78 N.J. Eq. 386 | New York Court of Chancery | 1911
(orally, after argument of counsel).
As the taking of testimony in this suit and the arguments of counsel have now consumed eleven days, I am better able to dispose of the case at once, while fully in possession of all of the facts and informed of counsel’s views respecting each of the questions raised, than would be the case if I delayed rendering a de
The initial petition in this cause is by the wife for a limited divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. It was filed on the 18th of November, 1909. Subsequently, she amended and supplemented this so as to allege adultery between her husband and a Mrs. Ehea Smith, subsequently intermarried with a man named Magee; and, also, in the same amended and supplemented petition, alleged desertion on his part for more than two years then last past; and thereupon prayed for an absolute divorce upon those grounds.
The answer of the husband denied the allegations of the wife’s petitions, and by cross-petitions prayed for an absolute divorce on, first, the ground of desertion since October 1st, 1907, and second, adultery with John H. Winans upon various stated occasions.
The defendant is now about forty-three years of age and the wife thirty-eight. They are gentle people, he being a physician with a good practice, and she the daughter of a lawyer of standing and means. They were married in 1895, and have had three children — Dorothy, now about fourteen; Emily, now about eleven, and Joseph, now about six. There is no dispute that up until late in the year 1906, or early in 1907, they got along together in a manner which requires no comment. They lived in a good neighborhood, on the corner of York street and Jersey avenue, in Jersey City, in a nice house, and were acquainted and associated with nice people.
Some time in the early part of 1907 their disagreements began, and continued with increasing frequency and seriousness until the bringing of this suit by the wife in November of 1909. It is extremely difficult to ascertain and determine just what instigated the disturbances, which began early in 1907. Up to that time Mi's. Eector and the doctor seemed to have been kind and pleasant to each other, and to have had no cause of complaint one against the other. Beginning at that time the wife altered her previous manner and conduct toward her husband and the general family life. She says that it was on account of the acquaintance and conduct of the doctor with Mrs. Smith. The latter was a woman
From Mrs. Rector’s own testimony it is obvious that from a late period in 1906, or a very early period in 1907, she determined to give herself more freedom as to coming and going than before ; and she certainly, after that time, largely, if not entirely, sought her associations and recreations apart from her husband. She did not express in words her grievances, but acted as if she was either aggrieved or angered, or both, and repelled any advances by him looking toward reconciliation and resumption of their previously happy married existence. When he requested information as to her whereabouts, when she had been absent, she refused to talk to him; and if she volunteered any information as to where she had been, it was upon the few occasions when her companions indicated to him whence she had come.
The defendant undoubtedly was angry at her conduct, and it undoubtedly affected his manner and conduct toward her.
In July of 1907 Mrs. Sector and the children went to the Hotel Calderwood, at Oakland, New Jersey. While there she met a Mr. Winans, who was accustomed to make that place his summer headquarters. He is a lawyer by profession and apparently a man of means, having horses, carriages, opera boxes and other indicia of wealth. Hpon the occasion of a visit there by the defendant he became jealous of a preference which he thought his wife showed as between his company and that of Mr. Winans. She returned from Oakland in the early part of September, 1907, and they resumed living at the York street residence much in the same manner as that which had preceded her visit to the country. Mrs. Bector continued to conduct her life in about the same way as before her departure for Oakland, except that possibly she went out in the evenings more frequently to gatherings or amusements apart from her husband, and more thoroughly and absolutely withdrew from the family life, and eliminated herself from his life and excluded him from her life. She still refuses either to abstain from going out at his request or to give information concerning her doings while out. While the parties, up to the fall of 1907, still kept up a semblance of being united, it was little more than a seeming.
Mrs. Bector says that it was in December, 1906, that she saw Mrs. Smith leave the doctor’s office and go toward the ferry, and later saw the doctor also go toward the ferry, and that she went there also and saw Dr. Sector and Mrs. Smith sitting on the upper deck of a ferry-boat together, and that she spoke distantly to them, whereupon Mrs. Smith, she says, made protestations of innocence and left the boat, and she and the doctor went on to New York together. Mrs. Smith and Dr. Sector deny all suggestion of protestations by Mrs. Smith, and say that their meeting upon the boat upon this occasion was entirely by accident and was without motive or purpose. The doctor places this incident much later, and says that it was his clinic day, upon which he always took the ferry-boat, leaving at that time to attend at a
There were clashes arising from her refusal to either consult him about her comings and goings, or inform him concerning them.
