213 A.D. 103 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1925
This action was brought by the plaintiff to obtain a decree of separation from her husband, the defendant, by reason of the alleged cruel and inhuman treatment of the plaintiff by the defendant. The complaint specified some twenty-three acts of alleged cruelty and misconduct on the part of the defendant toward the plaintiff which the plaintiff alleged rendered it improper and unsafe for her to continue to reside with the defendant. By his answer the defendant denied each and every allegation of the complaint charging him with cruelty or improper conduct toward the plaintiff and denied that by reason of the alleged misconduct set forth in plaintiff’s complaint the plaintiff suffered as alleged in the complaint, and that thereby it became improper and unsafe .for the plaintiff to continue to reside with the defendant.
As a separate and distinct defense and by way of counterclaim the defendant set forth and alleged in his answer that the plaintiff, without cause or reason, deserted and abandoned the defendant at the home of the parties at Mamaroneck, in the county of Westchester, State of New York, and the defendant demanded judgment in his said answer upon the counterclaim therein alleged for a decree of separation from the bed and board of the plaintiff.
Plaintiff’s action was commenced by the service of a summons and complaint and motion papers upon an application for temporary alimony and counsel fees on June 21, 1923. Plaintiff’s application for temporary alimony and counsel fee was denied, the learned justice presiding at the Special Term which heard said application holding that the moving affidavits and complaint did not show that the plaintiff had reasonable ground for commencing her action, and that it did not appear that there was reasonable probability that she would succeed in establishing facts sufficient to warrant a decree of separation, the learned court at Special Term basing such decision of the plaintiff’s application upon the authorities of DeVide v. DeVide (186 App. Div. 814) and Heyman v. Heyman (119 id. 182). Thereafter and on April 24, 1924, the action came on for trial at Special Term. At the opening of the trial plaintiff abandoned her claim for a separation from the bed and board of the defendant and offered to return to the home of the defendant and resume her marital duties. The plaintiff took the witness stand and freely testified that she did not desire to proceed to prove the allegations of her complaint for the purpose of obtaining a separation from her husband on the ground of cruelty and that she was willing to return to her husband’s home and to her husband and to resume her marital duties. Thereupon, upon motion of the defendant, the court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint. Counsel for the plaintiff then moved to dismiss the defendant’s counterclaim, which motion was denied, and the trial proceeded upon the issue set forth in the defendant’s counterclaim that the plaintiff had on June 18, 1923, abandoned the defendant without his consent.
The parties were married on June 7, 1920. No issue was born of such marriage. The defendant was a widower and the plaintiff had divorced a former husband. The defendant was a man of
Certainly the letter from which the above quotations are made did not evince any intention of leaving the defendant temporarily but very clearly expressed the intention of the plaintiff that her action in severing her relations with the defendant was final. Nevertheless, thereafter the plaintiff wrote the defendant that she was ill and had been advised that an operation was required and called upon the defendant to furnish the money necessary for such operation. In response to such request the defendant asked the plaintiff to return to New York, which she did, and the required operation was performed, the defendant paying all expenses, hospital and medical charges, and for nursing, which the plaintiff required. The marital relations of the parties were thereupon resumed and the parties resided for a time at 212 West Seventy-second street,
Such attitude of the plaintiff towards the defendant would seem very clearly to indicate that her marriage with the defendant was for the purpose of what she conceived was her financial advantage rather than because of any affection or regard for him. The facts that have just been stated readily explain the conduct of the plaintiff immediately following her conversation with these disinterested witnesses. On June 18, 1923, the plaintiff went to New York and consulted counsel, and on the same day returned to her home in Mamaroneck accompanied by one Florence Rose, a private detective whose employment had been with the district attorney as an investigator. The woman, Rose, was introduced to the plaintiff by the senior member of the firm of attorneys whom she employed to institute an action for separation against her husband., and the detective was paid by plaintiff’s said attorney for her services in accompanying the plaintiff to the home of the parties. The witness Rose testified that on the 18th of June, 1923, she accompanied the plaintiff to the home of the parties at Mamaroneck; was ushered into the home by a maid; that tea was served in the private apartment of the plaintiff in that home; that thereafter a call was made upon a neighbor, and that upon the defendant’s return to his home in the evening the plaintiff introduced her to the defendant. Miss Rose testified: “ She said, ‘ This is Miss Rose whom I think you remember meeting at Helen’s funeral.’ ” The Helen referred to was a sister of the plaintiff who died and was buried at Buffalo, N. Y. The defendant disclaimed any recollection of every having met Miss Rose, but the plaintiff insisted that he had done so at her sister’s funeral. During this' episode the witness Rose remained silent and permitted the deception to continue. Evidently the defendant became suspicious that all was not well and refused to permit the so-called friend to remain in his household. At the time the defendant requested that Miss Rose leave his home he specifically stated to his wife that he did
Upon plaintiff’s application for temporary alimony and counsel fee in June, 1923, the defendant, in his answering affidavits, offered to receive the plaintiff back into his home and to resume his marital relations with her. This offer the plaintiff refused to accept and proceeded in the prosecution of her action and in the application which she had made for temporary alimony and counsel fees. After the denial of her application for nearly eight months and until February, 1924, the plaintiff made no further move, but at that time, evidently under the advice of counsel, wrote the defendant that she was willing to return. Such offer was rejected by the defendant, the defendant insisting that the plaintiff had abandoned her home and him and that it was then too late for her to resume her relations with him.
