1. Upon review here of a judgment of a court of one State
refusing to give full faith and credit to a judgment of a court of
another, the sufficiency of the grounds of refusal is for this
Court to determine. P.
323 U. S.
81.
2. Upon review here of a decision of a court of one State
involving the law of another, a federal right being asserted, it is
the duty of this Court to determine for itself the law of such
other State. P.
323 U. S.
81.
3. A duly authenticated judgment of a court of general
jurisdiction of another State is
prima facie evidence of
the jurisdiction of the court to render it and of the right which
it purports to adjudicate. P.
323 U. S.
86.
4. A money judgment of a court of North Carolina for arrears of
alimony, not, by its terms, conditional and on which execution was
directed to issue,
held, under the law of that State, not
subject to
Page 323 U. S. 78
modification or recall, and, under the Federal Constitution and
the Act of May 26, 1790, as amended, entitled to full faith and
credit. P. 86.
180 Tenn. 353, 175 S.W.2d 324, reversed.
Certiorari, 322 U.S. 719, to review the reversal of a decree in
a suit to enforce a judgment of a court of another State for
arrears of alimony.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision is whether the Supreme Court of
Tennessee, in a suit brought upon a North Carolina judgment for
arrears of alimony, rightly denied full faith and credit to the
judgment on the ground that it lacks finality because, by the law
of North Carolina, it is subject to modification or recall by the
court which entered it.
In 1920, petitioner secured in the Superior Court of North
Carolina for Buncombe County, a court of general jurisdiction, a
judgment of separation from respondent, her husband. The judgment
directed payment to petitioner of $200 per month alimony, later
reduced to $160 per month. In 1932, respondent stopped paying the
prescribed alimony. In 1940, on petitioner's motion in the
separation suit for a judgment for the amount of the alimony
accrued and unpaid under the earlier order, the Superior Court of
North Carolina gave judgment in her favor. It adjudged that
respondent was indebted to petitioner in the sum of $19,707.20,
under its former order, that petitioner have and recover of
respondent that amount, and "that execution issue therefor."
Petitioner then brought the present suit in the Tennessee
Chancery Court to recover on the judgment thus obtained.
Page 323 U. S. 79
Respondent, by his answer, put in issue the finality, under
North Carolina law, of the judgment sued upon, and the cause was
submitted for decision on the pleadings and a stipulation that the
court might consider as duly proved the records in two prior
appeals in the North Carolina separation proceeding "upon the
authority of which the judgment sued upon in the present case is
predicated," and that the opinions of the Supreme Court of North
Carolina upon these appeals,
Barber v. Barber, 216 N.C.
232, 4 S.E.2d 447; 217 N.C. 422, 8 S.E.2d 204, should be
"admissible in evidence to prove or tend to prove the North
Carolina law."
The Tennessee Chancery Court held the judgment sued upon to be
entitled to full faith and credit, and gave judgment for petitioner
accordingly. The Supreme Court of Tennessee reversed on the ground
that the judgment was without the finality entitling it to credit
under the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution, Art.
IV, § 1. 180 Tenn. 353, 175 S.W.2d 324. We granted certiorari
because of an asserted conflict with
Sistare v. Sistare,
218 U. S. 1, and
because of the importance of the issue raised. 322 U.S. 719.
The constitutional command is that "Full Faith and Credit shall
be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and Judicial
Proceedings of every other State." Article IV, § 1 of the
Constitution also provides that "Congress may by general Laws
prescribe the Manner in which such Acts, Records and Proceedings
shall be proved, and the Effect thereof." And Congress has enacted
that judgments
"shall have such faith and credit given to them in every court
within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts
of the State from which they are taken."
Act of May 26, 1790, c. 11, 1 Stat. 122, as amended, 28 U.S.C.
§ 687.
In
Sistare v. Sistare, supra, 218 U.
S. 16,
218 U. S. 17,
this Court considered whether a decree for future alimony, brought
to a sister
Page 323 U. S. 80
state, was entitled to full faith and credit as to installments
which had accrued, but which had not been reduced to a further
judgment. The Court held that a decree for future alimony is, under
the Constitution and the statute, entitled to credit as to past due
installments, if the right to them is "absolute and vested," even
though the decree might be modified prospectively by future orders
of the court.
See also Barber v.
Barber, 21 How. 582. The
Sistare case also
decided that such a decree was not final, and therefore not
entitled to credit, if the past due installments were subject
retroactively to modification or recall by the court after their
accrual.
See also Lynde v. Lynde, 181 U.
