Judges: Winkle
Filed Date: 10/4/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
The final decree, which includes a provision for the payment of $25 a week to complainant, was entered in this maintenance suit in June, 1936, on a bill which was filed in June, 1929. In June, 1937, defendant filed his petition for a modification so that the amount should be made $15 a week, which amount he has been regularly paying; and his claim is that he is unable to pay more. There are also arrears due under orders for the payment of alimony pendente lite. A petition praying that defendant be adjudged in contempt for failure to pay up to the full amount provided in these orders and for failure to pay up to the full amount provided in the final decree had been denied because of the facts shown by affidavits filed, the application being heard on affidavits by
Oral testimony of the parties and their witnesses was taken on this application for modification; and I must hold that there is now no factual basis for an order for more than $15 a week. Defendant’s earnings are virtually the same, it is claimed by complainant’s counsel, as they were when the provision presently in force was made, and he contends that the court should not reduce the amount presently provided because of the holding in Rigney v. Rigney, 62 N. J. Eq. 8 (at p. 13); 49 Atl. Rep. 460, which is that an application must exhibit changed circumstances and new facts which have arisen since the order, and that to succeed on such application there must be clear proof of such new facts and circumstances as would justify and require a variation in the amount of alimony allowed. There was testimony that complainant, who is comparatively young and apparently in normal health, is, and has been for sometime employed, and, inferentially, gainfully employed, by a relative in his liquor store. While the testimony on this head was not precise, it was cogent; and I believe from the testimony that complainant has been, from a time after the provision now in force was made, gainfully employed. Complainant denied that she was so employed, but the relative was not produced at the hearing. If complainant is so employed the prerequisite requirement of the holding in Rigney v. Rigney, is met; and a consideration of all the circumstances leads to the granting of defendant’s application to reduce the amount of support to $15 a week.
Rigney v. Rigney, a divorce suit, was decided in 1901, and the application for modification in that suit was considered in connection with the provisions of the Divorce act then in force. The present Divorce act has a provision respecting orders for alimony in divorce suits which was not in the act in 1901, that is to say, “orders so made may be revised or altered by the court from time to time as circumstances may .require.” Rev. of 1.907; £ Comp. Stat. 1910 p. £035 § &5, amended P. L. 1933 ch. 145 p. £96; N. J. Stat. Annual 1933 § 6£-£5. The comparable provision in the present Divorce act relating to maintenance suits gives the court the authority, and, I think, imposes on the court a duty, “from time to time to make such further orders as shall be just and equitable” (section 26).
The holding in Rigney v. Rigney does not now apply to applications for modification under the present Divorce act. The restriction imposed by its holding is not found in the present act with relation to applications for modification in divorce suits or in maintenance suits, and the court should not impose any such restriction on itself. A thing which in equity ought to be done because of the facts, and which may be done under the statutes of the state, should be done, of course. The holding in Rigney v. Rigney was induced by the facts of that case, which were severely against a contumacious husband. I perceive no reason for adopting the holding in Rigney v. Rigney on applications for modification in divorce suits or in maintenance suits, simply on the basis of its being a good holding. An application for modication should be decided in accordance with the very right of the matter at the time it is before the court for disposition. This
This holding in Rigney v. Rigney was cited by counsel in Williams v. Williams, 12 N. J. Mis. R. 641; 174 Atl. Rep 423, where Advisory Master Campbell was considering an application ior modification, and 1 note that he decided the application in accordance with equity and good conscience.
In considering an application for modification this court should be as responsive as possible, and it should not hamper itsell with a restriction which is not imposed by the Divorce act and which is not necessarily equitable. II there should be a preliminary inquiry to ascertain if there are “changed circumstances and new facts,” then if equity is to be done it would also be proper to inquire whether the order sought to he modified had been based on facts or only on assumed facts. Apparently Advisory Master Campbell had this thought in mind when he remarked, in deciding Williams v. Williams, supra, that no one had appeared for the defendant at the time the order sought to he modified had been made, and that the defendant had not submitted himself to examination before the vice-chancellor who made the decree.
The “propriety” of a decree of divorce or for maintenance is not called in question by an application for modification of the order for payment which happens to be contained in the decree. The decree itself as a decree on a cause of action, for divorce or for maintenance, as the case may be, remains undisturbed. So far as a decree of divorce is concerned the order for alimony in it is only an “incident” of the judgment, as Bishop has said.
To apply the holding in Bigney v. Bigney to applications for modification means that the court needs to examine the testimony on which the order sought to he modified was made, that the court may be satisfied with respect to “changed circumstances.” In most cases such testimony is not available. Often the testimony was given in the course of a final hearing, and it has not been preserved. More than once I have been detained, while I sought, without success, to ascertain the basis of an order for payment made some years before.
An order, for instance, may be made directing a man to pay a specified sum each week, although the man is unemployed or only partially employed, his potential earning power being considered and counted upon. A year passes, and the man’s potential earning power, without his fault, has not produced any money, and he has been put in debt by the order. An. application is made for a modification. What then? I suppose it may be said that there has been a change in the circumstances of the parties just because the man has been put in debt by the order; but why indulge in subleties ? Are the circumstances of the parties the same at the end of the year, under the holding in Bigney v. Bigney? Why should the court enter upon such an inquiry? Obviously, the equitable thing to do is to settle a new order, and it may be, later on, another order, that both parties may have the full benefit of the circumstances existing at the time the court makes an order, and this without reference, necessarily, to the facts or reasons on which a previous order was made, and with no restriction on the court growing out of a previous order, so far as its continuance is concerned.
•No order for support should continue in force for its full amount where it is clear that the man cannot pay to the full
My chief concern is that this court shall do equity; and in what I have said I have had in mind, of course, only meritorious applications. Applications for modification, whether for increase or decrease, which are without merit will be discouraged, and 1 should add that they will turn out to be troublesome activities for applicants.
° The sums due and accrued under the present order in the decree and under the orders for alimony pendente lite may not be discharged; but an order may be entered reducing the weekly payment to $15 from this time forward.