Judges: Habéis
Filed Date: 5/13/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Official Referee. Reference to hear and determine. The plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant certain amounts of moneys allowed for the support and maintenance of the infant child of the parties which she claims are due by reason of the provisions of a decree of divorce granted in a District Court of the State of Oklahoma; that decree severed the marriage relations of the parties heretofore existing. The District Court was of competent jurisdiction. No question is raised as to the validity of the decree of divorce and the binding effect thereof on the parties herein. Such decree in part provides that the plaintiff in the divorce action, the defendant in this action, should pay the sum of $42 a month for the support and maintenance of a minor daughter of the parties herein. The answer and defense of the defendant herein is that no moneys are owing by reason of the said provisions of divorce because of an agreement made between the parties herein after the entry of the decree of divorce and which agreement the defendant herein claims to have been made by the parties herein with the object of reducing the amount from $42 a month to $22 a month.
The plaintiff and the defendant were married in the State of New York in June, 1938. In 1939, there was born of such marriage a daughter now the only living issue of such marriage. At the time of the granting of the divorce, July 7, 1943, in the State of Oklahoma the defendant herein was in the armed service of the United States of America and stationed in the State of Oklahoma. During his army service and prior to the granting and entry of the decree of the Oklahoma State Court the plaintiff herein was receiving from the defendant herein the sum of $42 a month, all of which was paid by the Federal authorities, $22 of which were from the pay of the husband and $20 of which was a contribution of the United States Government. The decree of divorce placed the child in the custody of the mother and provided for the maintenance and support of the minor child the sum of $42, as the allowance to be paid monthly by the father for the support of this minor child. The defendant herein was discharged from the Army in January, 1946, and then returned to Buffalo, New York, to which city the plaintiff herein had previously come after the granting of the decree of divorce. From the granting of the divorce decree to the time of his discharge from the Army the $42 each month was paid to the plaintiff herein by Government checks. The defendant herein, the former husband, testified that when he returned to Buffalo about the 1st of February, 1946, he had a conversation with his former wife, the plaintiff herein, in which he stated to her that he was
In reference to the effect of the conversation in which the defendant on his return to Mew York State said he would only pay $22 a month and her response of “ O. K.” and the subsequent actions of the parties herein the court has now to consider whether or not such conversation and such subsequent actions did away with the obligations placed upon the defendant herein for maintenance and support of the minor child as set forth in the decree of the Oklahoma State Court. In the decree of the Oklahoma State Court was a direction without qualification to pay the amount of $42 a month. The statutes of the State of Oklahoma provided at the time of the entry of the decree and still have a provision that the court granting the decree could from time to time on a proper showing therein make a change in the amount to be paid for the maintenance and support of the infant minor child. (Okla. Stat., tit. 12, Code Civ. Pro., § 1277.) The courts of the State of Oklahoma have held that this statutory provision could only affect the amount to be paid in the future after the court had ordered modification of the original decree and that there is no power in the Oklahoma State Court to grant a modification that could affect the payment of installments of maintenance and support money already due and owing at the time of the application for the order and modification. (Sango v. Sango, 121 Okla. 283; Sistare v. Sistare, 218 U. S. 1.) Therefore under the laws of the State of Oklahoma the amount unpaid would be regarded as a judgment of the courts of that State. By virtue of the full faith and credit provision of the United States Constitution (art. IY, § 1) in any action brought in this State to enforce the payment of unpaid money of this type, the courts of this State must accept the unpaid amount as a basis of a judgment in the courts of this State except as to a legal or an equiable defense that came into existence after the accrual of the unpaid alimony. (Smith v. Smith, 255 App. Div. 652; Miller v. Miller, 219 App. Div. 61, affd. 246 N. Y. 636.) A legal defense in this State would be full payment. This the defendant herein has not proven. An equitable defense could be that the obligation for support was discharged as between the parties herein and on behalf of the infant child for whose benefit the provision for support was made in the Oklahoma decree. (Smith v. 'Smith, supra.) Though the plaintiff herein, the mother of the child, did agree to accept $22 a month or in the City Court $7 a week in place of the $42 a month there comes a question as to whether
This may be regarded as my decision herein and the plaintiff may have judgment against the defendant herein in the amount of $508, with costs.