52 N.J. Eq. 215 | New York Court of Chancery | 1893
The parties to this action were married in 1855. In 1874 they removed from Jersey City and went to live at 190 Lafayette street, in Brooklyn. In 1876 the defendant told his daughter, who was living with them, to occupy the room with her mother, and he took the daughter’s room. From that time to the present he has not occupied his wife’s bed. He gives as an excuse for this that his wife, having inherited some $16,000, speculated in Wall street, and was frequenting brokers’ offices; that he remonstrated
*217 “ New Yobk, May 26th, 1891.
“ Mrs. O. F. Burton :
“ Madam — Declining health has caused me to change my residence from the city of Brooklyn to the country. I have, therefore, rented a house, No. 889 Washington Ave., North Newark, N. J., where you are welcome to bed and board on and after June 5th, 1891; and after the said date, I shall cease to pay to the Brooklyn Board of Charities the allowance awarded by the court for your support.
“For any further arrangement for a separate maintenance, I hereby refer you to my attorneys, Messrs. De Witt & Prevost, No. 445 Broad St., Newark, N. J. Their card enclosed.
“O. F. Burton.”
The complainant went to the office of Mr. De Witt, where she met her husband and asked him what provision he intended to make for her, and he replied by saying to De Witt, “You have my terms.” He says that he wrote this letter because he thought it would make her sign the mortgage. In July, 1891, she had him arrested in Newark for non-support. She had him arrested in Brooklyn a second time, but it is not clear if this was before or after the* Newark arrest. The latter, defendant says, was on a very hot day; that the justice refused to take his own recognizance, and that he-was .locked up in a noisome cell and kept there until he could get Mr. Sandford to come from Belleville and bail him out. He admits that he has addressed no conversation to his wife since she had him arrested and incarcerated in Brooklyn in 1887, and gives as his excuse her persecutions, as he terms her conduct, both as to ai’resting and imprisoning him and crossing his wishes in reference to property which he had bought. He was discharged both in the proceedings in Brooklyn and in Newark. The complainant then brought this suit. I do not stop to examine whether the excuse he gives for separating himself from his wife’s bed, and subsequently from the house in which she lived, viz., that she persisted, against his remonstrances, in frequenting brokers’ offices in Wall street, refused her co-operation in improving his property, thwarted his plans of realizing on it, are established by the evidence, or are, if true, coupled with his repeated arrests, a justification, because I do not think that such separation from bed and home is extreme cruelty, as used by the statute, in the absence of evidence that it
The other occasion, she says, was in 1869, when he struck her in the presence of Mrs. Fountain. There is no evidence by anyone who has known or lived with her or near these parties during their home life, from 1855 to 1887, a period of thirty-two years, who is produced as a witness to a single act of personal indignity or violence. The daughter, who has always been with her mother, says she never knew her father to use violence to her mother. He emphatically denies both statements. They were condoned if they ever occurred. She is explicit in her statement that the occurrence in 1874 was the last act of cruelty on her person. They lived after that in the same home, either keeping house or boarding, although not occupying the same room, until 1887, or thirteen years and more, and he, so far as the evidence shows, never attempted to do her bodily injury, except that she says in 1884 he attempted to poison her and did produce abortion. Her grounds for the first accusation are so unsubstantial that the charge gives rise to the suspicion that she is under some hallucination with reference to her husband, or, at least, is ready or eager to believe him capable of anything, no matter how criminal or outrageous.
As to the other charge, she testifies that, after the birth of her daughter in 1859, he performed on her, while enciente, a criminal operation with an instrument made of whalebone, and thereby produced a premature birth, and that he thus produced on her person abortion no less than ten different times. Defendant denies all these charges. There is no corroboration whatever. Of course it would be difficult to find corroborative evidence of the specific act. Cruelty by husband to wife, either by beating
In my opinion, the facts do not justify a decree of divorce from bed and board, and I will advise that the bill be dismissed.