159 N.Y.S. 405 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
The action is to recover damages for a breach of promise to marry. The facts, as alleged in the complaint and the affidavit to procure the order for the examination, are as follows:
On November 20, 1903, defendant promised to marry the plaintiff, and on April. 2, 1904, a marriage ceremony was performed by a minister, and thereafter the parties cohabited as man and wife for eleven years, when on or about March 9, 1915, the' plaintiff discovered that at the time of the promise and the marriage ceremony the defendant had been married; that the wife of the former marriage was living and that the said marriage was in full force and effect. On the examination the defendant was asked: “Did you know a Miss Florence Weeks ? * * * Were you ever married to a Miss Florence Weeks ? * * * Did you ever know a Eeverend Gr. M. Colville? * "x" * Did you ever know a man by the name of L. H. Beach ? * * * Did you ever know a Mrs. M. S. Hard ? "x" "x* * Did you ever live at Evanston, near the City of Chicago, Illinois ? * * * Were you in the City of Scranton, Pennsylvania, in the year 1900 ? ” To each of these questions the witness declined to answer, and refused to assign any reason. The referee certified the questions to the court. Each of these questions may be assumed to tend to prove the former marriage of the defendant, and were, therefore, pertinent to the issue and material. The only justification for a refusal to answer, that was presented by defendant’s counsel, was that the answer would tend to incriminate the defendant.
The refusal to answer such a question is a privilege secured to a witness by section 83Y of the Code of Civil Procedure. It has been repeatedly held that this is a personal privilege that may be waived, and is waived, unless the privilege is claimed. Therefore, the order of the Special Term that the defendant
The defendant in his verified answer has denied the facts which his counsel claims would tend to incriminate him. If he desired to put the plaintiff to her proof, and still save his privilege, he could have done so by serving an unverified answer. (Code Civ. Proc. § 523.) But assuming, as counsel has, that his denial under oath is false, and that the witness will claim his privilege, it does not necessarily follow that he may not be required to answer the questions. If there was performed a ceremonial marriage between the parties to this action on April 2, 1904, and the defendant then had a wife of a former marriage living, and said marriage is still valid and subsisting, the Statute of Limitations has run against the crime he then committed. That being the case the claim of privilege does not apply. The rule and the reason therefor are clearly stated by Professor Wigmore: “The law is concerned with its own penalties only. Legal criminality consists in liability to the law’s punishment. When that liability is removed, criminality ceases; and with the criminality the privileges * * *. A
This disposition of the case does not contravene the decisions of this State which have declared, “The witness who knows what the court does not know, and what he cannot disclose without accusing himself, must in such cases judge for himself as to the effect of his answer, and if, to his mind, it may constitute a link in the chain of testimony sufficient to convict him, when other facts are shown, or to put him in jeopardy, or subject him to the hazard of a criminal charge, indictment or trial, he may remain silent. ” (People ex rel. Taylor v. Forbes,
The defendant was asked: “Will you state what patents you did own?” to which he answered: “That is impossible.” The counsel for defendant evidently has presented his objection, to the court at Special Term, to any inquiry as to the defendant’s property on the ground that only the defendant’s general reputation as to his means is admissible (citing Kniffen v. McConnell, 30 N. Y. 285, and Chellis v. Chapman, 125 id. 214).
In Kniffen v. McConnell it does not appear whether the amount of defendant’s property was shown by general reputation or by specific evidence of his property and the value thereof. Objection was taken to the admissibility of the evidence, but upon what ground does not appear. The court said (p. 289): “The objection in this case was not to the mode of proof, but to the admissibility of that kind of evidence. It may be objectionable to particularize the defendant’s property, and such evidence should be Confined to general reputation as to the circumstances of the defendant. To that extent I think it admissible ” —■ and the judgment was affirmed. In Chellis v. Chapman {supra) evidence of the defendant’s general reputation for wealth at the time of the agreement of marriage was admitted. The court said: “I apprehend, however, that the difficulty in the question before us of the evidence is not so much in adducing proof as to defendant’s pecuniary means, as in the mode of their proof. But assuming, as I think we are bound to do under the authorities, that the amount of defendant’s property is material in such an action, then evidence of the reputation which he enjoys for wealth is unobjectionable. Bepu
As to the limitation as to the time of the inquiry regarding defendant’s property, I think the plaintiff is entitled to prove the estate of the defendant during the time that he might have reasonably been expected to fulfill his agreement; that would be from the date of the promise until the date of the commencement of the action, October 23, 1915, but not since that time.
The order should be modified as indicated in this opinion, and as modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the respondent.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Smith, JJ., concurred.
Order modified as indicated in opinion, and as modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to respondent. Order to be settled on notice.