S. 183,
181 U. S.
187.
The
Sistare case considered the applicability of the
full faith and credit clause only as to decrees for future alimony
some of the installments of which had accrued. The present suit was
not brought upon a decree of that nature, but upon a money judgment
for alimony already due and owing to the petitioner, as to which
execution was ordered to issue. The Supreme Court of Tennessee
applied to this money judgment the distinction taken in the
Sistare case as to decrees for future alimony. It
concluded that, by the law of North Carolina, the judgment for the
specific amount of alimony already accrued was subject to
modification by the court which awarded it, that it was not a final
judgment under the rule of the
Sistare case, and therefore
was not entitled to full faith and credit.
As we are of opinion that the Tennessee Supreme Court
erroneously construed the law of North Carolina as to the finality
of the judgment sued upon here, it is unnecessary to consider
whether the rule of the
Sistare case as to decrees for
future alimony is also applicable to judgments subsequently entered
for arrears of alimony.
Compare Lynde v. Lynde, supra,
181 U. S. 187,
where this Court distinguished between a decree for arrears of
alimony and one for future alimony some of the installments of
which had accrued.
Page 323 U. S. 81
See also Audubon v. Shufeldt, 181 U.
S. 575,
181 U. S.
577-578. For the same reason, it is unnecessary to
consider whether a decree or judgment for alimony already accrued,
which is subject to modification or recall in the forum which
granted it but is not yet so modified, is entitled to full faith
and credit until such time as it is modified.
Cf. Levine v.
Levine, 95 Or. 94, 109-113, 187 P. 609;
Hunt v.
Monroe, 32 Utah 428, 440, 91 P. 269,
and compare Milwaukee
County v. White Co., 296 U. S. 268,
296 U. S.
275-276, and cases cited.
We assume for present purposes that petitioner's judgment for
accrued alimony is not entitled to full faith and credit if, by the
law of North Carolina, it is subject to modification. The refusal
of the Tennessee Supreme Court to give credit to that judgment
because of its nature is a ruling upon a federal right, and the
sufficiency of the grounds of denial is for this Court to decide.
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Hunt, 320 U.
S. 430,
320 U. S. 443,
and cases cited. And, in determining the applicable law of North
Carolina, this Court reexamines the issue with deference to the
opinion of the Tennessee court, although we cannot accept its view
of the law of North Carolina as conclusive. This is not a case
where a question of local law is peculiarly within the cognizance
of the local courts in which the case arose. The determination of
North Carolina law can be made by this Court as readily as by the
Tennessee courts, and, since a federal right is asserted, it is the
duty of this Court, upon an independent investigation, to determine
for itself the law of North Carolina.
See Adam v. Saenger,
303 U. S. 59,
303 U. S. 64,
and cases cited.
We are thus brought to the question whether, by the law of North
Carolina, the judgment which petitioner has secured in that state
for arrears of alimony is so wanting in finality as not to be
within the command of the Constitution and the Act of Congress. Our
examination of the North Carolina law on this subject must be in
the
Page 323 U. S. 82
light of the admonition of
Sistare v. Sistare, supra,
218 U. S. 22,
that "every reasonable implication must be resorted to against the
existence of" a power to modify or revoke installments of alimony
already accrued "in the absence of clear language manifesting an
intention to confer it." The admonition is nonetheless to be heeded
when the debt has been reduced to a judgment upon which execution
has been directed to issue.
Section 1667 of the North Carolina Consolidated Statutes
(General Stats. of 1943, Michie, § 50-16), under which
petitioner brought her suit for separation and alimony, provides
that, "[i]f any husband shall separate himself from his wife and
fail to provide her and the children of the marriage with . . .
necessary subsistence," she may maintain an action in the Superior
Court to have a "reasonable subsistence" allotted and paid to her.
It declares that "the order of allowance . . . may be modified or
vacated at any time, on the application of either party or of
anyone interested."
This statute, by its terms, makes provision only for the
modification of the "order of allowance," not of a judgment
rendered for the amount of the unpaid allowances which have accrued
under such an order. Nor does it state that the order of allowance
may be modified retroactively as to allowances already accrued. The
original North Carolina judgment ordering the payment of
subsistence installments of alimony is not in the record, and we
are not advised of its terms. Respondent places his reliance not on
them, but upon the North Carolina law, apart from the terms of the
decree, as providing for modification of such a judgment. But we
are aware of no statute or decision of any court of North Carolina,
and none has been cited, to the effect that an unconditional
judgment of that state for accrued allowances of alimony may be
modified or recalled after its rendition. Indeed, we find no
pronouncement of any North Carolina court
Page 323 U. S. 83
that, before such a judgment is rendered, an order for future
allowances may be modified or set aside with respect to allowances
which have accrued and are due and owing.
