Devaney v. L'ESPERANCE
Devaney v. L'ESPERANCE
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this appeal, we determine whether cohabitation is an indispensable element of a cause of action for palimony. Plaintiff and defendant were involved in an intimate relationship. During the course of their twenty-year relationship, defendant, who was married, continued to live with his wife and never cohabited with plaintiff. However, he promised to divorce his wife, marry plaintiff, and have, a child with her. Defendant’s promises were not fulfilled and his relationship with plaintiff eventually ended.
Plaintiff filed a palimony complaint against defendant, asserting a breach of a promise to support her for life. The trial court denied relief because the parties essentially had a dating relationship rather than a marital-type relationship that was needed to support a palimony claim. The Appellate Division affirmed solely because the parties never cohabited. We granted certification to address whether a party may prove a cause of action for palimony absent cohabitation.
We hold that cohabitation is not an essential requirement for a cause of action for palimony, but a marital-type relationship is required. Because there was sufficient evidence for the trial court
I.
The following evidence was presented at trial. In 1983, plaintiff, Helen Devaney, then twenty-three years old, began working for defendant, Francis L’Esperance, Jr., as a receptionist for his ophthalmology medical practice. At that time, defendant was fifty-one years old and had been married to his current wife for approximately twenty years. Plaintiff and defendant embarked on a romantic relationship. Although plaintiff was aware that defendant was married, she believed that he would divorce his wife.
In the beginning of their relationship, plaintiff lived in a variety of places, all of which were rented in her own name and mostly self-financed. At some point, defendant began paying plaintiffs telephone bill and gave her money for various other things. Plaintiff, however, remained largely self-sufficient during this period of their relationship. She continued working for defendant in various capacities, at first full-time, and then part-time.
For about ten years, plaintiff and defendant saw each other regularly and would spend vacations together. However, when the parties were not traveling, they rarely stayed overnight together. Defendant frequently had dinner at plaintiffs house, but he invariably returned home to his wife.
Plaintiff testified that defendant repeatedly told her that he would divorce his wife and marry her. In 1993, plaintiff terminated her employment with defendant and pursued educational opportunities. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff moved to Connecticut. A year later, she moved to Seattle, Washington, where she remained for approximately three years. Plaintiff testified that her decision to move was based primarily on defendant’s unfulfilled promise to divorce his wife. During her stay in Seattle, plaintiff frequently spoke by telephone with defendant and requested money from him. Defendant would send her approximately four hundred
In 1997, defendant asked plaintiff to return to the East Coast. Plaintiff testified that defendant promised that he would “make things right” by divorcing his wife, marrying plaintiff, and having a baby with her. She testified that she agreed to move back after defendant showed her a separation agreement that was signed by both defendant and his wife. Plaintiff also testified that defendant promised to buy her a home.
Plaintiff returned to New Jersey in 1997, and moved into a North Bergen condominium that defendant leased for her. In 1999, defendant purchased the condominium unit and plaintiff continued to reside there. Defendant also purchased a car that plaintiff used; gave her money for various expenses; and paid for her undergraduate and graduate education. Plaintiff ultimately received a Master’s degree.
Despite the increased support that defendant provided to plaintiff, the parties saw each other no more than two or three evenings at the condominium for dinner each week and sometimes one day on the weekend. During the seven years that plaintiff lived in the condominium, defendant spent only six or seven nights there.
In 2003, the parties considered having a child together. However, at some point, plaintiff learned that she would have difficulty conceiving a child. Defendant also changed his mind about wanting to have another child in August 2003 and conveyed that to plaintiff.
Finally, defendant told plaintiff that he wanted to discontinue the relationship. Plaintiff continued to live in the North Bergen condominium, and in December 2003, she began a relationship with another man. In February 2004, defendant attempted to visit the condominium when plaintiff’s new boyfriend was present, but defendant was denied entrance by plaintiff.
Plaintiff filed a complaint for palimony in October 2004, and defendant filed an answer. Following discovery, a bench trial was held. The Family Part judge issued an oral opinion in which she denied plaintiff’s complaint for palimony. The judge found that defendant had made “general promises” to plaintiff that he would take care of her and that “things would work out,” and that plaintiff used those promises to sustain her belief that they would eventually live together. Further, although over the years plaintiff became financially dependent on defendant, defendant never promised to provide plaintiff with lifetime financial support.
