41 Barb. 114 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1863
Ho objection was raised to the complaint for multifariousness: and ho evidence was taken under that count. We may regard it here as abandoned. Though the referee reports that the marriage was voluntarily entered into on the part of the plaintiff, and not by compulsion or threats; and that at the time of the marriage the plaintiff was under arrest on a warrant issued on the application of the superintendents of the poor of Montgomery county, as being the putative father of a bastard child, of which the defendant was then pregnant. The referee also reports, as his opinion, that the defendant has committed the adultery charged in the complaint, with one Charles Wood.
From the evidence it appears that the marriage was consummated no further than by the usual marriage ceremony, and not by subsequent cohabitation; the parties never having lived together, but separated at the time of the ceremony, and remained separate, and resided, the plaintiff at Amsterdam, and other; places, and the defendant at Fort Plain, 25 or 30 miles distant, ever since the ceremony.
I should have serious doubts whether, upon the evidence as reported, I could bring myself to the same conclusion as did the referee, on the question of adultery, under all the circumstances of the case. If she is guilty, it is to be presumed from circumstances all transpiring on one occasion entirely disconnected with the usual and ordinary accompaniments of this offense, of friendship, intimacies, repeated instances of imprudent behavior, lewd conduct, &c. Presumptions based upon uniformity of, or continued improprieties, and suspicious intimacies with one individual, are much stronger than the presumption arising from a single circumstance unaccompanied by previous or subsequent impropriety of conduct. Excluding the fact of pregnancy prior to the
But in thelight in which Hook at this case, the plaintiff has failed to make out his case, even conceding the opinion of the referee on the question of adultery could be" sustained by evidence. Proof of adultery alone is not'sufficient to Authorize a judgment of divorce. The 86th Tule df this court, which has ever been a part of the law of divorce in this "state", and I -believe also in England, provides, “ that in actions !of divorce on" the ground of adultery, unless it be averred in the complaint that the adultery charged was committed without the consent, connivance, privity or procurement of the plaintiff, &c.; and the complaint containing such averment be verified by the oath of the plaintiff, &c. judgment shall not be rendered for. the relief demanded, until the plaintiff’s affidavit be produced, stating the above facts.” To this effect is 2 R. S. 145, § 55, [42,] sub. 1. The plaintiff has produced no sxich affidavit, and he has not averred any such fact in his verified complaint. There is a statement in the complaint, which it is claimed was intended for that purpose, but which cannot be admitted to be sufficient. The statement in the complaint is in the following language: “ that five years have not elapsed since he discovered the fact that such adultery had been committed by the defendant without his consent, connivance or procurement.” To say nothing of the omission of the word “privity ” contained in the rule, this statement amounts to no allegation that the adultery was committed without his “ consent, connivance or procurement.”
It is only an allegation that he had not discovered it to be so. Very likely! Perhaps he never will discover it to be “without his consent, connivance or procurement.” If he had consented, connived at, or procured the adultery to be committed, he could have taken, with truth, this very affidavit ; that it was not five years since he discovered it. That
The case shows that ever since his marriage, in August, 1860, the plaintiff has abandoned his wife, and left her upon the world without his help, to provide for herself, and her and his own offspring. This is a sufficient indication of his wish to live separate from her; or in other words, to he rid of her as a wife. They resided in the same county, some 25 miles distant from each other. There is no evidence of the intercourse between them from the time of marriage, even of a visit or a letter, prior to the 14th January, 1862. Just prior to that day, one Charles Wood, then of Herkimer county, an intimate friend of the plaintiff, who had known him while they resided together at Fort Plain, was at the plaintiff's residence at Amsterdam. It was proved that Wood and the plaintiff left Amsterdam together on the 14th of January; that both were together at Fort Plain, the
Potter, Justice.]