Sidway v. Sidway

Thomas, J.:

In this action for divorce a counsel fee of $500 and temporary alimony at $200 per month were awarded on May 12, 1912, and duly paid. On May tenth the defendant executed a mortgage on his individual one-fifth interest in land in Buffalo to secure his mother for a valid indebtedness of $9,120, and on June twentieth the defendant conveyed his equity to his brothers and sisters, cotenants, for. the sum of $1,880 then paid, which was its full value. His brother, Frank S. Sidway, a lawyer residing at Buffalo, participated in this conveyance as grantee and as an adviser, and accordingly has been found *376guilty of a civil contempt and fined the sum of $900. Hence he appeals, whereas the plaintiff appeals in that the fine was not at a greater sum, which it is now urged should he some $15,000 by reason not only of the' conveyance hut also the mortgage to the mother, who was advised thereto by appellant. In what way did the brother injure the plaintiff whereby the former came into contempt of court ? It is said to be as follows: The action was tried on June twelfth and the permanent alimony fixed at $350 per month, and the judgment was on June eighteenth duly served on the defendant, and after conveying the land as stated and receiving payment therefor, he left the State and did not pay the alimony, although he appealed from the interlocutory judgment so far as it involved it. It is now charged that the brother advised the departure, the omission to pay the alimony, that he procured the conveyance of the land to put it beyond the reach of the judgment, and that he in that way furnished the money that enabled the defendant to take himself beyond the jurisdiction of the court. The contention cannot be that an interlocutory decree of divorce ■ fixing permanent alimony, although not a lien on the land, is so potential that a bona fide creditor paay not be secured, if she he a mother, and the land may not be sold for its full value for cash, if the grantees he four brothers and sisters, cotenants, and this even if no alimony be due and payable. By such proposition, pending the continuance of the decree, the land never escapes from the bondage, the mother-creditor is incapacitated to secure her debt, and the cotenants cannot become alienees. The judgment continues its periodical demand for the payment of alimony during the mutual life of the parties, and it cannot be that a mother or brother meanwhile must abstain from any act that would disturb the property in its statu qv,o. It is urged that the vice of the grant is that it was not honest in purpose, but that it was contrived to enable the land to be converted into personalty to enable the defendant to carry it beyond the reach' of the court, and that the brother advised that he should so do. There is not only no evidence that the brother advised the absence of the. defendant from the State, but the positive statements of the brother and the defendant are that the brother counseled that defendant stay *377in the State and pay the alimony pending the appeal. The brother, as did the. mother, lived in Buffalo, and did not often see the defendant, who lived in the city of New York, and the former disclaims all knowledge that the defendant intended to leave the State or that he had knowledge of his going. But it is shown that the brother attended the trial and hearings in this court, and that he was counsel in the case. That a brother was interested for a brother is not an offense, nor does it show that he was his legal representative in the action, as he clearly was not. The controversy was a distressing event in the life of the mother and her children, and it was quite becoming on the part of the brother that he should keep the litigation in its different phases under his immediate observation and lend to it his aid and advice. The conclusion is inevitable that there is not proof from official relations that the appellant counseled the brother to do what he did in the matter of the default. So the case comes to this, is the brother guilty of contempt because he advised the cotenants to buy the land.lest, as he says, it be involved in the litigation, and it is to this that the question comes- at last. Such statement by the appellant reveals his appreciation that his brother would not pay the alimony, that the property would be sequestrated, and a receiver of the income appointed, to that extent at least bringing in a stranger as a cotenant. He conceived that the alimony was placed far in excess of the unaided ability of the defendant to pay it from his income, and that it was in its larger part based on the inference that past advances from the mother to the defendant would be continued through willingness to aid or coercion to save him from punishment, and this court later justified his conception that the alimony was excessive by its decision, whereby the alimony was reduced from $350 to $150 per month. The purchase of the property by the cotenants delivered them from the threatened association with the litigation and furnished the defendant with ample means to meet the payment of the alimony. The plaintiff’s assertion in effect is that the defendant’s interest in the land was so tethered to the erroneous decree that the brother and his cotenants could not honestly purchase it with a view of delivering themselves from the harassing association that menaced them, and that if they did so the *378law looking to the motive would condemn it and the act as fraudulent, and the brother’s advice and participation as contemptuous. ■ Had' the defendant placed the purchase money at the disposal of the plaintiff for the purposes of her judgment for alimony, unfounded in greater degree, there certainly could be no fault attaching to the sale. But it was not the brother’s duty to seek the plaintiff for that purpose or to allow the application of the money to the decree. The plaintiff’s present attitude- is that the whole interest unmortgaged should have been left undisturbed, while the cotenants awaited the appropriation of all of it for capitalization of the alimony. ' The errancy of the son has in this litigation been related too much to the solicitude of the mother, as the letter of the plaintiff’s attorneys to her as well as the record in the action illustrate, and this last attempt to punish the brother because he has been helpful to defendant in the litigation, but unwilling to confuse family property with possible appropriations of defendant’s interest to meet his liabilities, imposes too great burden upon kinship and the right to defend against uninvited association in ownership. The learned counsel for the plaintiff does not fail in the law invoked, but the application of it to the facts. The plaintiff had rights, but so had the brother, and he was not obliged to yield them to aid her. He is presumably a respectable attorney of the court, and his act, done openly in counseling his brothers and sister to buy this interest, does not merit the decision that he is a fraudulent grantee. This litigation has sufficiently occupied the courts, and while it .is hoped that a sense of duty on the- part of the defendant will hereafter secure to the plaintiff and her children what is their due, yet if there should be default the penalty should attach to him who has earned it.

The order should be reversed, without costs, and. the motion denied, without costs.

Jenks, P. J., Burr, Carr and Rich, JJ., concurred.

Order reversed, without costs, and motion denied, without costs.