Moore v. Moore

Decision Date16 March 1979
Docket NumberNo. 20,20
Citation252 S.E.2d 735,297 N.C. 14
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesRosanna Crump MOORE v. Alton Monroe MOORE.

Smith, Anderson, Blount & Mitchell by J. G. Billings, Raleigh, and Nigle B. Barrow, Jr., Greenville, for plaintiff.

Soles & Phipps, Tabor City, by R. C. Soles, Jr., Tabor City, for defendant.

BROCK, Justice.

This case raises again the troublesome issue of enforcement of a marital separation agreement that has not been incorporated into a judgment, which would thereby subject the parties to the contempt power of the court. See Bunn v. Bunn, 262 N.C. 67, 136 S.E.2d 240 (1964); Stanley v. Stanley, 226 N.C. 129, 37 S.E.2d 118 (1946); Brown v. Brown, 224 N.C. 556, 31 S.E.2d 529 (1944). Stanley and Brown involved attempts to invoke the contempt power of the court to enforce a separation agreement not made a part of a divorce judgment. The instant case differs from them in that the plaintiff seeks a decree of specific performance ordering defendant to comply with the support provisions of the separation agreement.

A marital separation agreement is generally subject to the same rules of law with respect to its enforcement as any other contract. Stanley v. Stanley, supra; 2 Lee, N. C. Family Law, § 201, p. 423 (3d ed. 1963). The equitable remedy of specific enforcement of a contract is available only when the plaintiff can establish that an adequate remedy at law does not exist. Bell v. Smith Concrete Products, Inc., 263 N.C. 389, 139 S.E.2d 629 (1965). Therefor, we must consider plaintiff's contention that her remedy at law is inadequate.

Equity "seeks to reach and do complete justice where courts of law, through the inflexibility of their rules and want of power to adapt their judgments to the special circumstances of the case, are incompetent so to do." Zebulon v. Dawson, 216 N.C. 520, 522, 5 S.E.2d 535, 537 (1939). In Sumner v. Staton, 151 N.C. 198, 201, 65 S.E. 902, 904 (1909), Justice Brown discussed the nature of a court's inquiry into the adequacy of a plaintiff's remedy at law thusly "An adequate remedy is not a partial remedy. It is a full and complete remedy, and one that is accommodated to the wrong which is to be redressed by it. It is not enough that there is some remedy at law; it must be as practical and as efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration as the remedy in equity." (Emphasis added.)

Thus in McClintock on Equity, § 46, p. 110 (2d ed. 1948) it is observed that "(t)he fact that the remedy which the courts of law would ultimately give if the plaintiff were successful would be an adequate one does not prevent the intervention of equity if the procedures which must be followed at law would make the remedy less efficient and practical to meet the plaintiff's needs." A common instance of this basis of equity jurisdiction is found in the continuing trespass situation. The plaintiff, who is suffering a continuing trespass to his property or interference with a legal right, could bring numerous actions at law serially to recover damages. That remedy, although it will ultimately compensate the plaintiff, is deemed to be inadequate because of the nature of the wrong and the impracticality and inefficiency of the remedy. Donovan v. Pennsylvania Co., 199 U.S. 279, 26 S.Ct. 91, 50 L.Ed. 192 (1905); Cobb v. Atlantic Coast Line RR, 172 N.C. 58, 89 S.E. 807 (1916); Dobbs, Trespass to Land in North Carolina, 47 N.C.L.Rev. 334, 352 n. 94 (1969).

What remedy at law is available to the plaintiff who seeks to compel compliance with a provision for periodic alimony payments in a separation agreement that has not been made part of a divorce judgment? The facts of this case are illustrative of the answer to that question. The plaintiff must wait until payments have become due and the obligor has failed to comply. Plaintiff must then file suit for the amount of accrued arrearage, reduce her claim to judgment, and, if the defendant fails to satisfy it, secure satisfaction by execution. As is so often the case, when the defendant persists in his refusal to comply, the plaintiff must resort to this remedy repeatedly to secure her rights under the agreement as the payments become due and the defendant fails to comply. The expense and delay involved in this remedy at law is evident. The nature of the contract, I. e., providing for the plaintiff's basic subsistence, is such that the remedy available at law involves unusual and extreme hardship.

The adequacy of the remedy at law must be evaluated in a relative sense, treating the contract in a particular case "as one of a class, and the inquiry is whether, in agreements generally of that kind, the terms or relations of the parties are such that the legal remedy of damages is adequate or inadequate." Pomeroy's Specific Performance of Contracts, § 27, pp. 89-90 (3d ed. 1926). The Restatement of the Law of Contracts, § 361, p. 646 sets forth the factors involved in the determination of the adequacy of remedies at law when specific performance of a contract is sought. Subsections (c) and (e) are pertinent to our consideration. Subsection (c) focuses on "the difficulty, inconvenience, or impossibility of obtaining a duplicate or substantial equivalent of the promised performance by means of money awarded as damages." Plaintiff here contracted for payment of support at regular stated intervals until her remarriage or death. Requiring her to bring successive lawsuits to recover in a piecemeal fashion the sums due can hardly be viewed as a duplicate or substantial equivalent of the promised performance. Subsection (e) focuses on "the probability that full compensation cannot be had without multiple...

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