198 A.D. 885 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The plaintiff and defendant’s testator were husband and wife, having married on January 12, 1892. They lived together as husband and wife until July 12, 1916, at Piándome, L. I. On the last-mentioned date the parties separated by mutual consent and it was then agreed between them that thereafter they should • live separately and apart and that defendant’s testator, the husband, should pay to the plaintiff for her maintenance and support the sum of $100 per month. Following such separation and until the month of April, 1917, defendant’s testator, in conformity with said agreement with the plaintiff, paid to her monthly the sum of $100, paying her
As to the first cause of action for reimbursement for necessaries alleged to have been purchased by the plaintiff after the separation of the parties and prior to testator’s death, I do not think the verdict of the jury has sufficient support in' the evidence. Upon the trial the utmost latitude was given the plaintiff with reference to establishing her cause of action for moneys expended for necessaries, and over the objection and exception of the defendant, plaintiff was permitted to show expenditures for a large number of items, aggregating substantially $8,000. Unquestionably, the jury was to determine which, if any, of the items of expenditure proven were for necessaries suitable and proper for the plaintiff according to her station in life. (Wickstrom v. Peck, 163 App. Div. 608.) As to many of the items proven, the jury were unjustified in finding that such items were for necessaries, and while the verdict of the jury was for a sum much less than that for which the plaintiff claimed reimbursement, still there is nothing in the record to show that their verdict was for items properly within the category of necessaries. As the case was presented
We also think the learned trial court erred in refusing to limit plaintiff’s recovery to the period following the time when the decedent paid the plaintiff $100 per month in full for her support and maintenance, and in permitting the plaintiff to prove items of expenditure made during the time when her agreement with her husband to live separately and apart was in full force and effect. Clearly, the plaintiff could not ask reimbursement for expenditures made by her while such agreement was in full force and effect, and while the husband .was paying her $100 per month for her maintenance and support. The court, over defendant’s objection and exception, I think, erroneously permitted the jury to consider expenditures by the plaintiff during the whole period of the separation of the parties, crediting the defendant’s estate with the $850 paid under said agreement between the parties.
I am also of the opinion that the court erred in charging the jury, in effect, that they might find for the plaintiff upon the basis of $100 per month, or $4,000 for forty months following the separation of the parties and until the husband’s death, crediting thereon the $850 paid the plaintiff by her husband, as aforesaid, and leaving a balance, as stated by the court, of $3,150. It is quite apparent that the jury followed the method, thus suggested by the court when they returned a verdict upon the first cause of action for precisely the last-mentioned amount. The action was not brought upon any such theory,' and such recovery is not in conformity with the allegations of the complaint.
For the reasons indicated, we are of the opinion that so much of the judgment appealed from as awards to the plaintiff the sum of $1,667.44, the amount found by the jury to be plaintiff’s due upon her second cause of action, with interest, should be affirmed, without costs in this court to either party as against the other, and that the action should be severed (See Bremer v. Manhattan Railway Co., 191 N. Y. 333) and a new trial ordered as to the first cause of action, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Smith and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.