189 Misc. 186 | N.Y. Fam. Ct. | 1947
Subdivision (1) of section 92 of the Hew York City Domestic Relations Court Act (L. 1933, eh. 482) provides as follows: “ To order support of a wife or child or both, irrespective of whether either is likely to become a public charge, as justice requires having due regard to the circumstances of the respective parties. ’ ’
The duties of a judge are not always pleasant. Sometimes a judge must do that which runs counter to what his conscience dictates. Compromise with conscience, in order to follow the slaw, is abhorrent, yet it must be made.
The matter before me is a situation in which I shall have to do that which in conscience I feel very difficult to justify. Insistence on the part of the petitioner to her right to have
The facts in this case are: Respondent and the petitioner were married to each other on or about the 21st of October, 1939, by way of a ceremonial marriage presided over, in the first instance, by a minister, evidently of the Protestant faith; to make the marriage more binding, they went through a subsequent marriage ceremony which was performed by a priest of the church to which they belonged, to wit, the Roman Catholic Church; they lived together from time to time until the respondent volunteered for service to his country in its armed forces, and lived together after he had served his term of enlistment and was discharged from military services of his country; a child was born to the petitioner on or about the 15th of January, 1942; she is now five months pregnant with another child; there is no dispute between the respondent and the petitioner that he is not the father of either child; the fact is that the father of both children is another man, the same man in each instance.
The problem with which I am confronted is one of law and of morals, not one of fact. The law should reflect the morals of a period in which the law is to be enforced. Moral concepts ■ordinarily antedate laws. Law for the guidance of man generally is the embodiment of the moral code accepted by man in his relationships individually and collectively in his relation to others as well as to the community. The accepted moral concepts run counter to what the law requires me to do. To require the respondent to answer for the support of the lady who calls herself his wife and who is his wife in the eyes of the law amounts to countenancing her conduct with another man while she is and was the wife of the respondent.
Whatever order I make in this case is not to be construed to mean approval of her conduct. Men and women do get married and are unable to continue to live together as husbands and wives because of incompatibility in character or even in sex but that incompatibility is not a warrant to one or the other to violate vows made at the time of the marriage ceremony, and exact of the other the obligations undertaken at the time of the marriage vows.
Petitioner here is the wife of the respondent. As long as she is the wife and she is without financial ability to take care of herself or is industrially incapacitated and thus may become a charge on the public or is a charge on the public, the responsibility is that of the husband and not of the public to maintain her.
Exercising that sound discretion which judges must exercise and taking into consideration the fact that she is not wholly unemployed — cooking and keeping house for an aunt is employment— she may not be paid for it in dollars and cents'but she is paid for it in food and shelter —■ the order of the court, in view of all the circumstances which I must take into consideration in order to do justice between the parties, is, he is to contribute $10 monthly.