Citation Numbers: 32 N.J. Super. 382, 108 A.2d 308, 1954 N.J. Super. LEXIS 495
Judges: Tomasulo
Filed Date: 5/12/1954
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
Plaintiff and defendant were married in 1935 and lived together as man and wife until the defendant’s first physical separation of the plaintiff in 1951, just prior to the birth of their second child. On this occasion he withdrew himself from their bedroom because as plaintiff testified, defendant “found me distasteful, and he was going to sleep in the back.” Defendant continued to support his family while residing with them until March 7, 1953 when he deserted the plaintiff and their two children while she was out for the day, leaving a note for the plaintiff which reads as follows:
“(1) Joint checking account has been closed out.
(2) All store ‘charge accounts’ have been closed out.
(3) Have arranged for all. necessary household bills to be sent to 47 Worth Street, New York. Taxes, water, gas, electric, soft water service, telephone, trash removal, Farragut.
(4) I can be reached at office.
(5) Check will be sent to you for the baby.
Check will be sent for you and house, (separate). Bud is taken care of at school.”
Exhibit P-2. Defendant, in his leave-taking, had removed all his belongings including his bed, a coffee table, cocktail shakers, liquor glasses, tools, lawn mower and other miscellaneous items. Subsequently, when defendant failed to sup
At the conclusion of the hearing, I was of the opinion that the defendant, Edward Y. White, IY, had already conceived the idea and had already made up his mind to thereafter desert his wife and family, and that the transfer of the title to his mother comprised a part of his scheme to divest himself of his assets and to place them beyond the reach of his wife in the event of any attempt by her to claim the same subsequent to his planned desertion. That a deed was re-executed by his mother to both plaintiff and defendant, indicates to me that his mother was but a straw person, lacking any beneficial interest in the premises in question. The effect of this gesture was to disarm the plaintiff and to lull her into a sense of security, soon to be lost to her by reason of defendant’s desertion. While it is true that defendant did not actually leave the bed and home of the plaintiff until March 7, 1953, the separation, in effect, had its onset just before July 14, 1951, about the time of the birth of their daughter, Nancy Ann. It will be seen therefore, that the deed to defendant’s mother preceded the separation only by a few months — February 1951 — and in my judgment was preconceived and planned by defendant as I have indicated. The further devolution of the title to the claimant by the defendant’s mother on January 9, 1953, was calculated by the defendant to further enmesh the Holly Street property in a web and, by additional circumstances, calculated to lend to the series of transactions an atmosphere of validity — which was theretofore lacking — through the advancement of the mother’s claim and her contentions that this conveyance was made by her to the claimant in order to augment his income. Designed to ferret out the truth, the hearings elicited the fact that even after the execution of the deed to the claimant, the defendant continued to receive
Wrifford White claims that a writ of attachment may not issue in an action for separate maintenance. With this I do not agree. An attachment is authorized under N. J. S.' 2A:34-26 which reads as follows:
“When a husband cannot be found within this state to be served with process, his estate, property and effects within this state and the rents and profits (hereof, may be attached to compel his appearance and performance of any judgment or order which may be made in the action.
Where the proceedings are by process of attachment and the defendant does not appear, the judgment shall be enforceable only out of and against the property attached.”
The essence of claimant’s contention is that R. S. 2:50-37 and 2:50-39 (now N. J. 8. 2A :3A-23 and 2A :34-24) do not authorize an attachment. Whatever may have been the law or practice prior to the enactment of N. J. S. 2A :34-23 et seq., an examination and analysis of the existing status of the legislation referred to reveals that attachment is now an authorized remedy by which the estate of a husband wlio cannot be found in this State to be served with process, may be made available for the support of his wife and family, N. J. S. 2A :34-26. Nor is the argument that the legal title is not in defendant’s name, tenable. An equitable interest in lands is subject to attachment, Williams v. Michenor, 11 N. J. Eq. 520 (Ch. 1858), and this all the more where a conveyance, such as in this case, was tainted by fraud, i. e., as in the cited case where the deed was made to protect the premises from creditors. Indeed, were the plaintiff a business creditor of the defendant’s, the attached
It is suggested by claimant, that an adjudication should have been sought by plaintiff in an independent action against the defendant, setting aside the questioned conveyance as a fraud, and that then the attachment proceeding might be in order. This is likewise untenable, because with the revision of our court system, the Superior Court, Matrimonial Division, is authorized to determine matters of a purely equitable character where such a determination is necessary and can be made in a matrimonial cause pending before it. Ippolito v. Ippolito, 3 N. J. 561, 71 A. 2d 196 (1950); R. R. 4:31-3, 4:93-1 and 4:93-3. A finding of fraud in the matrimonial branch of the court in a matter properly before it, is as effective and binding upon the litigants as if made in the equity branch of the court. No useful purpose would have been served by referring the property aspect of the litigation to another branch of the court.
Claimant next points up the argument that he was deprived of his property without due process of law. This, likewise, is not so. The validity of quasi in rem proceedings of this character has long been recognized both here and elsewhere. George v. George, 30 N. J. Misc. 41, 33 A. 2d 599 (Ch. 1941), and the cases cited therein. Here, the claimant was served in the manner prescribed by statute, i. e., by mail and publication. This constituted valid and due process. R. R. 4:77-1 et seq., George v. George, supra. Besides, Wrifford White, in filing a claim of property and otherwise submitting to the jurisdiction of the court, cannot thereafter complain of a lack of due process. Trautman v. Higbie, 10 N. J. 239, 89 A. 2d 649 (1953); Turtur v.
Claimant next contends that no parol testimony should have been received to impeach the deed from plaintiff to defendant’s mother and that its admission was in violation of the statute of frauds. The statute of frauds cannot be invoked to perpetrate a fraud. Moses v. Moses, 140 N. J. Eq. 575, 53 A. 2d 805 (E. & A. 1947). The testimony given by the plaintiff was accepted by the court for the purpose of proving equitable title in the defendant, as alleged in the complaint, and to disclose the existence of a fraud. No effort is being made by plaintiff to regain the title in her own right in a proceeding to set aside her deed. She, in effect, acknowledges the validity of the deed to the mother. She is not attempting to disavow her act in having made the conveyance to defendant’s mother, Edna White. She contends, however, that as a result of this conveyance and a conveyance made by the mother to the claimant, her husband is the beneficial owner of the property by reason of this fraudulent scheme to which the defendant, his mother, and the claimant are parties. The questioned testimony is therefore, not unlike testimony tending to show the true consideration of a deed and is not in conflict with the statute since it does not vary or enlarge the grant. Dieckman v. Walser, 114 N. J. Eq. 382, 168 A. 582 (E. & A. 1933).
Lastly, claimant relies upon the alleged unclean hands of the plaintiff as a bar to her rights. It is claimed that her conduct in connection with the conveyances on Holly Street and Hampton Road was unconscionable since it was part of a scheme to avoid the capital gains tax. The unclean hands doctrine cannot be invoked save in a proceeding in which the unconscionable conduct took place. City of Paterson v. Schneider, 31 N. J. Super. 598 (App. Div. 1954) and the cases cited therein. Thus, if plaintiff instituted a direct action to set aside the deeds or either of them, then the doctrine could be invoked against plaintiff, assuming, without deciding, that such conduct was unconscionable. Here,