In November of 1907 a further matter of disagreement arose out of the attitude and conduct of the Rectors toward the unhappy conditions existing in the family of her sister, Mrs. Warren Dixon. The name of a Mr. Aitón had been connected unfavorably with that of Mrs. Dixon, and Dr. Rector did not wish his wife or her sister Miss Eugenia Bentley (who was then an inmate of his household) to interfere in any way, and upon finding that they were conniving at communications through his house between Mrs. Dixon and Mr. Aitón, he forbade it, and this caused further bad feeling. Later, in that same month, a family gathering of the Bentleys at the Rector home culminated in an unseemly fist fight between Parker Bentley, a brother of Mrs. Rector, and the doctor; the police were called in by the doctor, and Parker was arrested, and subsequently released by the doctor withdrawing the complaint. The doctor ascribes this trouble to too much drinking. I think the real cause was some conversation he overheard between his wife and her brother concerning her grievances against him, the doctor, in which he was held up by her to her brother in an undesirable and unpleasant light. However, the result was the ejection of Miss Bentley from the house, and an increased bitterness between the husband and wife.
Shortly after Mrs. Rector’s return from Oakland, in 1907, she received some letters from Mr. Winans, one of which contained but a few lines and some photographic films. This letter she either showed to the doctor, or informed him of its contents. The others she did not. She asked the doctor if he would accompany Mr. Winans and herself (and, I think, Miss Bentley) to the opera box of Mr. Winans at the Metropolitan Opera House, and he refused. She wanted to ask Mr. Winans to come to her house to dinner, and he forbade her to do so, and instructed her to tell him that she could not have him at her house, and this she did by telephone and later by letter.
He found certain letters from Winans to his wife in her desk and quarreled with her about them. This was in October of 1907, just before the cessation of all marital intercourse.
Nothing requiring specific relation occurred until the summer of 1908. After disagreements between them as to where- and when she should go for her vacation, finally in August she went to Oakland, he having, upon learning that she intended to go there, forbidden her to go to that place because of his knowledge that Mr. Winans usually went there in the summer, and he did not wish her to meet Winans. She had received about $500 from some dead relative’s estate, and. feeling secure as to money, went, taking a maid and her three children.
Previous^', and in July of 1908, she began to go to the office of Mr. Winans in New York, and to consult and confer with him about her marital troubles, and to be guided by his advice in respect thereto, and on the 24th of August she gave him a check for $100. This was a part of the $500 she had which has just been referred to. She at one time conveyed to Mr. Winans the information that of this $500 she had $300 left, and he advised her to deposit this in a bank in New York, which she did; and the first or second check that she drew against this deposit, on the day on which she made it, the 24th of August, 1908, was to Mr. Winans for the $100 aforesaid, which they both
Upon learning that Mrs. Rector had gone to Oakland, and that she would probably stop while there at either the Calderwood Hotel or at the cottage of some people named Lockwood, he ■wrote to both places, warning them that he would not be responsible for her debts at these places because he had forbidden her to go there. Mrs. Rector stayed at the Lockwood cottage from August 13th to September 4th or 5th, the Sunday before Labor Day of 1908. Winans was frequently at Oakland, stopping at the Calderwood Hotel, upon part of the grounds of which the Lockwood cottage stood. He and Mrs.' Rector met constantly, conferring, they say, about her marital troubles. She had informed Mr. Winans that the doctor had found some of his letters to her and had made a scene concerning tllem.
She arrived home the Sunday before the doctor left for his hunting trip of 1908, and she stayed in the house until after this suit was brought. At the time of her return in September of 1908, her room on the second floor was being refurbished, and she went, at the doctor’s direction, to the third story, and stayed there so long as she remained in the house, refusing to go back to her room on the second floor, or to permit the children to resume their old quarters on the second floor.
