87 N.J. Eq. 546 | New York Court of Chancery | 1917
(at conclusion of hearing).
This is a hearing upon an order requiring respondent, Chester S. Edwards, to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt for imposition and fraud upon the court and perjury committed by him before a special master in an uncontested divorce suit brought by him against his wife which resulted in a final decree and which could not have so resulted if the petitioner had testified truly. The questions which were asked him, to which the false replies were made, were material and were in my judgment known by the petitioner to have been material at the time he testified. There is also an application to open the decree and to permit an intervener for the state to interpose an answer denying the guilt of the defendant and set
. There has been in this class of cases such a vast amount of perjury that when the court finds itself in a position to make an example of a party who has been guiltys it becomes its duty, no matter what its personal feelings may be, to make such an example. The judgment I have reached is not one that has been arrived at hastily. I have- considered for years, that until courts of this state take the same ground that the federal courts have taken (149 Fed. Rep. 244; 164 Fed. Rep. 71; 182 Fed. Rep. 349; 194 Fed. Rep. 552; 188 Fed. Rep. 677; 195 Fed. Rep. 299; 202 Fed. Rep. 419; 208 Fed. Rep. 461), and that was the common law rule, that perjury committed in a cause is
The contempt of the petitioner was most flagrant. After the tiling of the petition he lived with his wife in practically the same manner as they had theretofore been living. He would have me believe that' he did not realize ihat this resulted or might result in condonation. He says, however, that he was advised some time in January, 1915, before he lived with his wife in May, 1915, that he ought not to meet her. Notwithstanding his denial, I am convinced that he was fully advised at that time of the consequences if he did, or what the consequences might be. He their deliberately, before the special master, testified that-he had not-seen his-wife during all of this space of time that he had-been living with her. He knew at the time, and must have known, because there was no reason for his false testimony if he had not known, that if he did not testify the way he did the result would be that his divorce would be denied. He deliberately falsely testified for the purpose of inducing the
I have not overlooked the case of In re Gonzales, 88 N. J. Law 536, and In the Matter of the Appeal of Verdon, 97 Atl. Rep. 783, and particularly the remarks of Mr. Justice Garrison at the conclusion of the latter opinion. No question of the method of procedure is before me in this case.
Mr. Myers—In connection with the counsel fee your honor spoke of. Will your honor consider at this time an application for alimony for the defendant in the pending divorce suit?
Mr. Oongleton—It is dismissed.
Mr. Myers—No, your honor said you could not dismiss it' until after answer filed and an order of reference was made.
Mr. Myers—Oh, I did not understand, your honor.
The Court—I might say that there is no imputation upon Judge Lambert in' any manner, shape or form. The petitioner will be paroled in the custody of his counsel until, the order and warrant can be drawn.
Mr. Myers—I will draw it to-day'and present it to the court in the morning.