The Supreme Court of Tennessee found no support in North
Carolina statutes or judicial decisions for its conclusion that the
North Carolina judgment for arrears of alimony is subject to such
modification, other than a single paragraph of the opinion of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina at an early stage of the suit which
resulted in the judgment upon which suit was here brought.
* But these
remarks, as their context shows, appear to be addressed not to the
power of the court to modify or set aside a judgment for arrears of
alimony, but to the authority conferred by N.C.Con.Stat. §
1667, upon the court in the suit for alimony to modify its previous
order for the allowance of subsistence.
Page 323 U. S. 84
Consistently with
Sistare v. Sistare, supra, the
passage points out that such an order is not final in the
proceeding in which it is entered, but is subject to modification
by further orders of the court. In this respect, the North Carolina
court was but following its own pronouncement in the first appeal
in the separation proceeding,
Barber v. Barber, supra, 216
N.C. 232, 234, and in numerous other decisions of that court.
See Crews v. Crews, 175 N.C. 168, 173, 95 S.E. 149;
Anderson v. Anderson, 183 N.C. 139, 142, 110 S.E. 863;
Tiedemann v. Tiedemann, 204 N.C. 682, 683, 169 S.E. 422;
Wright v. Wright, 216 N.C. 693, 696, 6 SE.2d 555. But it
is quite another matter to say that past due installments may be
modified, or that a judgment not, by its terms, conditional and on
which execution may issue, is subject to modification because the
obligation for accrued alimony could have been modified or set
aside before its merger in the judgment. And, in fact, the North
Carolina Supreme Court has been at pains to indicate that such is
not the case.
In considering whether the decree of another state for future
alimony is entitled to full faith and credit, the North Carolina
court recognizes that such faith and credit is required as to past
due installments when it does not appear that they may be modified
or revoked. And it interprets general provisions for modification
of a decree directing future allowances of alimony as inapplicable
to allowances which have become due and owing. Since its decision
in
Barber v. Barber, in 217th N.C., it has held in
Lockman v. Lockman, 220 N.C. 95, 16 S.E.2d 670, that such
a decree in Florida is entitled to credit in North Carolina with
respect to arrears in alimony. The court said, at page 103:
"The rule in North Carolina is that a judgment awarding alimony
is a judgment directing the payment of money by the defendant, and,
by such judgment, the defendant becomes indebted to the plaintiff
for such alimony as it falls due, and, when the defendant is in
arrears in the payment
Page 323 U. S. 85
of alimony, the Court may judicially determine the amount due
and enter decree accordingly. It has no less dignity than any other
contractual obligation.
Barber v. Barber, 217 N.C. 422, 8
S.E.2d 204. In
Duss v. Duss, 92 Fla. 1081, 111 So. 382,
the obligation of the divorced husband to pay alimony was stated in
language of similar import."
The Supreme Court of North Carolina thus has assimilated the law
of North Carolina to that of Florida, under which it had just held
that past due installments of alimony were not subject to
modification. In this state of the law of North Carolina, we cannot
say that past due installments under a decree for future alimony
can be revoked or modified.
Still less can we say that a judgment for such installments can
be so modified. The North Carolina Supreme Court said in the
Barber case, 217 N.C. 422, 428: "There is no reason why a
judgment should not be rendered on an allowance for alimony, which
is a debt, any more than an ordinary one." And, elsewhere in its
opinion it said (page 427):
"A judgment awarding alimony is a judgment directing the payment
of money by a defendant to plaintiff, and, by such judgment, the
defendant thereupon becomes indebted to the plaintiff for such
alimony as it becomes due, and when the defendant is in arrears in
the payment of alimony, the Court may, on application of plaintiff,
judicially determine the amount then due and enter its decree
accordingly. The defendant, being a party to the action and having
been given due notice of the motion, is bound by such decree, and
the plaintiff is entitled to all the remedies provided by law for
the enforcement thereof."