The doctor provided for the family meals at boarding-houses in the neighborhood, and they never afterwards resumed full family life together, although they lived under the same roof and met and spoke together occasionally and formally.
Mrs. Rector began going to the office of Mr. Winans to consult him, she says, about her marital troubles, in the month of July, 1908, and continued to visit him there until she went to Oakland on the 13th of August, he going there then also. At Oakland, whenever 'he was there, their constant private interviews excited the comment of one of their mutual friends, who suggested to Mr. Winans that it was subjecting them to a misconstruction, unless he explained to those who observed them that he was her lawyer, and that their constant private interviews were with respect to legal business.
Mrs. Lauterbaeh, a friend and associate of theirs at Oakland, whose family lived in the village, says they were frequently together; that she saw them kissing upon one occasion. They deny that they ever kissed each other. Mrs. Lauterbaeh says they took walks together,, which they deny; and that she saw them in a room apart, late at night, in a familiar attitude toward each other. They deny this. She says that upon another occasion she came across them upon a dark porch of an inn where they had come to dine with a party, and that they had left the rest of the party quite some time before she stumbled over them upon the porch. They deny this.
Upon the occasion that Mrs. Rector was upon this visit at Oakland, she returned to the Jersey City residence to get some things. She met the doctor there and was invited by him to stay to luncheon, and refused to do so, and went from there to New York, met and lunched with Mr. Winans, and returned with him to Oakland.
Upon Winans’ advice, and so as to prevent a successful charge of abandonment by her of the doctor, she returned to the Jersey City residence the day before she had been informed the doctor intended leaving for a hunting trip to Canada. She got back upon Sunday night, and he left the following Monday morning, September 6th, 1908. He left her $25. She says she was in great want and that the children were also.
On the 25th of September, 1908, she went with the boy, Joe, who was about four, to Niagara Falls, returning on the 27th. She did not inform the doctor of this trip. She sent the two girls to a friend. The boy subsequently informed his father’s sister that he and his mother had taken this trip, and that Mr. Winans was with them. Upon learning that the boy had done
Through the rest of the year 1908 she frequently met Mr. Winans at his office and went with him to restaurants and hotel dining-rooms. They do not deny that they were at the places where detectives and others saw them, but they insist that their meetings were for the discussion of legal matters requiring attention.
In January of 1909, several detective witnesses testify to an occurrence at Winans’ office when Mrs. Rector was there, and all the lights were extinguished and they stayed in a dark room together for about half an hour. They admit that they were there, but they deny the putting out of the lights. They confirm the rest of the detectives’ stories concerning their whereabouts after they left the office, and their going to a restaurant in Brooklyn where they dined together and subsequently came to Jersey City, where she went back to the Jersey City residence.
Many other similar dinners and meetings are testified to by the detectives and admitted by Mrs. Rector and Mr. Winans. They were together at lunching places downtown and uptown, and in dining-rooms and restaurants and hotels, both uptown and downtown. They met at his offices, upon the street, upon elevated railroad platforms and at railroad stations. They went to Newark together, to Summit, to Elizabeth and Jersey City, upon all of which occasions they say that their reason for meeting and being together and remaining together was to discuss her legal affairs. The detectives, who watched them upon the occasion of a meeting at the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western depot at Hoboken, say that after dining there (which they admit they did), Mr. Winans placed his arm around Mrs. Rector on the way down from the dining-room to the ground floor. This occurrence Mr. Winans and Mrs. Rector deny.
In March of that year they met one afternoon a.t the Hotel Manhattan in Eorty-seeond street, New York, and after taking afternoon tea, or having something to eat or drink together there,
The colored boy who was on duty at the apartment seems, by his evidence, to suggest, if not possibly to swear, that Miss Small was not there at all upon that occasion. They say she was there, and she says she was there.
