118 Misc. 359 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1922
Action to annul a marriage. The defendant had been married to one Berg. In 1903 she commenced an action to recover a judgment of divorce against said Berg in the Supreme Court of Kings county. The defendant defaulted, and upon the proof submitted it was directed by the justice presiding that judgment be entered for the plaintiff in that action. Neither an interlocutory nor a final judgment was ever entered. The plaintiff in this action was present on June 3, 1903, the time of the taking of the testimony in the divorce suit. He employed the attorney for the plaintiff in that divorce action and helped pay him some of his fee. The proof indicates that both the plaintiff and the defendant in this action believed that they were free to marry three months after the taking of the testimony. It does not appear that either ever inquired or knew anything about an interlocutory judgment or a final judgment. Four months after the taking of the testimony the parties were married by a minister and lived together as husband and wife, and were generally recognized as such up to April, 1921, when on account of some differences the plaintiff left the defendant. Berg, to whom the defendant was first married, died in August, 1907, which plaintiff and defendant knew. Plaintiff learned after April, 1921, for the first time that the defendant had never procured a judgment of divorce against her husband. Plaintiff seeks to annul the marriage because defendant was married to another and undivorced at the time of her marriage to plaintiff. In Matter of Wells, 123 App. Div. 79; affd., 194 N. Y. 548, the court, at page 85, says: “ It seems to me,
Judgment for defendant.
1 Doug. 171.— [Rep.