The trial judge rejected plaintiff’s contention that the parties entered into an implied agreement for support, and citing In re Estate of Roccamonte, 174 N.J. 381, 808 A.2d 838 (2002), found that such an agreement requires that the parties have entered into a “marital-type” relationship. The judge cited several factors that contributed to her conclusion that the parties’ relationship was not akin to a marriage. The judge considered that the parties had not cohabited, had not spent significant periods of time together, and had not demonstrated an intention to commingle property. The judge also found that although defendant did visit with plaintiffs family, the parties did not hold themselves out to the public as husband and wife and plaintiff did not attend social gatherings with defendant’s friends, family, or colleagues.
In addition, the judge found that plaintiff’s contributions to the relationship were not similar to those a wife would make in a marriage. Although plaintiff provided defendant with companionship and helped with some of his personal and business matters, the judge found no evidence that those actions were more than a typical dating relationship. Finally, the judge denied plaintiff’s request for counsel fees because the equities weighed against such an award.
We granted plaintiff’s petition for certification. Devaney v. L’Esperance, 192 N.J. 72, 926 A.2d 856 (2007).
II.
Plaintiff argues that the Appellate Division erroneously held that cohabitation is an indispensable element of a palimony cause of action. She contends that consistent with Roccamonte, supra, in which the Court defined a marital-type relationship as “the undertaking of a way of life in which two people commit to each other,” 174 at 392, 808 A.2d 838, cohabitation is a relevant, but not a necessary, factor. Plaintiff contends that the parties’ relationship satisfied Roccamonte because they committed to each other, provided companionship, and met each other’s financial, emotional, physical, and social needs. Plaintiff asserts that her entering into such a relationship and subsequently conducting herself in accordance with its unique character was consideration in full measure to make defendant’s promise of lifetime support enforceable. She also argues that the parties’ attempt to conceive a child was evidence of a marital-type relationship and that equity requires an award of palimony because she devoted herself to defendant for almost twenty years in reliance on defendant’s promises that he would divorce his wife, marry plaintiff, and have a child with her. Further, she contends that whether she is entitled to counsel fees should await the ultimate disposition of this matter.
In contrast, defendant argues that the Appellate Division’s holding is correct because the law is “settled” that cohabitation is
III.
Preliminarily, we trace our history of a cause of action for palimony, which in general terms is a claim for support between unmarried persons. We first recognized such a cause of action in Kozlowski v. Kozlowski, 80 N.J. 378, 403 A.2d 902 (1979). Prior to that decision, our courts would not enforce support agreements between unmarried individuals or married persons who lived together with someone other than their spouses because they were considered meretricious.
In Kozlowski, both the defendant and the plaintiff were married to other persons when the defendant induced the plaintiff to leave her husband and come live with him. Id. at 381, 403 A.2d 902. The parties lived as a normal family unit for approximately six years. During that time, three of the four children of the two families came to live with the couple in their new home. Ibid. Although a serious disagreement caused them to separate for a
The plaintiff filed suit against the defendant, seeking, among other things, future support for life. The trial court found that the defendant expressly agreed to support the plaintiff for the rest of her life and that such a promise was enforceable; Id. at 384-85, 403 A.2d 902. While the appeal was pending in the Appellate Division, this Court certified the appeal. Id. at 381, 403 A.2d 902. The Court acknowledged the changing mores that resulted in many unmarried persons living together and adopted the view expressed by the California Supreme Court, which declared: .
In summary, we believe that the prevalence of nonmarital relationships in modern society and the social acceptance of them, marks this as a time when our courts should by no means apply the doctrine of the unlawfulness of the so-called meretricious relationship to the instant ease. As we have explained, the nonen-forceability of agreements expressly providing for meretricious conduct rested upon the fact that such conduct, as the word suggests, pertained to and encompassed prostitution. To equate the nonmarital relationship of today to such a subject matter, is to do violence to an accepted and wholly different practice.
We are aware that many young couples live together without the solemnization of marriage, in order to make sure that they can successfully later undertake marriage. This trial period, preliminary to marriage, serves as some assurance that the marriage will not subsequently end in dissolution to the harm of both parties. We are aware, as we have stated, of the pervasiveness of nonmarital relationships in other situations.
The mores of the society have indeed changed so radically in regard to cohabitation that we cannot impose a standard based on alleged moral considerations that have apparently been so widely abandoned by so many.
We conclude that the judicial barriers that may stand in the way of a policy based upon the fulfillment of the reasonable expectations of the parties to a nonmarital relationship should be removed. As we have explained, the courts now hold that express agreements will be enforced unless they rest on an unlawful meretricious consideration.
