82 N.Y.S. 444 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action was for a divorce. The defendant answered denying the charge of adultery and set up a counterclaim charging the plaintiff with adultery and asking for an affirmative judgment. The issues of fact were framed for trial before a jury and* the cause was placed upon the calendar of the Trial Term. That trial seems to have been adjourned several times on account of the illness of the defendant. It finally came on the day calendar on the 17th of February, 1903. At this time the plaintiff was ready, but it was stated that the defendant was ill and a certificate of a physician was presented. The court refused to receive this certificate as it was unverified, and the case was marked ready and passed until the next day. On the next day, February 18, 1903, the defendant did not appear, when the evidence for the plaintiff was taken and the jury found a verdict upon the issues in favor of the plaintiff.
From the affidavits on which this motion was made it appears that on the seventeenth of February the defendant was ill at a hotel in the city of New York, being unable to leave her room; that she received a letter from her attorney stating that a further postponement had been refused because the certificate of the physician was not verified before a notary public, and that it would be necessary for them to have in their possession before half-past ten o’clock the physician’s affidavit specifying the nature of the defendant’s illness; that on the receipt
There is no dispute about the condition of the defendant, and it appears that her health was such that she could not have attended court upon the day on which the default was taken. The default arose from the neglect of the defendant or her attorneys to properly present proof of her actual condition to the court. Considering, however, the nature of this action, and the interest that the State has in the subject of divorce, we think the court below should have opened the default and allowed the defendant to be heard before granting to the plaintiff an absolute divorce. The rule governing the opening of defaults in ordinary actions involving a mere pecuniary liability should not be rigorously applied to actions of this character; and where, as in this case, there seems to be no reason to doubt that the condition of the defendant was such that it was impossible for her to appear on the day that the case was called for trial, we think she should have been given an opportunity to present her evidence to show that the plaintiff was not entitled to a divorce.
It follows that the order appealed from should be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside and the case restored to the calendar of the Trial Term for final disposition, without costs.
Patterson, O’Brien, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, verdict of jury set aside and case restored to the calendar of the Trial Term for final disposition, without costs.