18 Mills Surr. 304 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1917
S.This is an application brought on by the petition of Moses Spondre, the father of the deceased, to set aside our letters of administration granted in the ordinary course to Rachel Spondre, as the widow of Henry Spondre. It is averred that Rachel Spondre falsely suggested in her petition for letters of administration on the estate of Henry Spondre that she was such widow, a material fact, and next, that she falsely suggested that her daxighter, “ Goldie,” was the daughter of said Henry Spondre, deceased. The application is made to me pursuant to subdivision 4, section 2569 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by the father of the deceased, claiming to be the only heir at law and next of kin of deceased. Rachel Spondre having joined issue on the allegation of the petition of the father, the issue of fact was set down for hearing.
The testimony taken illustrates one of the very curious phases of urban life in this cosmopolitan seaport, where of late years have come so many from the remoter parts of Europe. The deceased, his father and his family, as well as Rachel Spondre, all lived in the Province of Galicia, Austria, before their migration to this country. But it was in Rumania that the family or marital relations of Henry Spondre were constituted, quite in conformity, I think, with the curious license, which in some European countries, and even under some insular American governments, is tolerated.
It is the father of Henry Spondre who is seeking to revoke the letters of Rachel Spondre, and yet who is the main witness upon the matrimonial status of Rachel and Henry Spondre. If he succeeds in this proceeding he will take the little estate away from Rachel Spondre, who has always in this country lived as the wife of his son. The petition of Moses Spondre is signed by his mark, and yet I thought him not lacking in shrewdness or a certain sort of patriarchal dignity of demeanor.
Mollie Bass, the sister of Henry Spondre and the daughter of the petitioner, Moses Spondre, testifies that Henry Spondre and Rachel came finally to Hew York and Rachel then admitted to her that she was not married to Henry. Admissions claimed to be made to antagonistic witnesses are never a high 'order of evidence, and of themselves are insufficient to affect a status otherwise established. As it is, it is entitled to little weight, for the reasons I shall hereafter mention. Vague admissions are always overborne by facts which operate as estoppels. A person’s admission of marriage is of no value on the question of status.
Rachel Spondre was then called by petitioner; she testified that she was now forty-three years old, which was confirmed by her much younger appearance on the witness stand, although Moses Spondre would make her out a very old woman, seventy
It was conceded by counsel on the record, at my suggestion, that Henry and Rachel Spondre lived together in New York for the last twelve years as husband and wife, and were known in their neighborhood as husband and wife until Henry Spondre died. Petitioner was not prepared to prove that Rachel was not married to his son Henry Spondre, but his counsel rested on what he called “ presumptions of the common law ”— presumptions certainly formulated for and by a very different civilization than that to which the parties to this proceeding originally belonged. Such common-law presumptions have scant relevancy to the eastern institutions of Rumania and Bulgaria. The only affirmative evidence, indeed, that Rachel ever at any time .consorted with Topelman is furnished by Moses Spondre, the petitioner.
An important fact established is that Henry Spondre and Rachel came to our shores as husband and wife, and I will take notice of our own immigration laws requiring the marital relations to be truly stated by immigrants before their admission. There is. some evidence also that “ Goldie,” the daughter
In Russia, Rumania and parts of Austria the marriage and divorce laws are different from those of this common-law country. Although the parties offered no evidence of the foreign law, yet for the purposes of this application I should take notice of such difference, or a great wrong may be done to Rachel Spondre. . The evidence offered on the hearing, as is most always the case in the applications of the poorer people, was extremely inartificial and untechnical. To apply rigid legal formulae to such evidence is not always conducive to justice. The presumptions of the common law of evidence have scant application to the circumstances of the parties, and the interests of good government and decent society are not furthered by their application to cases not conceived of by the lex fori where such presumptions originate.
While this is an application to set aside letters of administration, the decision really involves affirming, or setting aside, a status of importance to the community. A decision which abrogates a marital relation of long standing, at the instance of a third party vitally interested in the result, ought to be entered on by a court of justice, having no jurisdiction in marital matters, with great caution, especially when it may concern a foreign status, recognized and enforced in the country of the spouses’ own origin. At this point I am concerned that our law shall not be brought into disrepute with people of this sort. I am justified in this view of my duty by the fact that by our own law even where prior marriages of the spouses are technically proved, their second marriages, without divorce, are not always ignored in this jurisdiction. Indeed the parties seeking the annulment of the second marriage are often left without decree or relief when the higher interests of society so demand. (Erlanger v. Erlanger, 173 App. Div. 767, citing Berry v. Berry, 130 id. 53, 56; Stokes v. Stokes, 198 N. Y. 301; Roth
As surrogate I am always extremely loath to ignore an existing status on an indirect application like this before the court. It seems to me that factum of marriage alone should defeat this application, and that the surrogate should rest when an existing marriage is once established, even though its validity may legally be questioned in a competent forum. Marriage is the most solemn and important of all civilized institutions, and in the past but few tribunals of this state have been intrusted with jurisdiction of an application to affect or to dissolve or to annul a marriage. Among the tribunals so intrusted the courts of the surrogates were never included. (Peugnet v. Phelps, 48 Barb. 466; Burtis v. Burtis, 1 Hopk. Ch. 557; Stokes v. Stokes, 198 N. Y. 301; Johnson v. Johnson, 206 id. 561; Walter v. Walter, 217 id. 439.) Why should the surrogate, then, do indirectly what he cannot do directly, at least when such adjudication is not made imperative on him?
