182 A.D. 717 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
There are three allegations of adultery which were attempted to be proven upon the trial. The learned trial justice at Special Term dismissed two of them as being wholly without support from the evidence but upon the third he found the defendant had been guilty of adultery in Rome, Italy.
This finding is based upon the evidence of an attorney at law, practicing in New York city as a member of a partnership. The managing attorney of his firm was the attorney of record for the plaintiff when this suit was brought in September, 1916, and his firm had been retained as counsel in this matter several months before. We desire to say, however, that thereafter other counsel were substituted and appeared upon
Judge Earl said in Moller v. Moller (115 N. Y. 466), in speaking of the uncorroborated testimony of a hired detective: " The courts have come to regard the uncorroborated evidence of such witnesses as insufficient to break the bonds of matrimony.” The reason for requiring minute scrutiny and corroboration of such testimony is succinctly put in Blake v. Blake (70 Ill. 618), “ When a man sets up as a hired discoverer of supposed delinquencies, when the amount of his pay depends upon the extent of his employment, and the extent of his employment depends upon the discoveries he is able to make, then the man becomes a most dangerous instrument.”
It is true that in Winston v. Winston (165 N. Y. 553) the Court of Appeals said: “ The rule of those cases, however, is not a rule of evidence, but one for the guidance of the judicial conscience.” And in Yates v. Yates (211 N. Y. 163), after quoting Judge Gray’s statement in the Winston case, the court said: “ While this court has justified justices and jurors in looking with suspicion upon the evidence of prostitutes and detectives on different occasions, it has not determined as matter of law that such evidence could not be considered by a justice or jury, but rather has declared that in the consideration of the same only such weight should be given to that class of evidence as the conscience of the judge or jurors shall determine the same entitled to receive.”
It should be borne in mind that the defendant took the stand in his own behalf and positively denied all wrongdoing.
We find the testimony insufficient to support the judgment, and, therefore, reverse the same and order a new trial, with costs to abide the event.
Latjghlin, Smith, Page and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to abide event.