[Id. at 385-86, 403 A.2d 902 (quoting Marvin v. Marvin, 18 Cal.3d 660, 134 Cal.Rptr. 815, 557 P.2d 106, 122 (1976)).]
Three years later, the Court applied the Kozlowski principles in Crowe v. DeGioia, 90 N.J. 126, 447 A.2d 173 (1982). There, the plaintiff met the defendant in 1960 when she was separated from her husband. The defendant was single and agreed that the plaintiff and her seven children could live with him. Id. at 129, 447 A.2d 173. The plaintiff alleged that the two lived together for twenty years in a relationship that was akin to a marriage and that the defendant told her that “he would take care of her and support her for the rest of her life.” Ibid. When the defendant broke off the relationship, he promised to give her a good settlement, but never did. Id. at 129-30, 447 A.2d 173. The plaintiff filed a complaint seeking support and temporary relief. Ibid. The trial court granted temporary relief, but the Appellate Division reversed. Id. at 131, 447 A.2d 173. After reaffirming that the plaintiff was not entitled to alimony because the parties were not married, this Court applied traditional equitable principles to authorize preliminary relief. Id. at 132-36, 447 A.2d 173. The Court explained that
[t]he inability to fit [the] plaintiffs claim for temporary relief into the conventional category of a matrimonial action is not a bar to relief. To achieve substantial justice in other cases, we have adjusted the rights and duties of parties in light of the realities of their relationship. Increasing numbers of unmarried couples live [the] plaintiff need not be rewarded for cohabitating with [the] defendant, she should not be penalized simply because she lived with him in consideration of a promise for support. Our endeavor is to shape a remedy that will protect the legally cognizable interests of the parties and serve the needs of justice.
[Id. at 135, 447 A.2d 173 (internal citations omitted).]
Thus, the Court affirmed the trial court’s grant of preliminary relief and remanded for a plenary hearing to resolve the factual dispute. Ibid.
This Court reviewed its prior palimony cases and explained that such highly personal contracts require that the Court take special care to “determine whether such a contract has been entered into and what its terms are.” at 389, 808 A.2d 838. The Court made clear that the fundamental principle of New Jersey’s palimony cases is that “the formation of a marital-type relationship
in which people commit to each other, foregoing other liaisons and opportunities, doing for each other whatever each is capable of doing, providing companionship, and fulfilling each other’s needs, financial, emotional, physical, and social, as best as they are able. And each couple defines its way of life and each partner’s expected contribution to it in its own way. Whatever other consideration may be involved, the entry into such a relationship and then conducting oneself in accordance with its unique character is consideration in full measure.
[Id. at 392-93, 808 A.2d 838.]
The Court noted that because the trial court had not properly applied the palimony principles of Kozlowski and Crowe, it would exercise original jurisdiction and determine if the defendant made an express or implied contract to support the plaintiff. Id. at 394, 808 A.2d 838. The Court scrutinized the record and found that the evidence supported the conclusion that the defendant promised to support the plaintiff for life. Id. at 395, 808 A.2d 838. The Court explained that
[i]t is not disputed that [the defendant’s] final break from his family and his marital-like relationship with [the] plaintiff resulted from his successful efforts to induce [the] plaintiffs return to him after she had moved to California to make a new life for herself because she had despaired of [the defendant’s] willingness ever to divorce his wife and marry her. There is no reasonable inference that can be drawn from her abandonment of that plan at his insistence and the resulting reunion other than that she relied on his representations, express or implied, that her future would be neither prejudiced nor compromised. It is also beyond dispute that [the defendant] was concerned for [the] plaintiffs economic well-being and provided for her lavishly during their twenty-five years together as well as during the first extended period of their relationship_The promise, clearly implied, if not express, that he would see to it that she was adequately provided for during her lifetime ... seems to us to have been both the corollary for and the condition of their relationship for the last quarter century of [the defendant’s] life.
