Court Opinion

ID: 5212628
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:16:03.711873+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:23.560448
License: Public Domain

Rich, J.:
The appellant urges that the complaint does not allege a contract valid and enforcible at law or in equity, in that it omits to set out that at the time the agreement was executed the parties were living-separate and apart, and that it was not made in contemplation of, and did not serve as one of the moving causes of, the separation. The agreement, which is made a part of the complaint, recites upon its, face not only that the parties are not living together, but that an action was then pending in the Supreme Court of this State for a separation, brought by the wife against the husband, which was to be discontinued upon the execution of the instrument. When an instrument sued upon is annexed to and made part of a complaint, any facts recited in such instrument are to be considered as alleged in the pleading. (Slack v. Heath, 4 E. D. Smith, 95, 109; affd. by Court of Appeals June, 1860.)
It is further contended that there is no allegation that the plaintiff’s assignor has not remarried. It is averred that when the assignment was made there was due, owing and unpaid, under the provisions of the contract, from the defendant to his wife, the amount sought to be recovered, and that the wife had performed all of the conditions of the agreement on her part. I think that these allegations are sufficient, and that performance on the part of the wife, and. that she had not remarried before the amount had become due and payable, may be shown under it.
It is urged that the contract, or any right thereunder, was not assignable. This is an erroneous conclusion; all contract rights are assignable.
It is further contended that there is a defect of parties defendant, in that the trustee is not made a party. In Potter v. Potter (8 Civ. Proc. Rep. 150) it was held, in a similar action, that the wife was the real party in interest, and could maintain the action *184without joining the trustee. That case is cited approvingly in Effray v. Effray (110 App. Div. 545, 548). Lord v. Lord (68 Hun, 537) is not an authority to the contrary. In that case the trustee had obligated himself to indemnify the husband for the wife’s debts, and there was no averment that he had refused to bring the action. In the case at bar there was no such agreement on the part of the trustee, and it is alleged that the trustee was requested to bring the action and refused. The agreement having been made since the Domestic Relations Law became operative, did not require the intervention of a trustee. It was made for the sole benefit of the wife. She is the real party in interest, the action was maintainable by her, and her assignee stands in her shoes.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
Hirschberg, P. J., Jenks, Gaynor and Miller, JJ., concurred.
Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs.