49 N.J. Eq. 102 | New York Court of Chancery | 1891
This is an application for alimony and counsel fees pendente lite. The complainant sues to obtain.a decree declaring void ah initio a marriage ceremony performed betweeen the defendant and himself, on the ground that when the ceremony was performed the defendant was incapable of contracting a valid marriage with him, because she was then the wife of another man. The defendant admits that, prior to her marriage to the complainant, she married a man by the name of Evans, at her aunt’s house in Dayton, Ohio, who was still living when she married the complainant. But she claims, notwithstanding such prior marriage, that she is, nevertheless, the lawful wife of the complainant, for she says that when she married Evans he was incápable of contracting a valid marriage with her, because he was then the husband of another woman. With the case in this position, it will be perceived that the fact on which the complainant’s action rests stands confessed, and that the effect of this confession, both in logic and law, is to shift the controversy, at least for the purposes of the present application, from the matrimonial capacity of the defendant, when she married the complainant, to the matrimonial capacity of Evans when the defendant married him. If Evans was a single man when the defendant married him, nothing can be more certain than that the defendant is not now, and never has been, the lawful wife of the complainant. It is among the things that are clearly impossible, as a matter of law, that the same woman should be the wife, either de jure or de facto, of two different husbands at the same time. The law does not recognize polygamy in any form or under any circumstances.
An order for alimony and counsel fees pendente lite can only be made in favor of a wife. That is the only foundation on which such an order can rest. If it were not so, “ every man,” as Chancellor Zabriskie said in Vreeland v. Vreeland, 3 C. E.
This case differs in a highly important particular from Vandergrift v. Vandergrift, § Stew. Eq. 76. There the point in dispute was, whether or not the defendant’s first husband was still living when she married the complainant. The complainant said he was and the defendant he was not. There were ex parte affidavits supporting, in a greater or less degree, each of these conflicting affirmations. With the case in this situation,'it will be observed that the fact constituting the very foundation of the complainant’s action was not only not admitted, but denied; he was still bound to prove it; the burden of proof was still on him, and unless his proof, in demonstration of such fact, was mot only sufficient in weight to establish it, but also to overcome the defendant’s counter proofs, he could not succeed in his .action. Here, on the contrary, the fact constituting the foundation of the complainant’s action is admitted. It is neither denied nor disputed that the defendant had contracted a prior marriage, and that the husband she took by such prior marriage was still living when she married the complainant. She has placed herself in this position — she confesses the fact on which the complainant’s action rests, and then attempts to avoid the effect of her confession by the introduction of a new fact, but she leaves such new fact wholly unsupported by proof. She does not produce a shred of legal evidence tending to show that the new fact, put forward in avoidance of the fact confessed, has :the slightest foundation in truth. The difference between the two cases is wide and vital. Here, on the proofs as they now stand, it appears that the defendant is not the wife of the complainant; while in Vandergrift v. Vandergrift the main point in contest was, whether or not the defendant was the wife of the complainant — there was evidence supporting both sides of that
I think I ought also to say that the weight of the evidence, now before the court, imputes declarations and conduct to the-defendant which go very far to justify the belief that this application is not made in good faith, under an honest belief that she-has a defence to the action. It is not, however, on this ground that her application is denied, but on the ground that the proofs,, in their present condition, show that she is not the complainant’s-wife.