This is a suit for divorce in which sixteen specific allegations of adultery by the plaintiff against the defendant, his wife, were framed for submission to a jury under section 1149 of the Civil Practice Act. By consent of the parties the court directed the jury to answer questions 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16 in favor of the defendant, and submitted to the jury the six questions which remained. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant upon all these issues except question 9, which it answered in the affirmative. That question was as follows: “ Did the defendant commit adultery with one Frank Caforio in Apartment No. 52 at premises No. 391 Central Park West, Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, at divers times between January or February of 1924 and April, 1925? ”
The defendant now moves to set aside the verdict concerning question 9 on the ground that the evidence does not justify the finding of the jury. The plaintiff has not moved to set aside the verdict with respect to those issues which the jury has decided in favor of the defendant.
The plaintiff’s evidence directed to question 9 tended to establish that the defendant, between the dates specified, was present frequently at the apartment house and in the apartment where Caforio resided, under circumstances which, if not explained, would justify an inference of adultery. The defendant admitted that she had spent several nights at this apartment, but testified that on each occasion the plaintiff, also acquainted with Caforio, had spent these nights there with her. This explanation, if accepted by the jury, would have served to rebut the unfavorable inference necessarily arising from the defendant’s presence in Caforio’s apartment, and rendered vital the issue whether or not the plaintiff, as the defendant had testified, had spent these nights there with her.
In this situation the defendant called the plaintiff*as a witness and interrogated him concerning statements made previously by affidavit with respect to the paternity of their child. The court deemed this testimony to be immaterial and objections interposed by plaintiff’s counsel were sustained. In consequence, the plaintiff
It is evident that the plaintiff was incompetent to testify to these facts, that his testimony was distinctly prejudicial, and that, in consequence, the verdict concerning question 9 must be set aside unless the defendant maybe deemed to have waived the provisions of section 349. I am of the opinion that those provisions could not be waived. They express a principle of public policy binding alike the parties and the court. They were not enacted, nor are they to be enforced for the benefit of the parties merely, but rather to protect the marriage against the action of either party, and particularly against both combined. The right to a divorce being entirely statutory (Erkenbrach v. Ekrenbrach,
If I have correctly read the purpose of this section, it must follow that the parties could not, either by consent or acquiescence, set its prohibitions aside. They could no more do this by omitting to object to testimony declared to be incompetent than they could by default waive objection to a divorce on insufficient grounds. The one as much as the other is a subject of public concern. Speaking of the public interest involved in matrimonial actions, the court in Winans v. Winans (
This conclusion is fortified by comparison of these provisions of section 349 with the provisions of the same section relating to confidential communications between husband and wife. Disclosure of such communications is only prohibited if “ without consent of the other ” party, whereas the provisions excluding the testimony of a complaining party on the issue of adultery contain no similar qualification. The same applies to the succeeding sections of the Civil Practice Act (§§ 351, 352, 353), which prohibit the disclosure of confidential communications made to clergymen, physicians and attorneys, but which in section 354 specifies in detail the conditions under which the secrecy imposed by sections 351, 352 and 353 may be waived. Analysis of these sections confirms the view that whenever the Legislature has intended to permit such provisions to be waived it has said so in unmistakable terms.
The precise question appears seldom to have arisen and never to have been decided by the Court of Appeals. In Fanning v. Fanning (
The same principle was applied in Pratt v. Pratt (2 App. Div. 534), where the court vacated an order of reference appointing a referee agreed upon by the parties in a suit for the annulment of a marriage, in violation of the Rules of Civil Practice, saying: “ The law was not enacted, nor was the rule established for the benefit of the parties to matrimonial actions, but for the public good. * * * For this reason the parties are not permitted, as they are in ordinary controversies, to admit the facts, or to waive proof thereof; nor is the court permitted to grant relief upon their consent.” And to the same general purport are Boyer v. Boyer (
The verdict on question 9 must, therefore, be set aside. Must the verdict on the remaining fifteen issues for that reason also be vacated, even though the decision of those issues was not affected by the admission of this testimony, and that no motion has been made by the plaintiff to set aside the verdict in this respect? It is-true that if the verdict on question 9 alone is set aside there must be at least two trials and two verdicts upon the same complaint, and a situation might exist where there would be sixteen. If, on the other hand, the verdict on every question must be set aside whenever incompetent evidence has been received or the jury has disagreed on a single issue which is not related to any other issue in the case, the result will be the protraction of litigation in every similar case until a record can be made perfect enough, and a jury can be found unanimous enough, to determine on a single trial every issue in the litigation.
I am of the opinion that the verdict on question 9 should be. set aside without disturbing the verdicts on the fifteen issues which remain. Each of these issues is distinct from all the others, and each, although isolated, would, if sustained, entitle the plaintiff to a decreé of divorce. Each of these issues could have been made the subject of a separate suit (Minervini v. Minervini,
I perceive, therefore, nothing unusual or alarming in the condition which will arise as the result of a retrial of the issue raised by question 9, leaving the verdict on the other issues undisturbed; nor do I find any provision of the Civil Practice Act which discountenances this course. By section 1147 of the Civil Practice Act either party in an action for divorce is entitled to a trial by jury as a matter of right. (Lowenthal v. Lowenthal,
Section 430 also provides for a jury trial, but in the discretion of the court, “ where a party is not entitled as of right to a trial by jury.” This, of course, has reference to suits in equity where the court, using the findings of the jury for the information of its conscience, is at liberty to accept or reject these, either in whole or in part. The responsibility of determining the facts in such cases rests upon the trial judge and the Civil Practice Act has not changed that rule. (McClave v. Gibb,
Section 429 of the Civil Practice Act, derived from section 970 of the former Code, and section 553, derived in part from section
I have not overlooked the decision in Smith v. Smith (
The Court of Appeals in Smith v. Western Pac. Ry. (
The same rule has been established with respect to the procedure to be followed on appeal. Although it has been held that where the judgment appealed from consists of a single adjudication, such as the recovery of a gross sum of money, a new trial must extend to all the issues (Goodsell v. Western Union,
The issues of adultery submitted to the jury in this case were separate and distinct and the new trial should be limited to the specific issue presented by question 9. The rule to the contrary adopted in Smith v. Smith (supra) would result in the retrial of issues which, in my opinion, have already been properly determined, would subject the parties to unnecessary expense and deprive the defendant of ground legally won.
It need only be added that I have not intended to suggest that any collusion existed here. On the contrary, it is abundantly clear
For the reasons stated the motion to set aside the jury’s answer to question No. 9 is granted, the answers of the jury to the remaining question to remain undisturbed.
Settle order on notice.