The meetings at his office and other places, as above described, continued without interruption or particular incident until April, 1909. On Saturday, the 3d of April, 1909, she went in the afternoon, with her daughter Dorothy, a child then of between twelve and thirteen, to Mr. Winans’ apartments. The implication conveyed by the colored boy that they were there with Mr. Winans for some period of time before a Mrs. Lockwood arrived, is denied by Winans and by Mrs. Eector. Mrs. Lockwood, and later her husband, and Mrs. Eector with her daughter, and Mr. Winans were all finally together at his apartments on that evening or afternoon, and dined together and remained together until about ten-thirty or so, when Mr. Winans took Mrs. Eector and her daughter to the ferry-boat. They explain that this was really a long-promised house party by Mr. Winans to the Lockwoods and Mrs. Eector, but that it was also availed of, and particularly so, as an occasion to get Mr. Lockwood to consent to go to a house in New York where they thought they had
Upon the return of Mrs. Rector and Do'rothy to the Rector residence, about eleven-thirty on this Saturday night, Mrs. Rector refused to give the doctor any information as to where she had been, but the child informed him, and he thereupon became very angry and abusive of Mr. Winans, and absolutely forbade any association of any sort between his wife and Mr. Winans.
She had promised to return to the Winans apartment on the next day and dine again with the Lockwoods, and after this scene with the doctor she next day called Mr. Winans on the telephone at his apartment and conveyed to him information of what had happened, and told him that she would not come over under the circumstances. He, however, persuaded her to come, telling her that it was only right that she should renew her efforts to obtain Mr. Lockwood’s services in hunting up Mrs. Magee or Mrs. Smith, and that since the doctor was endeavoring to do things detrimental to her, it was only right that she should continue to do things detrimental to him, and that she should come, which she did. She got there between two-ten and two-thirty upon that Sunday afternoon. The Lockwoods were there and Mr. Winans was there, and they had dinner, and later in the afternoon Dr. Rector arrived with Thompson, one of the detectives employed by him, and they obtained admittance to the apartment, and a disturbance and scene ensued in which the doctor accused Winans and his wife, and the police were telephoned for, and the doctor and Thompson departed, and subsequently Mrs. Rector got back to Jersey City, and the next day was brought to the house of her brother John, and the doctor was interceded with concerning her return to her home. A rather inconclusive meeting was held between John and the doctor as to the terms upon which she would be re-admitted. In the meantime she was re-admitted, and remained there until a long period after the beginning of this suit.
From that time the condition of the contending parties may be properly described as one of “armed neutrality.” There is not the slightest suggestion that anything that was done by
It is the petitioner’s contention that the Various happenings up to the time that she filed her bill demonstrate that the conduct of Dr. Rector toward her was extreme cruelty under the construction placed upon this term by our courts, so as to bring the ease within the statute.
I am utterly unable to reach this conclusion.
There is only one instance in all of this long and minute recital of family life in which there was any physical violence of any sort, and that was of the most casual character and did not in any way reveal any cruelty upon the doctor’s part, or the possession by him of a cruel or brutal disposition, or of anj'thing approaching it or approximating it. This incident happened on Thanksgiving Day of 1908. Eor some time prior to that period she had been removing certain articles from the house — whether they belonged to her or to the doctor is utterly immaterial. Some time before that time he had made up his mind to stop this, and had locked portable articles, which he did not propose to have removed, in the dining-room. The parties were not eating at home. It was after her return from Oakland, and after that time she never ate in the house but always at boardinghouses. There was some picture which she claimed to own, and which he did not propose that she should have — whether she owned it or not I do not know — and he was about to put this into the dining-room. She objected, and followed him into the dining-room and took the picture up for the purpose of taking it out again. It was a small affair. He wrested it from her hands and took her in his arms and carried her or pushed her out of the room. She returned to the room again and persisted in her endeavor to remove this small picture from the table or chair, or wherever he had put it, and he would not permit her to do so, and again put her out of the room, and eventually forced her down upon a sofa and held her there. This is the only thing throughout the case, which is credible, which in any way indicates any physical encounter between these people, and it is really too trivial to dignify by any great amount of discussion.
Apart from these two physical instances there is nothing in her case concerning extreme cruelty excepting her complaints concerning the doctor’s conduct toward her during this long period. That conduct, she says, consisted in not giving her as much money as she thought she should have, in forbidding her to associate with friends in the way that she wanted to, and in other similar instances.