I come at last to the merits of this application. Henry and Rachel Spondre first began their consortium in Rumania. They arrived in the port of New York as husband and wife, and as such husband and wife they lived here continuously until Henry Spondre died. Rachel swears she was divorced from Topelman by a rabbi and married by a rabbi. This evidence, I think, is not disproved. While a decree of divorce is undoubtedly the best evidence with us (Tice v. Reeves, 30 N. J. L. 314), yet no objection was taken to Rachel Spondre’s testimony that she was divorced' from Topelman by a rabbi. Sec
It may, I think, be presumed here from the facts conceded that Henry and Rachel contracted a common-law marriage on the high seas, or at the entrance to this port within the three-mile limit, ,or even in the harbor.- A common-law marriage was certainly permissible' in the instance of Henry and Rachel, especially after so great a lapse of time since the disappearance ■ of Topelman, who, indeed, from the vague evidence given in, may never have been married at all to Rachel. (Kresh v. Kresh, 58 Misc. Rep. 461.) Common-law marriages have always been recognized in this state, except from the period from January 1, 1902, to January 1, 1908. (Laws of 1901, chap. 339; Laws of 1907, chap. 742; Gall v. Gall, 114 N. Y. 109; Matter of Hinman, 147 App. Div. 452; affd., 206 N. Y. 653; O’Gara v. Eisenlohr, 38 id. 296; Bissell v. Bissell, 55 Barb. 325; Matter of Garner, 59 Misc. Rep. 116, 119.) Commonlaw marriages on the high seas within the three-mile limit are good marriages. (Hynes v. McDermott, 91 N. Y. 451.) The necessary declarations of Henry and Rachel Spondre to the commissioners of immigration at the port of Hew York, of themselves constituted, at common law, a perfectly good contract of marriage per verba de praesenti. Their cohabitation
It should not be overlooked that Topelman, the first consort of Rachel, or husband if husband he was, disappeared from the matrimonial scene many years ago — more than seven — and it sufficiently appears, I think, that he has since given no sign of life. The presumption of the death of Topelman on an indictment of Rachel for bigamy would justify her acquittal after seven years, if not before. (State v. Plym, 43 Minn. 385.) Any time after seven years, if not before, she would be competent to contract her marriage with Henry Spondre. (Reg. v. Willshire, L. R. [6 Q. B. D.] 366.)
If we inquire what other evidence, besides that denoted above there may be of such marriage, let me say that evidence, which I had always believed until lately was universally regarded as the highest kind of evidence known to the law of civilized peoples — I refer to reputation and cohabitation. (People v. Humphrey, 7 Johns. 314; Hynes v. McDermott, 91 N. T. 453, where all the authorities are reviewed.) Such proof is competent in all cases except proceedings for bigamy, divorce or damages for adultery. (Morris v. Miller, 4 Burr. 2057; 1 Wm. Black. 632.) So strong is this order of proof of marriage that even where it establishes a second marriage after a prior one a divorce from the first marriage will be presumed to support the second marriage. (Blanchard v. Lambert, 43 Iowa, 228; 22 Am. Rep. 245.) All such decisions proceed from that established maxim of our law “ semper praesumitur pro matrimonio.” It was with this familiar principle fully in view that I said on the trial of this application: “ I shall require the alleged marriage to Topelman to be proved with the same strictness, as on an indictment for bigamy, before I will .ignore, on this application, a subsequent marriage long established by reputation and cohabitation in this city.”
