The parties to this action are husband and wife. In December, 1888, the plaintiff commenced this action by the service of - a summons and complaint upon the defendant,
The papers further disclose that, pursuant to said arrangement, the parties separated, and have lived separate and apart until this time. That the defendant paid the amount stipulated to be paid in the offer of judgment as therein provided,, and in effect carried out this arrangement until about June, 1894, when the plaintiff employed Mr. Hill as her attorney, and a motion was made at the Erie Special Term on her behalf on July 6, 1894, to set aside and vacate the judgment so entered, the moving papers alleging that she liad, up to a very recent date, been ignorant of the existence of the judgment and of the papers upon which it was founded, and had in no manner authorized or consented to the same. Mr. Sessions, her attorney, however, made affidavit contradicting these statements, and setting forth that he had authority to make such offer and enter such judgment, and that it was with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff. The court set aside the judgment as absolutely void, and the defendant now makes this motion.
I am satisfied from the papers that the offer was made and accepted and the judgment entered with the knowledge and approbation of the plaintiff, and that she received the amount of money stipulated therein to be paid to her, and that she has in fact been separated from the defendant under the said judgment, and but recently has conceived the idea of repudiating it, and strong equitable considerations seem to favor affirming the transaction and granting this motion, but it cannot legally be done.
The judgment was not only irregular, but void. It was simply a judgment by consent. An action having been brought and the issue joined, it -was, so to speak, settled, and the parties agreed to a divorce from bed and board and upon the
It is against the policy of our law and the best interests of society to permit the destruction or impairment of the marriage relation, except upon due proof of sufficient cause, without collusion, upon due judicial investigation and by judicial decree. ,
This policy of the law is indicated by section 1229 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that even where there is a contest and trial before a referee, judgment cannot be taken as of course upon the referee’s report, but the judgment must be rendered by the court, and the court must fix the amount of alimony for the support and maintenance of the wife and children, under sections 1766 and 1769 of the Code. And by Supreme Court rules 77 and 37, no judgment granting a divorce or separation, or limited divorce, shall be made of course, by default or by consent.
In Daggett v. Daggett, 5 Paige, 509, it was held by the chancellor, in an action of divorce, that previous to a decree dissolving a marriage the wife could not make any valid agreement as to her allowance of alimony, and the same reasoning applies to an action for a separation.
And see, as bearing upon the proposition herein made, Blott v. Rider, 47 How. Pr. 90; Sullivan v. Sullivan, 41 N. Y. Super. Ct. 519 ; Peugnet v. Phelps, 48 Barb. 566; Burr v. Burr, 7 Hill, 207.
The court has no inherent jurisdiction in actions for divorce or separation, but its powers are purely statutory.
It follows from these views that the motion herein must be denied, but without costs.
There has been an issxie framed in this action which is untried and undetermined; and although, as before said, the plaintiff has had the benefit of the arrangement and a considerable amount of alimony, no other way seems open to the parties-but to have their-issues tried out in the appointed-way,' and haye- the court pass upon the question of separation and of alimony as prescribed by the laws and the practice of this
Motion denied, without costs.