78 N.J. Eq. 316 | New York Court of Chancery | 1911
This is a suit brought by the wife against the husband charging adultery. The suit is undefended and the proofs of the commission of the act charged are satisfactory, but the master reports adversely on the ground that the wife connived at the adultery. The facts upon which connivance is found are substantially these: The petitioner suspecting the fidelity of her husband, but having no proof of it, arranged with a detective office to follow her husband on the nights when the detectives were notified by her that her husband was absent from home. From a subsequent conversation of her husband over the telephone, which she overheard, petitioner thought he might be making an appointment, but with whom or where was not learned, and she proposed to have him followed. Knowing of her husband’s habit of going automobile riding with a friend, petitioner went with her sister to the detective’s office after her husband left their home, and with her sister and the detectives went in an automobile in a search for this friend’s
The master seems to have taken a single clause of this opinion in the Delaney Case, applied without reference to the facts or issues in the case, as intended to put in concrete form a new rule in reference to acts of petitioner which would bar a divorce, on the ground of negligence or connivance. This clause of the opinion, as well as the whole opinion, is to be read with reference to the issues directly involved for decision, one of which was, whether the special act of adultery charged had not been brought about by conduct of the husband himself toward the wife,.which conduct itself was the cause of or had a tendency to bring about the very act complained of. And it was this conduct of the husband toward the wife and the adulterer as being of itself an efficient cause of the crime, or itself contributing to the crime, which was held to bar relief. The effect of the mere watching the actions of the suspected wife, without her Imowledge and without directly effecting and encouraging them, was not involved in the Delaney Case, or intended to be passed on. On the facts of the case the court found that the conduct of the husband toward his wife conduced or contributed as one of its effective causes to the commission of the crime complained of. To extend the bar of connivance to the mere act of watching the movements of a suspected spouse could not have been the intention of the court, for the question was not involved. In a previous case (Warn v. Warn
The distinction between the Delaney Case and the one in hand is, that in the Delaney Case the acts or conduct barring divorce as connivance, or consent, were such as themselves tended to bring about the act complained of, in the sense that they were in some sense and to some extent the efficient causes of the act and contributed thereto as cause to effect. All of the cases in our courts which have considered this defence of consent or connivance, have applied the doctrine to acts or conduct which were in themselves of such a character as to cause or tend to bring about the crime. Hedden v. Hedden (Chancellor Zabriskie, 1870), 21 N. J. Eq. (6 C. E. Gr.) 61; Cane v. Cane (Chancellor Runyon, 1884), 39 N. J. Eq. (12 Stew.) 158; Warn v. Warn, supra. This statement probably does not include all possible eases of connivance— a matter which is not within the scope of this decision — but, while giving the meaning of “connivance,” or “consent,” as it appears to be drawn from the decisions, I intend now only to decide that the watching of a suspected husband and suffering him to avail himself of an opportunity .created by himself, without any previous knowledge or encouragement on the part of the wife, is not a connivance or consent on her part which would bar the divorce. This was the view taken by Vice-Chancellor Pitney in Brown v. Brown, 62 N. J. Eq. (17 Dick.) 62, 67, and seems to be the general, if not universal, rule in other American courts. 9 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (2d ed.) 830; Wilson v. Wilson, 154 Mass. 194, supra; 2 Bish. Mar. & D. (6th ed.) § 9; 1 Nels. Div. & Sep. § 485. Under the English statute (Matr. Causes act, 1857 §§ 29,
The exceptions will be sustained and a decree of divorce advised.