Judges: Beegan, Coon, Foster, Gtbson, Halpeen, Iialpeen, Postee
Filed Date: 12/19/1957
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
This appeal poses as its prime issue whether a judgment of the courts of the State of Vermont is entitled, under the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution, to be enforced in this State. The judgment is a decree of absolute divorce in favor of the plaintiff and carries with it a personal judgment against the defendant for a lump sum alimony in the amount of $25,000. Appellant challenges the validity of the judgment on the ground that it was obtained without due process.
The case has been in this court before on an appeal from an order denying a motion made by the plaintiff for a summary judgment. In affirming the order of denial we felt obliged to accept the defendant’s version of the facts as to all points upon which there was an open question of fact (Chapman v. Chapman, 284 App. Div. 504, 509). There has since been a trial by a court without a jury and certain findings of fact have been made, and a judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff which determined that the judgment of the County Court of Eutland County, Vermont, was obtained by due process and entitled to full faith and credit in the courts of New York. From that judgment the defendant has appealed.
In order to render this opinion intelligible some factual background must be given, now based upon the findings of the trial court, although a great deal of this does not differ materially from the statement of undisputed facts set forth in our previous opinion.
On February 14, 1950 the respondent herein commenced an action against the appellant in the County Court of Eutland
Respondent’s Vermont attorney moved the separation action for trial as of November 20, 1951. By telegram on November 17, 1951, followed by a letter, appellant was notified by his attorney in Vermont of the imminence of a prospective trial date. Appellant made no reply to either the telegram or the letter and the trial date was set for December 17, 1951. He testified he received the telegram two or three days after it was sent, at least before Thanksgiving Day of that year, and tried once to get in touch with his Vermont attorney by telephone. When he failed to reach him on that one occasion he made no further effort either by telephone or letter to communicate with him. From this course of conduct the conclusion is almost inescapable that appellant was content to let the separation action in Vermont go by default, but in any event if judgment had thereafter been entered by default, on the complaint as originally framed he could not have successfully argued lack of due process for he had entered a general appearance and had every opportunity to defend.
However respondent did not proceed on her original complaint. She moved to amend her complaint to substitute for a separation action a cause of action for absolute divorce. We are told, and the proof taken at trial term so indicates, that in Vermont the grounds for a separation and a divorce are the same, although they apparently constitute different statutory cause of action (Vermont Statutes [1947, Rev.], §§ 3205, 3218). In any event respondent’s motion to amend was made on
In some particulars his testimony was contradicted. Appellant’s Vermont attorney testified that he was never present at any conference with the Superior Court Judge at which the proposed amendment to respondent’s complaint was discussed; and he also denied that he was present in the courtroom when the motions were granted. An excerpt from the Rutland County Court docket, transcribed from the minutes of a court stenographer, indicates that the motion by appellant’s Vermont attorney to withdraw from the case was granted first, and the motion to amend the complaint granted thereafter. However the trial court accepted the testimony of the former Superior Court Judge, bolstered as it was by the testimony of respondent’s Vermont attorney and an Assistant Judge of the County Court, and made his findings accordingly: — that appellant’s Vermont attorney had notice of the motion to amend prior to the time he was permitted to withdraw from the case, and was present when the motion to amend was granted.
We are not disposed to interfere with the estimate of the trial court as to the weight of evidence on this issue. The testimony to support his findings was substantial; there was nothing about it inherently incredible, and his judgment as to credibility and the weight to be attached to it is entitled to acceptance. Of course it may be argued that even the order of the events as found by the trial court did not necessarily satisfy the requirements of due process on the basis that appellant was without adequate representation. The court, in the person of the Superior Court Judge and on his own admission had already
But we cannot dispose of so easily, as a matter of full faith and credit, the issue as to the validity of the personal judgment against defendant for lump sum alimony. We have heretofore held that the Vermont courts ‘ ‘ had no jurisdiction over the defendant personally upon the new cause of action by virtue of his original appearance and they could acquire personal jurisdiction over him only if service were made upon him personally within the State of Vermont or if a new appearance were made by him with respect to the new cause of action. In the absence of such service or appearance, the Vermont courts could render only a judgment in rem against the defendant; they could not enter a valid personal judgment for alimony.” (Chapman v. Chapman, supra, p. 513.) We do not retreat from this position or abandon the principle embodied therein (Matthews v. Matthews, 247 N. Y. 32; 2 Carmody on New York Practice, § 735; Restatement, Judgments, § 5, comment g). However, additional facts revealed in the record before us lead to the belief that the principle thus reaffirmed is not a bar to the affirmance of the judgment here under the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution.
On the same day the motions were granted proof was taken and respondent was granted an absolute divorce, and awarded the lump sum of $25,000 in lieu of alimony. In the meantime appellant had become domiciled in the State of Florida and on
If there is some doubt that the doctrine of res judicata is applicable the same result may be arrived at upon the theory of waiver. When the defendant thereafter moved in the courts of Vermont to have the judgment of divorce set aside, and for permission to set up as' a defense his judgment of divorce obtained in the State of Florida as a bar to plaintiff’s cause of action, he waived any issue of personal jurisdiction. His appearance therein was not a special appearance, designed only to contest the jurisdiction of the courts of Vermont by reason of a change in the original cause of action pleaded against him, but quite to the contrary was for affirmative relief to further contest the action on another ground. An appearance must be either general or special. If general it constitutes a waiver of any issue of jurisdiction (2 Carmody on New York Practice, § 749 and cases therein cited).
Both the doctrine of res judicata and waiver are based in principle on estoppel, and upon the theory of either or both plaintiff is now estopped from denying validity to the Vermont personal judgment so far as full faith and credit in this State is concerned.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.