We do not find in the language on which the Tennessee court
relied any clear or unequivocal indication that the judgment for
arrears of alimony, on which execution was directed to issue, was
itself subject to modification or recall. True, as the opinion of
the North Carolina court states, the judgment for arrears of
alimony was not a final
Page 323 U. S. 86
judgment in the separation suit. As to future alimony payments
not merged in the money judgment, the allotments ordered are, by
the terms of the statute, subject to modification. But it would
hardly be consistent with the court's statements, that accrued
alimony is a debt for which a judgment may be rendered, that the
defendant is bound by the judgment, and that "the plaintiff is
entitled to all the remedies provided by law" for its enforcement,
to say that the judgment may be modified or set aside by virtue of
a statute which, in terms, merely authorizes modification of the
order for payment of allowances.
The judgment of a court of general jurisdiction of a sister
state duly authenticated is
prima facie evidence of the
jurisdiction of the court to render it and of the right which it
purports to adjudicate.
Adam v. Saenger, supra,
303 U. S. 62,
and cases cited. The present judgment is, on its face, an
unconditional adjudication of petitioner's right to recover a sum
of money due and owing which, by the law of the state, is a debt.
The judgment orders that execution issue. To overcome the
prima
facie effect of the judgment record, it is necessary that
there be some persuasive indication that North Carolina law
subjects the judgment to the infirmity of modification or recall
which is wanting here.
Upon full consideration of the law of North Carolina, we
conclude that respondent has not overcome the
prima facie
validity and finality of the judgment sued upon. We cannot say that
the statutory authority to modify or recall an order providing for
future allowances of installments of alimony extends to a judgment
for overdue installments or that such a judgment is not entitled to
full faith and credit.
Reversed.
* The language quoted from
Barber v. Barber, 217 N.C.
422, 427, 428, 8 S.E.2d 204, 208, is as follows:
"It is not a final judgment in the action, since both the
plaintiff and the defendant may apply for other orders and for
modifications of orders already made, which the court will allow as
the ends of justice require, according to the changed conditions of
the parties. The orders made from time to time are, of course,
res judicata between the parties, subject to this power of
the court to modify them. The consolidation of the amounts due,
when ascertained in one order or decree does not invest any of
these orders with any other character than that which they
originally had. If the defendant is in court only by reason of the
original service of summons, he is in court only for such orders
as, upon motion, are appropriate and customary in the proceeding
thus instituted. There is no reason why a judgment should not be
rendered on an allowance for alimony -- which is a debt -- any more
than an ordinary one. The court below, in its sound discretion,
which is not ordinarily reviewable by this Court, under the motion
of plaintiff in this cause, can hear the facts, change of
conditions of the parties, the present needs of support of any of
the children, and, in its sound discretion, render judgment for
what defendant owes under the former judgment and failed to pay,
and see to it that such judgment is given to protect plaintiff, and
'give diligence to make her [your] calling and election sure.'"
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, concurring.
I concur in the result, but I think that the judgment of the
North Carolina court was entitled to faith and
Page 323 U. S. 87
credit in Tennessee even if it was not a final one. On this
assumption, I do not find it necessary or relevant to examine North
Carolina law as to whether its judgment might, under some
hypothetical circumstances, be modified.
Neither the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution nor
the Act of Congress implementing it says anything about final
judgments, or, for that matter, about any judgments. Both require
that full faith and credit be given to "judicial proceedings,"
without limitation as to finality. Upon recognition of the broad
meaning of that term much may some day depend.
Whatever else this North Carolina document might be, no one
denies that it is a step in a judicial proceeding, instituted
validly under the strictest standards of due process. On its face,
it is final, and, by its terms, it awards a money judgment in a
liquidated amount, presently collectible, and provides "that
execution issue therefor." Tennessee should have rendered
substantially the same judgment that it received from the courts of
North Carolina. If later a decree is made in North Carolina which
modifies or amends its judgment, that modification or amendment
will also be entitled to faith and credit in Tennessee.
Of course, a judgment is entitled to faith and credit for just
what it is, and no more. But its own terms constitute a
determination by the rendering court as to what it is, and an
enforcing court may not search the laws of the state to see whether
the judgment terms are erroneous. Of course, if a judgment, by its
terms, reserves power to modify or states conditions, a judgment
entered upon it could appropriately make like reservations or
conditions. No such appear in this judgment unless they are to be
annexed to it by a study of the law of North Carolina. Any
application for such relief should be addressed to the North
Carolina court, and not to the Tennessee
Page 323 U. S. 88
court nor to this one. The purpose of the full faith and credit
clause is to lengthen the arm of the state court and to eliminate
state lines as a shelter from judicial proceedings. This is
defeated by entertaining a plea to review the support in state law
for the judgment as it has been rendered, which is a delaying
inquiry, as has been shown by this case.