DocketNumber: NO. 3026.
Judges: Towse, Stainback, Rice
Filed Date: 10/26/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
This case was before this court in Hollinrake v.Hollinrake,
Upon remand the respondent filed an answer setting up, among other things, certain equitable defenses as to why he should not be compelled to pay the amounts set forth in the Nevada decree and his financial inability to make such payments. The chancellor sustained a demurrer to this answer and ordered the establishment of the Nevada decree as a foreign judgment. From this order the appellant appeals to this court.
In the former opinion of this court we held that he who seeks equity must do equity and that a respondent is entitled to invoke any equitable defense by showing a modification of the foreign decree by the court wherein it was granted or by way of other equitable defense to the enforcement of the foreign decree. However, the territorial court cannot affect the validity or modify the terms of a foreign decree even though it may for equitable reasons refuse to enforce by contempt proceedings the full amount due under such decree; that this does not deny the full faith and credit; that a foreign decree of alimony when made a local judgment may have such equitable remedies for enforcement as are customary in the enforcement of local alimony decrees, but that the full faith and credit clause does not give a foreign judgment, so far as enforcement is concerned, any higher position than a domestic judgment.
In addition to the Hollinrake v. Hollinrake holding,supra, and cases cited therein, see Johnson v. Johnson, 196 So. Car. 474,
The chancellor properly ordered the establishment of the Nevada decree as a foreign judgment. However, as set forth in the former opinion of this court, the territorial court may for equitable reasons refuse to enforce by contempt proceedings the full amount due under such decree and may modify the amounts of payments to fit the respondent's ability to pay with the proviso that the respondent is still liable under the Nevada decree for the full amount thereof and may be forced, when able to carry out the same, unless the Nevada court which granted the original decree modifies its terms.
In view of the opinion of this court in Hollinrake v.Hollinrake,
The case is remanded with instructions for the court to proceed in accordance with this and the former opinion heretofore filed in this matter.