[iWd]
We turn now to the present case. The question we have not previously addressed- is whether the parties may have a marital-type relationship, which is the underpinning of the consideration needed to support a claim for palimony, when they have not cohabited. The panel below and several other published Appellate Division opinions have interpreted our jurisprudence to require cohabitation as an indispensable element of a palimony action. See Levine v. Konvitz, 383 1, 2, 890 A.2d 354 (App.Div.) (holding that plenary action based on extra-marital relationship over seventy years failed because parties never cohab-itated), certif. denied, 186 N.J. 607, 897 A.2d 1061 (2006); McDonald v. Estate of Mavety, 383 N.J.Super. 347, 360, 891 A.2d 1218 (App.Div.) (noting that “a critical element of a palimony claim is cohabitation for a significant period of time”), certif. denied, 187 N.J. 79, 899 A.2d 302 (2006); see also In re Estate of Sasson, 387 N.J.Super. 459, 467-68, 904 A.2d 769 (App.Div.) (noting that cohabitation required for prima facie case for palimony and affirming trial court’s determination that cohabitation period of less than three years was insufficient), certif. denied, 189 N.J. 103, 912 A.2d 1263 (2006).
We do not read our jurisprudence as being so confining to make cohabitation a necessary requirement to a successful claim for palimony. Rather we opt for a more flexible approach that seeks to achieve substantial justice in light of the realities of the relationship. It is the promise to support, expressed or implied, coupled with a marital-type relationship, that are the indispensable elements to support a valid claim for palimony.
Indeed, whether the parties cohabited is a relevant factor in the analysis of whether a marital-type relationship exists, and in most successful palimony cases, cohabitation will be present. We recognize, however, that palimony cases present highly personal ■arrangements and the facts surrounding the relationship will
Just as important, “[w]e have recognized that Family Part judges have developed a special expertise in dealing with family and family-type matters.” Roccamonte, supra, 174 N.J. at 399, 808 A.2d 838 (citing Cesare v. Cesare, 154 N.J. 394, 412-13, 713 A.2d 390 (1998)). That is, the Family court is well-equipped to consider highly personal facts and to determine whether a plaintiffs claim for support based on a marital-type relationship has merit.
The trial judge in the present case exemplified that expertise. In concluding that the parties did not enjoy a marital-type relationship, the judge found that the parties did not live together; they did not spend significant periods of time together; they did not commingle their property or share living expenses; and they did not hold themselves out to the public as husband and wife. The trial judge correctly considered the lack of cohabitation as a factor in reaching its determination and appropriately analyzed all of the factors of the highly personalized relationship between the parties, including the fact that defendant continued to live with his wife. Consequently, in rejecting plaintiffs argument of an implied contract to support her for life, the judge concluded that the marital-type relationship that informs the basis of a valid contract was lacking. As the trial judge so aptly phrased it, “the parties’ relationship was best characterized as a dating' relationship.”
IV.
We find no need to engage in an elaborate discussion of the trial judge’s decision denying an award of counsel fees. In denying the parties’ request for counsel fees, the trial judge considered the parties financial resources; the amount of fees previously paid by the parties; the results obtained in the action; the reasonableness and good faith of the parties; and whether equity required an award of counsel fees. We find no abuse of discretion in the judge’s determination that neither party should receive an award for counsel fees.
V.
As modified, the judgment of the Appellate Division affirming the trial court’s rejection of plaintiffs claim for palimony is affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
concurring.
I write separately to express my view that although the Court’s opinion is an entirely correct paradigm in an implied contract case like the one before us, it should not be read in the future as applicable to an express contract.
The right to support in a palimony action “does not derive from the relationship itself but rather is a right created by contract.” In re Estate of Roccamonte, 174 N.J. 381, 389, 808 A.2d 838
At common law, that bar applied where promises were based in whole or in part on sexual intercourse outside of the marriage relationship. 15 Corbin on Contracts § 81.4 (Perillo ed., rev. ed. 2003). Indeed, in a broad sweep, courts tended to view any contract arising from such a relationship as “meretricious” and unenforceable even if the relationship was not an express part of the bargain. Ibid.
In a watershed decision, the California Supreme Court in Marvin v. Marvin, 18 660, 134 Cal.Rptr. 815, 557 P.2d 106 (1976), addressed the topic of meretricious consideration. In that case, the plaintiff who had cohabited with the defendant without the benefit of marriage sought, by way of a contract action, to enforce his promise that they would share earnings and property accumulated during their relationship. In reversing a judgment on the pleadings in the defendant’s favor, the court in Marvin concluded that non-marital cohabitants should be treated “as any other persons,” and that contracts between them are valid and enforceable so long as they are not solely and exclusively based on sexual services, i.e., prostitution. Id. at 815, 557 P.2d at 116. In other words, Marvin established the limited principle that cohabitation in itself is not meretricious and that the “judicial barriers that may stand in the way of a policy based upon the fulfillment of the reasonable expectations of the parties to a nonmarital relationship should be removed.” Id. at 815, 557 P.2d at 122.