"While there is tremendous volume in these complaints, the result of a careful analysis of the testimony is so small that it hardly seems to require extensive treatment, and I shall not devote any more time to it. I cannot, as a conscientious trier of fact,, say that I have any doubt that the offence of extreme cruelty has not been made out by the petitioner.
With respect to her charge that Dr. Rector was guilty of adultery with Mrs. Smith, the proven facts are few, and are properly summed up as follows: The petitioner says that the doctor met Mrs. Smith some time in the year 1906; that she observed that he was taken with her; that upon several occasions the doctor either put her on the right hand when she thought Mrs. Smith should have been on the left, or put her on the left when she thought Mrs. Smith ought to have been on the right; and that upon some other occasion she thinks the doctor either did not dance enough with her, or danced too much with Mrs. Smith, or some similar complaint. That the doctor was treating Mrs. Smith as a Iona fide patient there cannot be any possible question. She had injured her leg in such a way as to affect the
When it is considered that Dr. Rector is not shown by any witness to have had any previous intimate relations of any sort with Mrs. Smith (I do not use the word “intimate” in a sexual sense) — when it is considered that the Detwillers were life-long friends of his, were among his best paying patients, were right in
There is not in this case sufficient evidence to satisfy any of the definitions that I have found concerning what amounts to proof of adultery which would enable me as a conscientious trier of fact'to reach the conclusion that Dr. Rector committed adultery with Mrs. Smith.
This leaves, so far as the petitioner’s case is concerned, the sole remaining question of the charge of desertion.
She alleges that for two years prior to the time that she filed the petition in which she alleges desertion the doctor’s conduct amounted to willful, continued and obstinate desertion of her. It is extremely difficult to determine upon what she bases such a charge; because there is no evidence in the case that she ever desired to resume marital relations and he refused. There is evidence that she constantly objected to not having her own way concerning whatever she desired to do, and objected to his not giving her as much money as she thought she ought to have. There is evidence that from a period in 1907 these two people, while they lived under the same roof, did not live as husband and wife, not only as to sexual intercourse but as to any other of the things that distinguish married life from mere existence under the same roof. There is no evidence that this was initiated or continued by the conduct of the doctor. I am not, therefore, able to find the defendant guilty of desertion, and I do not think it worth while further to discuss the charge of desertion as made by the petitioner.
The first question which I shall consider upon the part of the defendant and cross-petitioner is with respect to the allegations
In Osborn v. Osborn (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1888), 44 N. J. Eq. (17 Stew.) 257, where numerous suspicious circumstances were considered by the court, it refused to reach a verdict of guilty because it did not find itself satisfied that these two things had been proven to have existed together. The difficulty with the case at bar — and I admit that it is a very great one — is to satisfactorily explain the conduct of these people upon any reasonable Irypothesis which satisfies me either that it was innocent or that it was guilty.
It is undoubtedly true that Mr. Winans was a lawyer, and that Mrs. Eector did talk to him about her troubles; but I cannot believe and I do not believe and I shall not find that she and lie tell the truth when they say that during all these five or six months that their constant meetings took place, that their interviews at his office, on the street, on the elevated railroad platforms and trains, and on ferry-boats and in ferry-houses, and visits tq Summit, and to Elizabeth, and to Newark, and Brooklyn, and Jersey City, and their walks through the streets and parks, and in their visits to his home were upon legal business, or were necessary or are reasonably to be explained upon that suggestion. It is undoubtedly true that they did, at their meetings or some
Of her impropriety in seeking this particular man as her law-, yer there can be no question, and no occasion for me to dwell upon.
■ Upon her indiscretion — which is almost unbelievable unless it were demonstrated by her own and his testimony — there is no occasion further to dwell.
To characterize a lawyer who would permit a client to conduct herself as she did, even if she had not better sense as to her own conduct, there is no occasion for me to search for words.
But when all this has been said, and when the most severe condemnation has been visited upon their conduct, the question still remains, is there in this case sufficient proof that the association of these people was for a sexual purpose? In other words, can we find from the proven facts that they had a sexual desire one for the other; and that upon some of the opportunities which they had they gratified it ?
