Citation Numbers: 188 A. 429, 122 Conn. 155, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 53
Judges: Maltbie, Hinman, Banks, Avery, Brown
Filed Date: 11/6/1936
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The writ in this action describes the plaintiff as a resident of the city of New York and the defendant as a resident of Redding in this State. The complaint and the exhibits attached thereto state the following situation: On October 20th, 1916, the plaintiff obtained a decree of divorce in the Supreme Court of New York. In that decree it was provided that the defendant should pay the plaintiff $20 each week until she remarried, for her support and the support and maintenance of the children of the marriage, and the decree incorporated an agreement which had been entered into between the plaintiff and defendant settling their property rights and providing for weekly payments in the event that a divorce should be granted. By the provisions of this agreement the defendant was to pay the plaintiff $20 a week should the divorce, be granted, in full discharge and satisfaction of all liability of the defendant for her support and maintenance, this provision to become a part of the decree for divorce, and, further, that the payment of these sums should not prevent the plaintiff from engaging in any occupation but that it should be an absolute obligation on the defendant's part so long as she remained unmarried.
The plaintiff has not married since the rendering of the decree. The defendant has not paid the weekly sums provided since December 26th, 1931, and is in arrears to the amount of $4380. He is a man of large means, well able to pay his obligations, but having his property so concealed as to put it beyond the reach of legal process. The plaintiff claimed as relief that the decree of the Supreme Court of New York be made *Page 158 the judgment and decree of the Superior Court; that the defendant be required to pay the plaintiff the amount of alimony alleged to be in arrears, and, further, to pay the weekly sums decreed from the date of the complaint until the plaintiff should die or remarry; that the defendant be required specifically to perform the terms of the agreement incorporated in the decree; and such further relief as the court might deem proper. The defendant filed a demurrer to the prayers for relief, the substance of which was that no judgment might be entered in the case other than an ordinary judgment at law for the amount of the alimony in arrears and, further, that the judgment in New York State might be altered, modified or annulled by its courts and therefore was not entitled to enforcement in the courts of this State.
Where in a decree of divorce alimony is awarded, the provision for alimony, in so far as the award is no longer within the power of the court which rendered the decree to rescind or alter and the right to receive the payments has become vested and absolute, falls within 1 of Article Four of the United States Constitution, which requires each State to give full faith and credit to the judicial proceedings of every other State. Sistare v. Sistare,
Those cases which upheld a resort to equitable remedies for the most part proceed upon the broad ground that a decree for alimony, in the enforcement of the obligation of a husband divorced for his fault to continue to support his former wife, imposes a peculiar obligation which the husband ought not to be permitted to avoid by the mere fact that he has moved from the State where the decree was rendered into another. In Lyon v. Lyon,
On the other hand, the decisions which deny that such remedies may be applied are expressly or impliedly grounded on the proposition that an action upon a judgment awarding alimony is by its nature one for the recovery of a debt, only cognizable at law, that an action for damages constitutes a full and adequate remedy, and that, as divorce, with its incident of alimony, is wholly a creature of statute, the provisions of the statutes authorizing enforcement by contempt or like proceedings apply only to decrees rendered in the courts of the State where the action is brought and are not available to enforce a like decree rendered in another State. If we admit the premise, that the only proper action to enforce such a decree is one at law for damages, the conclusion to which these courts have come is logical; but we disagree with that premise.
In New York State as with us, divorce, with its incident of alimony, is a creature of statute. Ackerman v. Ackerman,
That is peculiarly true in this jurisdiction, where a decree for alimony in its earliest form consisted of an assignment of specific property; Lyon v. Lyon, supra, p. 197; and the fact that, by judicial construction, it came to be held that, in lieu of such assignment, a sum of money might be awarded, and later, by legislative action, an order for periodic payments was authorized, does not change the nature of the award. Sanford v. Sanford, 5 Day, 353, 357; Benedict v. Benedict,
Upon ancient equitable principles an action brought upon a decree in equity might be brought in a court of equity. In Hugh v. Higgs, 21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 697, in an opinion by Marshall, C.J., it was held that an action on the case would not lie to recover money due under a decree in chancery. In a note found in 3 Cai. Cas. 37, it is stated that Chase, J., made a similar ruling in a case in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Connecticut. In Vanbuskirk v. Mulock,
In Barber v. Barber, 162 U.S. (21 How.) 582, 591, it is said: "The parties to a cause for a divorce and for alimony are as much bound by a decree for both, which has been given by one of our State courts having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and over the parties, as the same parties would be if decree had been given in the ecclesiastical court of England. The decree in both is a judgment of record, and will be received as such by other courts. And such a judgment or decree, rendered in any State in the United States, the court having jurisdiction, will be carried into judgment in any other State, to have there the same binding force as it has in the State in which it was originally given. For such a purpose, both the equity courts of the United States and the same courts of a State have jurisdiction."