The suggestion that Marvin and Kozlowski somehow established the cohabitation of the parties as an essential element of a common law contract action between romantic companions has wisely been rejected by my colleagues. Cohabitation only played a part in those decisions because it was advanced as an impediment to an otherwise maintainable contract action. In turn, a marital-type relationship was only considered in Marvin and Kozlowski because it raised the spectre of cohabitation. Indeed, all that Marvin and Kozlowski established was that living together in a marital-type relationship is not a meretricious disqualifies not that those circumstances are the only route to a contract claim.
That is not to suggest that the existence of a marital-type relationship is irrelevant. To the contrary, it bears on the issues of contract formation and bargained-for consideration. Indeed, in an implied contract case such as the one before us, where courts look beyond what was said to the parties’ acts, Roccamonte, supra, 174 N.J. at 389, 808 A.2d 838, it is hard to imagine that any scenario other than a marriage-type relationship would sustain the conclusion that an implied promise of lifetime support was made. It is for that reason that I concur in the result reached here.
I note as well that a party’s actual willingness to live in a marital-type relationship is relevant to a consideration analysis. As we recognized in Roccamonte, “[wjhatever other consideration may be involved,” the entry into a marital-type relationship “is consideration in full measure.” Id. at 393, 808 A.2d 838.
The point is that, under our established case law, like every other person, a participant in a non-marital romantic relationship may recover in contract if she can show that she incurred a detriment in reliance on an express promise of support, that that promise was breached, and that she was damaged thereby. Any other conclusion would contradict our statement in Roccamonte that “a general promise of support for life, broadly expressed, made by one party to the other with some form of consideration given by the other will suffice to form a contract.” Id. at 389-90, 808 A.2d 838 (quoting Kozlowski supra, 80 N.J. at 384, 403 A.2d 902) (emphasis added).
To be sure, to succeed on a claim of an express promise for lifetime support will be difficult because those kinds of representations are rarely made in the presence of witnesses and are usually denied by the putative promisor when the relationship breaks down. Nevertheless, in a case in which a plaintiff in fact proves an express promise of lifetime support, and that she provided the agreed upon consideration, she should not be barred from recovery based on the absence of a marital-type relationship.
For example, had the trial judge in this case credited Ms. Devaney’s claim of an express promise of lifetime support by Dr. L’Esperance, the only questions for disposition would be the nature of the agreed upon consideration for the promise and whether Ms. Devaney fully performed her part of the bargain. Any other approach would confound our contract law and render a so-called palimony case an independent cause of action based upon the nature of the parties’ relationship. We have already rejected
I write only to flag that issue for future consideration. In all other respects I am in accord with the majority’s view.
Concurring Opinion
concurring in the result.
Defining the cause of action for palimony “in general terms [as] a claim for support between unmarried personsf,]” ante at 253, 949 A.2d at 746, the majority declares that “cohabitation is not an essential requirement for a cause of action for palimony, but a marital-type relationship is required.” Id. at 248, 949 A.2d at 744. However, from its inception, a cause of action for palimony, even if valid, always has a bare proof of cohabitation. That requirement, and the rationale that undergirds it, require that the majority’s reasoning be rejected. However, because the majority ultimately rejects plaintiffs palimony claim, I concur in the result.
I.
The majority correctly notes that this Court “first recognized [a palimony] cause of action in Kozlowski v. Kozlowski, 80 N.J. 378, 403 A.2d 902 (1979)[,]” and that “[p]rior to that decision, our courts would not enforce support agreements between unmarried individuals or married persons who lived together with someone other than their spousesf.]” at 253, 949 A.2d at 746. Kozlowski embraced Marvin v. Marvin, 18 Cal.3d 660, 134 Cal.Rptr. 815, 557 P.2d 106, 122 (1976), where the Supreme Court of California held that modern mores required a more elastic view of when parties who are not married to one another nevertheless are entitled to a division of assets acquired during the relationship and, more to the point, virtue of the non-marital has assumed a continuing obligation of support
From that premise, the majority defines the question presented as “whether the parties may have a marital-type relationship, which is the underpinning of the consideration needed to support a claim for palimony, when they have not cohabited.” Ante at 258, 949 A.2d at 749. Concluding that cohabitation is not “a necessary requirement to a successful claim for palimony[,]” the majority instead “opt[s] for a more flexible approach that seeks to achieve substantial justice in light of the realities of the relationship.” Id. at 258, 949 A.2d at 750. The majority concludes that “[i]t is the promise to support, expressed or implied, coupled with a marital-type relationship, that are the indispensable elements to support a valid claim for palimony[,]” explaining that “whether the parties cohabited is a relevant factor in the analysis of whether a marital-type relationship exists, and [that] in most successful palimony cases, cohabitation will be present.” Ibid. Reasoning that “palimony cases present highly personal arrangements and the facts surrounding the relationship will determine whether it is a marital-type relationship that is essential to support a cause of action for palimony[,]” and that “[t]he trier of fact must consider the realities of the relationship in the quest to achieve substantial justice[,]” the majority defines the judicial task thusly: “in addressing a cause of action for palimony, the trial judge should
II.