That Henry and Rachel Spondre were married under the old law of this state, their arrival in this port as husband and wife, followed by their long cohabitation in this city and by the
The only evidence against the marriage status of Rachel and Henry Spondre proceeds from the petitioner, Hoses Spondre, who seeks to take the estate of his son Henry Spondre away' from Rachel. It is a rule of practice, as contradistinguished from a rule of law, that courts of 'the common law will not act upon the uncorroborated testimony of claimants to estates, unless convinced that such testimony is true. (Rawlinson. v. Scholes, 79 L. T. Rep. 350, following Re Hodgson, Beckett v. Ramsdale, 31 Ch. D. 177, 183; Cockle’s Cas. 124.) I have frequently acted on this rule in this court and I hope generally
But we need not, I think, rest this matter on any mere refinement or disputable presumption of law. Rachel Spondre, herself called for petitioner, without objection as I have said, testified to her divorce from Topelman by a rabbi. Now divorces of those of the Jewish faith by their rabbis in Russia and Rumania, I will take notice - for the purposes of this application, are valid, and the subsequent marriages of such divorced persons are consequently recognized as valid by the law of the locus contractus, to use our own technical phrase, or rather they are valid under the principle “ locus rigit actum.” Status of marriage is ordinarily fixed by the law of the place of marriage. Rabbinical divorces being recognized in Rumania are valid in this jurisdiction. (Leshinsky v. Leshinsky, 5 Misc. Rep. 495: Miller v. Miller, 70 id. 368; Weinberg v. State, 25 Wis. 370 [1870] ; Sokel v. People, 212 Ill. 238 [1904]).
Although not so in this country, in Russia and Rumania the Jewish communities constitute a sort of imperium in imperio, as the state allows them to divorce themselves, according to their own laws, the Mosaic Code, embodied in the Pentateuch, and commented on or modified in the Talmud. The jurisprudence of so old and so great a people as the Jews is naturally not inferior to the jurisprudence of other cultivated races. One is apt to forget what Renan pointed out in Prance, that modern law has three great originals — Greek, Jewish and Roman. Our own law owes most to the law of Israel. The lower classes of Jews, the peasants and the industrials of the towns in Rumania, avail themselves liberally of the permission indicated, although the Jewish nobility and the aristocratic people of the Jewish faith generally prefer for greater security to property the additional or ancillary sanction of the ordinary courts of a European country. But as this last is an obscure branch of Jewish law I need not enter on it, as it does not affect this proceeding.
It must not be forgotten that as among people of all other
The counsel for the petitioner, with a deft ingenuity, chooses to rest on some favorable presumptions of the common law, ignoring all the law I have referred to. He gave no proof of foreign or Jewish law, and no documentary proof of any kind. The certificate of Henry Spondre’s naturalization was produced, and it states that Henry Spondre was married to Rachel, and that “ Goldie ” was his own daughter. The trouble is not with the common-law presumptions counsel invokes, but with their irrelevancy to the state of facts disclosed. This playing back and forth in a litigation with logical see-saws I abhor, when it is not loyal to justice. On the facts shown the briefs
In regard to Rachel Spondre’s alleged false suggestion as to her daughter being the daughter of Henry Spondre, I am convinced it was not made in bad faith. Intention is the main element of a false suggestion. Henry Spondre evidently regarded Rachel’s daughter as his own daughter. It is so stated in his American certificate of naturalization, issued in the year 1912. The child certainly lived with him as his daughter, and he ultimately married her off, acting as her father. Henry evidently regarded “ Goldie ” as his daughter and the principle of adoption per subsequens matrimonium may apply. There is in any event just enough justification for Rachel’s simple suggestion that “ Goldie ” was Henry’s daughter to rob it of all elements of falsity. The validity of “ Goldie’s ” claim can well be reserved for the decree of distribution. On all the facts stated I feel inclined to deny the present application. I should do this with little hesitation were it not for a recent decision of their honors in the Appellate Division of this department rendered in Matter of McDonough, 175 App. Div. 367. I confess that decision somewhat weakens my resolution in this matter. The appeal was one from my own order and I am therefore entirely conversant with the facts — facts not dissimilar to those here. As said in Matter of Leland, 219 N. Y. 387, “ reasonable men may reasonably ” differ about facts.
In Matter of McDonough the Appellate Division did not sit as a court of review, but it exercised its original jurisdiction as trier of an issue of fact in this court and substituted its own findings of fact for mine. The Appellate Division, in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, as contradistinguished from its appellate jurisdiction, may lawfully substitute its own findings of fact for the surrogate’s. It does not then so act as a
How far the judgment of the Appellate Division in Hatter of HcDonough also involved the denial of the principles of law on which I have decided this case now here I am not precisely advised. It may negative them; I do not know. This being so, after due consideration I think it better for the present to deny the application of Hoses Spondre, with the satisfactory assurance that if I am in error he will not be prejudiced, as such error can be promptly corrected in the appropriate place.
Application denied.