It was therefore proper for the plaintiff in this case to invoke the equitable jurisdiction of the Superior Court to enforce the decree for alimony and it is within the power of that court to give any appropriate remedy applicable in an action brought to it in its capacity as a court of equity. The power of the court to enforce *Page 164 a decree for alimony by proceedings in contempt is with us not referable to any statute but is inherent in the authority of a court to compel obedience to its orders. Lyon v. Lyon, supra. It is therefore as applicable to an equitable proceeding brought here to enforce a decree for alimony rendered in another State as to a like decree rendered by our own courts.
Section 1170 of the Civil Practice Act of New York provides that the court may, upon proceedings brought as therein prescribed, "annul, vary or modify" any order made in a divorce action for the support of the wife. In Sistare v. Sistare,
While one of the prayers for relief in the action before us seeks a specific performance of the agreement incorporated in the decree, the tenor of the complaint is such that we can only regard the action as one which is based upon the decree and seeks its enforcement. It follows that, as concerns the past due instalments of alimony, the plaintiff might show herself entitled to relief in equity by an order for their payment, enforceable by contempt proceedings; but she could not have such an order as regards instalments due in the future. As the demurrer was addressed generally to the prayers for relief and not specifically to that seeking an order directing the payment of future instalments, it should have been overruled.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case remanded to be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Sistare v. Sistare , 30 S. Ct. 682 ( 1910 )
Fanchier v. Gammill , 148 Miss. 723 ( 1927 )
Lynde v. Lynde , 181 U.S. 183 ( 1901 )
Cummings v. Cummings , 97 Cal. App. 144 ( 1929 )
Harris v. Harris , 259 N.Y. 334 ( 1932 )
Grieves v. Keane , 23 R.I. 136 ( 1901 )
Creager v. Superior Court , 126 Cal. App. 280 ( 1932 )
Ostrander v. Ostrander , 190 Minn. 547 ( 1934 )
Shibley v. Shibley , 181 Wash. 166 ( 1935 )
Sistare v. Sistare , 80 Conn. 1 ( 1907 )
Wright v. Wright , 93 Conn. 296 ( 1919 )
Cary v. Cary , 112 Conn. 256 ( 1930 )
Ackerman v. . Ackerman , 200 N.Y. 72 ( 1910 )
Lynde v. . Lynde , 162 N.Y. 405 ( 1900 )
Neway v. Bogner, No. Fa97 034 81 09 S (Jan. 3, 2003) , 33 Conn. L. Rptr. 648 ( 2003 )
McCabe v. McCabe , 210 Md. 308 ( 1956 )
Weil v. Poulsen , 142 Conn. 213 ( 1955 )
Krasnow v. Krasnow , 140 Conn. 254 ( 1953 )
Hendrix v. Hendrix , 160 Conn. 98 ( 1970 )
Nitchke v. Nitchke, No. Fa 90 0379396 (Sep. 18, 1996) , 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5316-AAAA ( 1996 )
German v. German , 5 Conn. Supp. 512 ( 1938 )
Patrick v. Patrick, No. Fa 89 41733 S (Aug. 15, 1994) , 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 8161 ( 1994 )
Weldy v. Weldy , 74 N.D. 165 ( 1945 )
Jenkins v. Jenkins, Jr. , 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 213 ( 1954 )
Bielan v. Bielan , 135 Conn. 163 ( 1948 )
Lovejoy v. Lovejoy , 28 Conn. Super. Ct. 230 ( 1969 )
McCurry v. McCurry , 7 Conn. Supp. 197 ( 1939 )
Moldenhauer v. Moldenhauer , 10 Conn. Super. Ct. 327 ( 1942 )
German v. German , 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 103 ( 1939 )
De Golyer v. De Golyer , 13 Conn. Supp. 339 ( 1945 )
Tuescher v. Tuescher , 10 Conn. Supp. 543 ( 1942 )
Guglielmino v. Guglielmino , 16 Conn. Supp. 442 ( 1950 )
German v. German , 125 Conn. 84 ( 1938 )