Kozlowski, Crowe, and Roccamonte demonstrate that this Court indeed has recognized a cause of action for palimony. That recognition, however, is not without controversy. The majority does not mention, much less discuss, the objective fact that the overwhelming weight of authority nationwide rejects a claim for post-nonmarital relationship support or alimony obliinstead limits recovery to what a cohabitant has contributed to the relationship.
As a threshold matter, Alabama, Idaho, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah recognize common law marriages, and, for that reason, do not allow palimony claims. See, e.g., Beck v. Beck, 286 Ala. 692, 246 So.2d 420 (1971); Herd v. Herd, 194 Ala. 613, 617, 69 So. 885, 887 (1915); In re Estate of Wilkins, 137 Idaho 315, 48 P.3d 644 (2002); Mueggenborg v. Walling, 836 P.2d 112 (Okla. 1992) (explaining that common law marriage requires, among other things, “ ‘consummating [the] arrangement by cohabitation’ ” (quoting v. Maness, 470 P.2d 1011, 1013 (Okla. 1970))); Tarnowski v. Lieberman, 348 S.C. 616, 560 S.E.2d 438 (App. 2002); Layton v. Layton, 777 P.2d 504 (Utah Ct.App. 1989).
The vast majority of states that do not acknowledge common
Georgia explicitly rejects any palimony claims. v. Marino, 212 Ga.App. 113, 441 S.E.2d 475 (1994). Illinois jettisons palimony claims as surrogates for outlawed common law marriages. Hewitt v. Hewitt, 77 Ill.2d 49, 31 Ill.Dec. 827, 394 N.E.2d 1204 (1979). Although it does not recognize palimony claims, Iowa
Kentucky rejects palimony claims for a straightforward and logical reason: “[w]ere it otherwise, the courts, in effect, would be reinstituting by judicial fiat common law marriage which by expressed public policy is not recognized.” Murphy v. Bowen, 756 S.W.2d 149, 150 (Ky.Ct.App. 1988). Louisiana too rejects palimony claims. Schwegmann v. Schwegmann, 441 So.2d 316 (La.Ct.App. 1983). Holding that “[i]t is not right to treat unmarried people as if they were married[,]” Maine does not recognize a palimony claim, but does allow recovery for “business[-]related services” and for “domestic services performed solely to allow the defendant to devote more time to his businessf.]” Ring v. Thompson, 1996 Me.Super. LEXIS 279, at *4-5 (Me.Super.Ct. Aug. 29, 1996).
New York does not enforce contracts implied from the relationship of unmarried cohabitants, but does enforce express contracts for the distribution of earnings and assets acquired during the cohabitation. Morone v. Morone, 50 N.Y.2d 481, 429 N.Y.S.2d 592, 413 N.E.2d 1154 (1980). Ohio “decline[s] to follow [Marvin, supra, and like decisions] insofar as they recognize a new legal status for persons living together without benefit of marriage[,]” holding that “[t]here is no precedent in Ohio for dividing assets or property based on mere cohabitation without marriage[.]” Lauper v. Harold, 23 Ohio App.3d 168, 170, 492 N.E.2d 472, 474 (1985). Tennessee and Vermont do not allow palimony claims, but do enforce claims for property acquired during the relationship on a partnership theory. Bass v. Bass, 814 S.W.2d 38, 44 (Tenn. 1991) (explaining that “[t]he fact that the parties cohabited ... has absolutely no bearing whatsoever [as a] partnership can be implied in this case while completely ignoring the parties’ social relationship”); Harman v. Rogers, 147 Vt. 11, 510 A.2d 161 (1986).
