77 N.J. Eq. 309 | New York Court of Chancery | 1910
A decree of divorce in favor of complainant against defendant, Ethel Gans, on the ground of desertion, was made On November 13th, 1902. This decree was entirely regular. Complainant was then a bona ficle resident of this state. Defendant, prior to the commencement of the suit, had been living with her parents in Boston, and jurisdiction was acquired by publication and notice.
In the spring of 1903 the parties appear to have made up their differences. They lived together as man and wife from that time until September, 1907. The complainant says that before they caine together he tqld his wife that he had'obtained, a divorce, and that •he, would_ marry her Again “if she would act right for the period of six months,” or,• as he otherwise expresses fiy “after he had tried her for six monthg,” but that she did not so act. He did, in fact, live with her' for four yea'rs, and during this period they took and gave deeds as man and wife. The wife testifies, on the contrary, that they occasionally cohabited while his suit was progressing; that he did'not tell'her that it was going' Oh, and that she did not positively know that the divorce had been obtained until December, 19Q7, when on an application by.her to the police corift for support thé decree1 was produced. She admits that she had heart]' from a lawyer in Elizabeth, in 19Ó3,' that he had obtained-such a decree,-but she says that on calling her husband’s attention to the matter, he denied its truth. On this question of notice there is considerable evidence on both sides. Whichever way its-weight inclines, it is certain that the wife had definite knowledge of the decree as early as December, 1-907. This application was not made until February 15th, 1910. That is over seven years after the decree was made, and over two years after the wife admits that she was fully informed of it.
The affidavits on both sides show that after the second separation, and after the wife’s failure to obtain relief in the police court, negotiations were begun for a money settlement. The wife says .in her affidavit that she ffiias been either negotiating with her husband for a settlement or planning as best she could proceedings of. some sort against him.” She says further,
*311 “the settlement therein mentioned (she is referring to a letter of one Goldstein) and the $1,000 deal, referred not only to the transfer by her of real estate standing in the name of herself and husband jointly, and to a paymént of money to her in return for a release of rights she would have as his wife in her husband’s real estate, but rights to support as his wife.”
During the course of these negotiations the parties went before a rabbi in Boston, where her parents resided, and obtained what is styled a “Jewish divorce.” The wife says that she consented to this to please her family. The husband says he obtained it at her request, that she might be free to marry again. This so-called divorce was accorded on July 15th, 1908. ' It. is in Hebrew, and among other things, as translated, .it declares that complainant “brought believed witnesses, and he himself signed in his own hand that he had already been long divorced according to law.”
Then follows this somewhat remarkable sequence. In August or September, 1908 — that is, only a month or two after the Jewish divorce was obtained — the. wife went to the prosecuting authorities of Hudson county and applied for a warrant for her husband’s arrest on the criminal charge of living with her. A warrant issued, but her husband could not be found. It is difficult to assign any other motive for this extraordinary conduct on her part than, that, other expedients failing, she was willing, at any cost of self-respect, to compel Gans to.pay her money— money to which she was not, in her then situation, legally entitled.
It appears to me that however willingly the court would, in the beginning, have opened the decree and given the wife an opportunity to be heard, the case as now presented has little to commend it to one’s sympathy, and the power of this court should not be strained to advance it.
The wife, as I have said, had full knowledge of the decree in December, 1907. Having such knowledge, it was her duty to act promptly. Decrees of this sort are voidable and not void. Bish. Mar. & D. § 758e. She was not at liberty to taire first one position and then another, as she might think the one or the other would best-advance her pecuniary interests. It is clear that she has no regard for her husband. In her affidavits she takes pains to blacken his character. So Ear from avoiding the decree when
But it is said that the public welfare is involved, and that without reference to the merits or demerits of the parties, the decree should, on grounds of public policy, be opened, because of the deceit practiced upon the court. It has been well said: “Where is litigation to end, if a. judgment obtained in an action fought 'out adversely between two litigants sui juris and at arm’s length could be set aside by a fresh action on the ground that perjury has been committed in the first action, or that false answers had been given to interrogatories, or a misleading production of documents * * * had been given ?” Flower v. Lloyd, 10 Ch. Div. 333. The lord justice is speaking of a litigated action, but the principle applies to the case in hand. The alleged deceit is said to have been perpetrated by the suppression, by complainant, of a written agreement to separate, executed at the time the wife left her husband. He says it never took effect. I doubt if he is entitled to the fullest credence, but there is this.significant fact in connection with'what he says on this question. In the agreement it is stipulated that “said Ethel Gans hereby agree to apply for divorce as soon as the law may permit;” and yet we find that within a very short time after the wife went to her parents’ home in Boston and commenced suit in the Massachusetts courts, her husband defended and won on the merits. If the agreement became operative in the first instance, it was thus" almost immediately repudiated. I do not find anything in the case that, on grounds of public policy, requires the court to disturb this decree entered so long ago. It seems to me that to the situation here presented, the remarks of Chancellor Runyon, in Nichols v. Nichols, 25 N. J. Eq. (10 C. E. Gr.) 60, are quite applicable: “The object of this bill,” he says, “is obviously merely alimony. Public policy does not require the intervention of this court between these parties. It rather forbids.”