The only evidence upon this subject which the most careful watching to which they were subjected has resulted in being brought before me relates, as I now recall it, to three occasions.
Sophia Lauterbach, an associate and friend of theirs, who was with them at Oakland, says that she, upon one occasion, saw them kissing. She does not and was not asked to give any details. We know nothing whatever of the circumstances. We have simply that bald statement. She also says that upon another occasion she saw these people in the dining-room of the Lockwood cottage when the rest of the party were in the living room, and that he was leaning over her (Mrs. Rector), and that Mrs. Rector was sitting on a box, and I think the general implication of this testimony is that there was something improper in their respective positions toward each other at that time. This was in the summer of 1908.
The colored hall boy at the Winans apartment on Eighty-fourth street testifies to looking through a transom (which Winans and Miss Small say was covered with a heavy piece of
The other instance is testified to by two of the private detectives hired by Dr. Rector, and concerns a happening after a dinner which these people took together at the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western station one night. Upon leaving the dining-room at some hour around eight in the evening they say Mr.Winans put his arm around Mrs. Rector while she was going down the stairway. As this was one of the most public places imaginable, in a very busy railroad station and on a broad and observable and highly lighted stairway, this seems to be a very remarkable thing for this man to have done under the circumstances. The note which the detective Thompson made of this incident in his note-book is unquestionably interlined — that is, written in there after the original account of what happened was completed.
These are the sole instances which now occur to me, and I think they are all that the proofs disclose, of any physical contact of any description of a lascivious nature, or of an intimate nature, between these people throughout a period when they were undeT espionage, and were, as the proofs show, very frequently, if not constantly, observed by watchers on behalf of the defendant.
I have said sufficient to indicate the balancing factors which are now and throughout the giving of the testimony in this case have been in my mind.
I am not sure how I should determine this issue if I felt compelled to determine it. I do not. I find that the other allegation, which concerns the desertion which the cross-petitioner alleges was committed by Mrs. Rector, is proven; and, therefore, since I base the decree, which I shall advise upon that ground, I do not find it necessary to express any judgment or verdict with respect to this other allegation.
I have indicated in a previous portion of this deliverance that I reach the unquestioned conclusion, after considering carefully
By way of preface upon the question of the law, I think it useful to say that I incline to think that one of the difficulties in a clear apprehension upon this question of desertion arises rather out of the difficulty of proving desertion by any other fact than actual abandonment or departure than out of determining what is essentially desertion. Since in the vast majority of cases the only way to prove that the offending spouse intended to desert is an actual departure of that one from the other, a physical going away from and abandonment, it has almost come to be believed that a physical departure, going away from, utterly ceasing to be within sight of the other, is an essential element of the offence!. I do not believe that it is, either by precedent, definition or reason. I know of no more satisfactory definition is this s.tate of the statutory offence of desertion than that contained in Sergent v. Sergent, 33 N. J. Eq. (6 Stew.) 204 (at p. 205). It is there defined as follows:
“To establish desertion three things must be proved — first, cessation of cohabitation; second, an intent in the mind of the defendant to desert, and third, that the desertion was against the will of the complainant.”
With respect to the first and third of these essentials we have no difficulty in this case whatever. The unanimous testimony of the parties is that there was a complete cessation of all matrimonial cohabitation from a period dating back to October, 1907. With respect to the third, there is practically no dispute, namely, that that which I hold to be desertion was against the will of the husband. '
It has been held both in England and in this country, and in this state, that a man has deserted his wife even though he continues to supply her with all the necessaries of life. Conversely, why should it not properly be held that a wife has deserted her husband if, withholding all other marital obligations and relations, she continues to accept support? And this is practically all that Mrs. Rector, after October, 1907, did.