Several Colorado, Hawaii, Indiana, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Washington and Wyoming— do not explicitly address whether a palimony claim for support is cognizable, focusing instead on whether assets acquired during the non-marital cohabitation relationship are divisible. See, e.g., Cook v. Cook, 142 Ariz. 573, 577, 691 P.2d 664, 668 (1984) (stating that although “[t]he law will not give to non-marital cohabiting parties the benefit of community property rights, since these rights derive solely from the marital relationship[,]” nevertheless “ ‘the fact that
Two states, by statute, have required that palimony claims must satisfy the statute of frauds in order to be enforceable. Minnesota provides that
[i]f sexual relations between the parties are contemplated, a contract between a man and a woman who are living together in this state out of wedlock, or who are about to commence living together in this state out of wedlock, is enforceable as to terms concerning the property and financial relations of the parties only if: (1) the contract is written and signed by the parties, and (2) enforcement is sought after termination of the relationship.
[Minn.Stat. § 513.075 (2007).]
Its legislature made that point clear when it enjoined that
[u]nless the individuals have executed a contract complying with the provisions of section 513.075, the courts of this state are without jurisdiction to hear and shall dismiss as contrary to public policy any claim by an individual to the earnings or property of another individual if the claim is based on the fact that the individuals lived together in contemplation of sexual relations and out of wedlock within or without this state.
[Minn-Stat. § 513.076 (2007).]
Texas likewise provides that a
promise or agreement [made on consideration of marriage or on consideration of nonmarital conjugal cohabitation] is not enforceable unless the promise or agreement, or a memorandum of it, is (1) in writing; and (2) signed by the person to be charged with the promise or agreement or by someone lawfully authorized to sign for him.
[Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 26.01 (2007).]
See also Zaremba v. Cliburn, 949 S.W.2d 822, 825-28 (Tex.App. 1997) (applying statute of frauds to palimony case). Finally, as a matter of decisional law, Florida and North Dakota also do not acknowledge a palimony claim in the absence of a writing confirming the agreement of support. Posik v. Layton, 695 So.2d 759 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1997); Kohler v. Flynn, 493 N.W.2d 647, 649 (N.D. 1992) (barring both palimony claims and equitable division claims by unmarried cohabitants, explaining that “[i]f live-in com
The lesson to be gleaned is clear: for those limited instances where a claim for palimony is based on a writing confirming an agreement of a palimony claim be sustained absent proof of cohabitation. The rationale undergird-ing that obvious rule is equally self-evident: because they are easy to allege yet inherently contrary to fundamental legal concepts that have governed our jurisprudence for centuries, palimony claims must be viewed with great skepticism and must be subjected to harsh and unremitting scrutiny. It is to how this Court has guarded against sham palimony claims that I now turn.
III.
In Kozlowski, we adopted the rule that “an agreement between adult parties living together is enforceable to the extent it is not based on a relationship proscribed by law, or on a promise to marry.” Supra, 80 N.J. at 387, 403 A.2d 902 (emphasis supplied). The insistence on “adult parties living together” as a condition precedent to any palimony claim is utterly unremarkable as that condition appears explicitly in Marvin, supra, the decision on which Kozlowski firmly rests. In Marvin, the Supreme Court of California “base[d its] opinion on the principle that adults who voluntarily live together and engage in sexual relations are nonetheless as competent as any other persons to contract respecting their earnings and property rights.” Supra, 134 Cal.Rptr. at 825, 557 P.2d at 116 (emphasis supplied). In Roccamonte, we similarly allowed a palimony claim in circumstances where the parties “lived together as husband and wife.” Supra, 174 N.J. at 386, 808 A.2d 838. Clearly, this Court consistently has held that “living together as husband and “cohabitation” a necessary condition precedent to a palimony claim.
Those concerns rightly animated the Appellate Division’s decision below. Noting that “absent cohabitation, plaintiffs cause of action could not succeed[,]” Devaney v. L’Esperance, 391 N.J.Super. 448, 452, 918 A.2d 684 (App.Div. 2007), the panel cited with approval to Levine v. Konvitz, 383 N.J.Super. 1, 890 A.2d 354 (App.Div.), certif. denied, 186 N.J. 607, 897 A.2d 1061 (2006), for “the policy rationale behind the law’s insistence on cohabitation as
Although the quality, nature, and extent of the consideration sufficient to sustain a palimony action may differ depending on all the circumstances, we are satisfied that the rendering of such consideration must be done in a setting of cohabitation. Without such a bright-line requirement, the concept of “marital-type” relationship is unacceptably vulnerable to duplicitous manipulation.
