the parties are entitled. When a party seeks to remove such an action to the court of unlimited jurisdiction, CPLR 326 (a) provides that the court to which removal is sought (the Supreme Court) may make an order to stay proceedings pending consideration of the removal application. All subsequent proceedings are to take place only in the court to which the action is removed. Once an action has been transferred to another court, the original court has no further jurisdiction with respect to any subsequent motions or applications. (Mather v Ginsroe, Inc., 45 Misc 2d 674, 677; Komorowski v Smith, 74 AD2d 841.)

A stay pursuant to CPLR 326 is to be distinguished from the general stay as provided for in CPLR 2201. Those stays are issued in the selfsame court where the action is pending. As the Practice Commentaries to CPLR 2201 make clear,

"[t]here are many 'stays’ authorized in civil practice [including] * * *

"a stay in conjunction with the removal of a case from one New York court to another. CPLR 326. This one even allows the transferee court to stay proceedings in the court from which the transfer is being made, thus affixing the 'stay’ label to what is in essence an injunction by one court suspending proceedings in another.” (Siegel, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C2201:4, p 4.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 Misc. 2d 527, 496 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-young-nysupct-1985.