The bill in this case is filed by the husband, charging his wife with adultery, committed with one Scheuplein in August, 1896,
I have read over and carefully considered again all the evidence on this point, and the arguments and briefs of counsel, and am confirmed in the decided impressions made upon me by the evidence at the hearing that the complainant has satisfactorily proved the adultery charged in the bill.
In reference to the defence of condonation the situation of the case on the proofs, in my judgment, is that the wife, upon whom the burden of the proof of this defence rests, has proved by the weight of evidence a forgiveness in words and a promise by the husband to receive her back to his home. The husband denies this, but upon this point the wife is corroborated by the evidence of a witness who attended the interviews in the wife’s counsel’s office at the request of the husband, and who subsequently, at the husband’s request, became the intermediary in a conveyance of real estate (of little or no value, as it afterwards turned out), which was made by the husband to the wife while the question of return was pending, and for the purpose of assuring her of his good faith. These promises of the husband to take his wife-
The last question arises on the charge of the adultery of the husband, committed, as the cross-bill alleges, with a woman named Siebler, in the spring of T895. This woman, produced as a witness by the wife, swears to the husband’s commission of the crime with her twice in the city of Newark at two different houses. Complainant, under oath, positively denies the charges. The account which the woman gave of the circumstances of the solicitation and yielding, and of her previous life, while they may not justify a conclusion that she is a common prostitute, show that she is not a woman of virtue or good character. The credibility of her statement under oath is shaken by the fact that she also charged another person with being the father of the illegitimate child which she now swears was the child of complainant. In view of complainant’s denial, her uncorroborated testimony would not be a safe or proper basis for a decree of divorce. It is insisted that her testimony is sufficiently corroborated; but the facts and circumstances relied on as corroborating her proof of complainant’s guilt are not facts or circumstances which themselves tend to prove that the crime she swears to, viz., the adultery with her, was in fact committed, but have no further extent or scope than to show a probability that she is telling the truth. The facts mainly relied on as corroborating proof of the husbaud’s guilt are his absence from home
Giving them all due weight in arriving at a conclusion, the circumstances and evidence relied on as to the probability of the truth of the witness’ account, do not, in my judgment, afford sufficient corroboration of her evidence as to the charge, and in view of the complainant’s denial of the charge upon his oath, it must be held that the charge is not proved and the cross-bill must be dismissed.