Requiring cohabitation as an element of a palimony action also provides a measure of advance notice and warning, to both parties to a relationship, and to their respective family members, that legal and financial consequences may result from that relationship. In this context, cohabitation requires the demonstrable act of setting up a household together. Thus, in contrast to an extramarital affair, even a long-term one, cohabitation announces to the ones most affected by the existence of the relationship, the innocent spouse and dependent children, that defendant has entered into a relationship that may result in significant and long-term impairment of family assets.
[Levine, supra, 383 N.J.Super. at 10-11, 890 A.2d 354.]
The reasons for requiring cohabitation as a condition precedent to a palimony claim could not be stated any clearer; in contrast, the majority’s rejection of that safety valve condition precedent is unexplained and without basis.
IV.
It is against that that is neither explored nor analyzed by the majority, either in respect of its reasoning or its ultimate the majority announces the unceremonious discard of cohabitation as a prerequisite for a palimony cause of action. No doubt, there is a strong emotional basis for a palimony claim. As stated in Roccamonte,
The principle we recognized and accepted [in Kozlowski and Crowe ] is that the formation of a marital-type relationship between unmarried persons may, legitimately and enforceably, rest upon a promise by one to support the other. A marital-type relationship is no more exclusively dependent upon one partner’s providing maid service than it is upon sexual accommodation. It is, rather, the undertaking of a way of life in which two people commit to each other, foregoing other liaisons and opportunities, doing for each other whatever each is capable of doing, providing companionship, and fulfilling each other’s needs, financial, emotional, physical, and social, as best as they are able. And each couple defines its way of life and each partner’s expected contribution to it in its own way. Whatever other consideration may be involved, the entry into such a relationship and then*276 conducting oneself in accordance with its unique character is consideration in full measure. There is no doubt that plaintiff provided that consideration here until her obligation was discharged by [her cohabitant’s] death.
[Supra, 174 N.J. at 392-93, 808 A.2d 838.]
Yet, as we have been well warned, it is the very nature of a palimony claim that commands caution and strict proof requirements, and a distinct cohabitation requirement stands as a formidable bulwark against emotion-based yet meritless claims.
Because the majority concedes that plaintiff cannot satisfy even the lesser standard the Court sets forth, the end result in this case is the dismissal of plaintiffs palimony claim. That result should have been reached for a different plaintiff has failed to prove the element of cohabitation necessary to sustain a palimony not for the reasons tendered by the majority. Therefore, I concur solely in the result.
For
For concurrence in
Ironically, on remand, the trial court found that the defendant never had agreed to support the plaintiff for the remainder of her life, and only awarded the plaintiff living expenses during a limited rehabilitation period, an award that was vacated on appeal. See generally Ann Laquer Estin, Unmarried Partners and the Legacy of Marvin v. Marvin: Ordinary Cohabitation, 76 Notre Dame L.Rev. 1381, 1381-82 (2001).
Virginia also does not recognize common law marriage, all the while "recog-niz[ing] as valid a common law marriage [ ] formed in accordance with the law of another state which recognizes common law marriage as valid.” Reynolds v. Reynolds, 2003 WL 21278869, *4, 2003 Va. Cir. LEXIS 315, *10 (Va. Cir. Ct. June 4, 2003). No reported Virginia case discusses a cause of action for palimony.
Cohabitation is defined as "[t]o live together as spouses” or "[t]o live together in a sexual relationship when not legally married." Webster's II New College Dictionary 218 (1995). This Court has defined the term as follows:
*274 Cohabitation is not defined or measured solely or even essentially by "sex" or even by ordinary understanding of cohabitation is based on those factors that make the relationship close and enduring and requires more than a common residence, although that is an important factor. Cohabitation involves an intimate relationship in which the couple has undertaken duties and privileges that are commonly associated with marriage. These can include, but are not limited to, living together, intertwined finances such as joint bank accounts, sharing living expenses and household chores, and recognition of the relationship in the couple’s social and family circle.
[Konzelman v. Konzelman, 158 N.J. 185, 202, 729 A.2d 7 (1999) (citation omitted).]
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Helen Mary Devaney, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Francis A. L’esperance, Jr., Defendant-Respondent
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published