"Whatever may have been the result of a study of the decided law in this state prior to the decision of Raymond v. Raymond (unreported), by the present chancellor, it is now quite clear that this decision has clarified and settled the law upon what may have been theretofore a doubtful point. In that case the proofs were that the parties were married and lived together for quite some time, the husband absolutely refusing to have intercourse with the wife. Upon her complaint, he refused to have intercourse with her. She withdrew from his house and went back to her father’s home, and at his instance returned to her husband and again requested this matrimonial relation, which he again refused. She thereupon left him and sued for divorce after the statutory period liad passed, and was held to have made out the offence of desertion. The chancellor, who signed the decree, did not himself write any opinion, but, of course, the necessary rule which the facts must have applied to them to have produced that decree becomes the law of the state, so far as the court of chancery has to do with declaring that law. The case had been referred to former Justice Van Syckel, than whom, of course, there is no jurist of higher repute in the state; and in a memorandum filed by him at the time of his report he cites many authorities with approval, and, among them, that which he says contains the kernel of this matter:
“In Stein v. Stein, 5 Colo. 56, the court said 'matrimonial cohabitation must certainly comprehend a living together as husband and wife, embracing relative duties as such, otherwise all married couples residing in a hotel, boarding or lodging-house
After citing American and English cases and text-books which satisfied him as to what the rule was, he concludes by saying: “The cases generally admit that unjustifiable withdrawal from marital cohabitation constitutes desertion.
“That marital cohabitation implies necessarily something more than merely living under the same roof is strikingly stated in the quotation before made from Stein v. Stein.
“Where will the line be logically drawn, unless it is held that to constitute matrimonial cohabitation it must include the duties which distinguish the marital from every other contractual relation ? When cohabitation, in its true sense in the marriage relation, ceases, desertion commences.”
Mr. Justice Van Syckel then proceeds to state that he has no.t overlooked the two cases in the court of chancery of New Jersey which bear upon the issue, and he points out that in Reid v. Reid (Chancellor Zabriskie, 1871), 21 N. J. Eq. (6 C. E. Gr.) 331, the chancellor did not refer to the authorities which existed upon the subject, and that it appeared in that case from the testimony that the parties were married in 1841 and lived together until 1862, during which time two children were born of the marriage ; and so far as appears, the husband, after he left the wife, did not offer to return or make any request for the renewal of his marital rights. And with respect to the case of Watson v. Watson, which is reported in 52 N. J. Eq. (7 Dick.) 349, as anonymous, Chancellor McGill held that the fact that the wife withdrew from sexual intercourse with the husband did not constitute desertion within the meaning of the statute; and he points out that in that case the chancellor found as a fact that the husband, who was the complainant, never sought a restoration of his marital rights; and he thereupon proceeds thereafter to point out what he calls the distinguishing features between these cases and the rule which he finds is sustained by the various text-writers and other authorities that he gives.
I shall not at this time amplify this idea further, but shall proceed briefly to indicate the application which I think should be made of this principle to the existing facts.
I think that undoubtedly Mrs. Rector, in the early part of 1907, actuated, as 1 have before suggested, probably by her attitude toward Dr. Rector and Mrs. Smith, determined never again to have any relations whatever with the doctor such as a wife should have — not merely sexual, but any relations. She an
I have not been unmindful of the fact, although I have not before adverted to it, that under our law, where a wife has deserted the husband, before it can be found to be obstinate she must have been approached in good faith by him and requested to return and resume marital relations. I have no difficulty with the proofs in this case upon that point. Apart from the brief reference which I have already made to the ample testimony that the case contains of her declarations not only to her husband but to other absolutely impartial witnesses, that she was not then living with her husband and never would as a wife, would rather die than do so, and would not touch him with a ten-foot pole, there is ample evidence also of his bona fide efforts upon many occasions to have her return to him as a wife and resume their former marital life together. By their pleadings, at least, they each agree that a desertion took place in 1907; that at that time there was a breach of the marital contract, but each accuses the other of being the offender. I find, as previously stated, that the fact is that there was a complete breach of the marital relation dating from the period that they each fix, viz., October, 1907; that Mrs. Eeetor was the one who caused the breach and persisted in it; that it existed for the statutory period, and that during that time the husband, in good faith, sought upon several occasions to induce the wife to heal the breach and resume their matrimonial relations, not only sexual but complete and full relations ; and that she, having made up her mind firmly to depart from and not return to matrimonial relations (comprehending as I have throughout in this term more than mere sexual relations), continued obstinately in that frame of mind and shaped her conduct accordingly.