After a careful examination of the testimony in this case we have not the slightest doubt but that the plaintiff was inspired throughout
Had the plaintiff been able to establish even a small part of the allegations of cruel and inhuman treatment alleged in her complaint, she would have been granted the decree which she asked. It is quite apparent, however, from the record that no real cause justifying her complaint existed, and that the defendant’s treatment of the plaintiff was uniformly kind and considerate. Not only is this evidenced by her abandonment upon the trial of all claim of such cruel and inhuman treatment, but it is borne out by her own admissions upon the witness stand that the defendant was kind and indulgent toward her. On cross-examination plaintiff testified in answer to an inquiry as to whether she and the defendant had a lot of differences during their married fife, that the same were “ ordinary—like any married couple would have.” Plaintiff would not say upon the witness stand that she was terribly abused nor that her husband was ever unreasonable with her, except in one respect, evidently referring to his refusal to give up the home at Mamaroneck. The testimony of the plaintiff upon the trial minimizing the sworn statements of extreme cruelty contained in her complaint shows how little she regarded the sanctity of an oath. Throughout her testimony the plaintiff insisted that it was her intention at all times to return to her husband’s home and that she never intended when she left the home on June 18, 1923, to remain permanently away therefrom. Plaintiff claims that when her action was brought she intended to resume her marital relationship with her husband; that when she moved for alimony and counsel fees it was with the intention that her separation should be only temporary; that when she moved for the examination of the defendant before trial, she then intended to return to her husband; and that she never at any time intended to leave her husband, except for a temporary period, and she makes the astounding claim that her action was brought for the real purpose of effecting a reconciliation with her husband. Such testimony on the part of the plaintiff was with the evident purpose of bringing herself within the doctrine laid down in Silberstein v. Silberstein (218 N. Y. 525), wherein the Court of Appeals indicates that a separation will not be granted because of abandonment where it appears that
We are of the opinion that the abandonment of the defendant by the plaintiff on June 18, 1923, appears from the overwhelming weight of the evidence and that the defendant should have been granted a decree of separation upon his counterclaim. We are, furthermore, of the opinion that the offers of the plaintiff to return and to resume her marital relations with the defendant were not made in good faith, but were made merely for the purpose of preventing the defendant obtaining a decree against her. It is suggested in support of the respondent’s position that she had an entire right to bring her action with a view of compelling the defendant to accede to what the plaintiff insisted was her due and that she had a right to bring such action without intending that any actual separation of the parties should be thereby effected. The plaintiff had no right to thus play fast and loose with the processes of the court. Either the plaintiff had a good cause of action against the defendant, and, if so, should have pursued the same, or the action should never have been brought. We are of the opinion that the latter course should have been adopted by the plaintiff, and that there was really no legal justification in the plaintiff’s action or in her leaving the defendant’s home. In Uhlmann v. Uhlmann (17 Abb. N. C. 236) it was held that “ The test seems to be to determine the intent at the time of departure, for if the desertion be in itself complete, a subsequent offer to return will not avail, as the deserted party has a legal right of which he cannot be deprived without his concurrence. This was so held in England after the period of two years had elapsed (there required), but the principle would seem to be the same in the New York statute, where no time is required (Cargill v. Cargill, 1 Sw. & Tr. 235).” In some jurisdictions statutory provision is made that a desertion must last for a specified period of time, and that the offer to return, if made in good faith before the expiration of that time, eliminates the essential element of intent. The whole matter, it seems to us, rested on the intent of the party leaving the household of her spouse. If she really intended to temporarily leave the same and eventually to return, then such leaving did not constitute an abandonment, but if, on the other hand, where as in the case at bar, the facts evidenced an intention to leave and to" remain away from the home of the husband permanently, then the party leaving should not be permitted to return and her husband be compelled to receive her at any time she might see fit to change her mind. (Cargill v. Cargill, 1 Sw. & Tr. 235.)
We think the learned Special Term erred in the case at bar in
The judgment appealed from, in so far as it dismisses the counterclaim interposed by the defendant herein, should be reversed, and a judgment of separation granted to the defendant against the plaintiff by reason of the latter’s abandonment of the defendant.
Clarke, P. J., Finch and Martin, JJ., concur.
Judgment so far as it dismisses counterclaim reversed, and judgment of separation granted to defendant. Settle order on notice.