Simkins v. Simkins
Decision Date | 04 March 1969 |
Docket Number | No. 68--370,68--370 |
Citation | 219 So.2d 724 |
Parties | Leon J. SIMKINS, Appellant, v. Luisa Victoria SIMKINS, Appellee. |
Court | Florida District Court of Appeals |
Sibley, Giblin, Levenson & Ward, Miami Beach, for appellant.
Pallot, Silver, Pallot, Stern & Proby, George J. Baya, Miami, for appellee.
Before CHARLES CARROLL, C.J., and PEARSON and SWANN, JJ.
This is an interlocutory appeal from an order relating to discovery in a divorce suit pending in the circuit court of Dade County. The appellant, the husband, is suing for divorce. The wife has counterclaimed for alimony without divorce, charging the husband with having been guilty of adultery. The wife noticed the husband for a discovery deposition. Her inquiry thereon sought to explore two areas in which he claimed privilege. One was as to communications between him and his accountant. His objection there, on the ground of privileged communications, as provided for by § 473.15 Fla.Stat., F.S.A., was sustained, and the trial court recognized the husband's right to refuse to answer in that area without penalty. The other consisted of questions going to the charge of adultery which the wife had leveled against him. As to that, the husband refused to answer upon invoking his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination. 1 However, the court ordered the husband to answer, and this appeal followed.
The penalties authorized by Rule 1.380(b), RCP 30 F.S.A. for a litigant's refusal to so answer when ordered, make it clear that the effect of the order was to confront the husband with the dilemma of surrendering his right to refuse to answer on the ground of self-incrimination, or insist on such privilege and thereby subject himself to the penalty of loss of the right to prosecute his cause and to defend against the counterclaim.
The appellee argues that as a suitor the husband waived his right to protection against self-incrimination, and that if he should invoke it he could not pursue his cause, relying on Stockham v. Stockham, Fla.1964, 168 So.2d 320, 4 A.L.R.3d 539.
In the Stockham case a wife sued for divorce on the ground of cruelty. The husband defended by charging the wife with adultery. In response to his request for admissions thereof by her, the wife invoked the privilege against self-incrimination, as granted by § 12 of the Declaration of Rights of Florida, F.S.A. The trial court sustained her. The District Court of Appeal reversed. On appeal therefrom the Supreme Court affirmed the holding of the District Court of Appeal that the wife must answer, and that upon her failure to do so (on claiming protection against self-incrimination) her suit for divorce would be dismissed. It was held in the Stockham case that provisions of § 12 of the Declaration of Rights of Florida and of the Fifth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, for protection against self-incrimination, were not available to a litigant in such suit, and, if insisted upon, would result in dismissal of that party's suit.
That decision fits this case, and would call for our affirmance of the order on appeal here, were it not for the fact that the Supreme Court of the United States, in later decisions, has clearly indicated the contrary. See Spevack v. Klein (1967), 385 U.S. 511, 87 S.Ct. 625, 17 L.Ed.2d 574, and Garrity v. New Jersey (1967), 385 U.S. 493, 87 S.Ct. 616, 17 L.Ed.2d 562.
At the time it was rendered in 1964, the decision of the Florida Supreme Court on this question in Stockham v. Stockham, supra, was in accordance with an earlier decision of the United States Supreme Court in Cohen v. Hurley (1961), 366 U.S. 117, 81 S.Ct. 954, 6 L.Ed.2d 156. In that case, in a judicial investigation of 'ambulance chasing' in the State of New York, where a lawyer refused to furnish evidence against himself, upon claiming a state granted constitutional protection against self-incrimination, the state court imposed the penalty of disbarment. On certiorari, the United States Supreme Court rejected the petitioner's argument that the Fourteenth Amendment forbade the state from making his refusal to answer the Inquiry's questions, on a good faith claim of privilege against self-incrimination, a ground for disbarment. Later, in Malloy v. Hogan (1964), 378 U.S. 1, 84 S.Ct. 1489, 12 L.Ed.2d 653, the United States Supreme Court held that the self-incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States was applicable to the states by reason of the Fourteenth Amendment. Still later, in 1967, applying that ruling of Malloy v. Hogan, supra, the Supreme Court of the United States overruled its prior contrary decision on the point in Cohen v. Hurley, supra, and held that the Fifth Amendment, applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, affords protection Without penalty. Spevack v. Klein, supra; Garrity v. New Jersey, supra.
In Spevack the Court said:
'We said in Malloy v. Hogan:
'The Fourteenth Amendment secures against state invasion the same privilege that the Fifth Amendment guarantees against federal infringement--the right of a person to remain silent unless he chooses to speak in the unfettered exercise of his own will, And to suffer no penalty * * * for such silence.' 378 U.S., at 8, 84 S.Ct., at 1493, 12 L.Ed.2d at 659.
* * * '(Italics supplied.)
In the Garrity case the Court said:
'Where the choice is 'between the rock and the whirlpool,' duress is inherent in deciding to 'waive' one or the other.
Ibid.' (Union Pac. R.R. Co. v. Pub. Service Comm., 248 U.S. 67, 69--70, 39 S.Ct. 24, 63 L.Ed. 131--133.)
'There are rights of constitutional stature whose exercise a State may not condition by the exaction of a price. * * *'
The 'penalty' alternative in Spevack was disbarment for a lawyer, and in Garrity it was loss of position for a policeman. While the rights threatened to be lost by the penalties sought to be invoked in those cases may have been greater than the right of a resident of this state than the right of a resident of this state of action for divorce, nevertheless the latter right is a valuable and substantial one, guaranteed by § 4 of the Declaration of Rights of Florida, and the rule announced in Spevack and Garrity was not made to depend on a...
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