64 N.Y. 47 | NY | 1876
In effect, the plaintiff here asks the judgment of the court, that the defendant perform his contract for the *49 purchase of certain lands, by paying the consideration-money agreed upon and taking a deed from the plaintiff. The defendant objects that the plaintiff is not able to give a good title; and it appears that Dietz, the immediate grantor of the plaintiff, had at the time of his conveyance to the plaintiff, and still has, a wife living. She did not join in the deed to the plaintiff, made by her husband, nor has she in any way, at any time, released any interest or right which she ever had in the premises. As his wife, married to him before the execution of the deed by him to the plaintiff, and while he was seized of an inheritance in the lands, she is prima facie, if she survives him and becomes his widow, entitled to dower in the lands. (1 R.S., 740, § 1.) In answer to this prima facie show of right in her, the plaintiff insists, that in an action for a divorce avinculo from her, on account of her adultery, formerly brought by Dietz, her husband, it was found by the referee that she had committed adultery, as alleged in the complaint. It further appears, however, that in the same action the referee also found, that Dietz had committed adultery, and hence a judgment of divorce between them was denied, and there was judgment that his complaint be dismissed.
In that part of the Revised Statutes which treats of dower, it is enacted that in case of divorce, dissolving the marriage contract for the misconduct of the wife, she shall not be endowed. (1 R.S., 741, § 8.) The misconduct there spoken of must be her adultery, for there is no other cause for a divorce, dissolving the marriage contract. (2 R.S., p. 144; see Reynolds v. Reynolds, 24 Wend., 193.) This does not aid the plaintiff, for, as we have seen, there was no judgment of divorce granted to Dietz, and hence no divorce dissolving the marriage contract with his wife. The plaintiff invoked another section of the Revised Statutes, which is in these words: "A wife being a defendant in a suit for divorce brought by her husband, and convicted of adultery, shall not be entitled to dower in her husband's real estate, or any part thereof. * * *" (2 R.S., 146, § 48.) He contends *50 that the finding of fact of the referee above mentioned, is a conviction of her of adultery, and that she is thereby barred of, or has lost, her right to be endowed in these lands. He has argued as though any conviction in any action, that is (as he interprets the word conviction) any finding of fact, or any verdict that a wife has been guilty of adultery, will take from her her title to dower.
It is to be observed, however, that even upon that interpretation the section cited has not all that scope. It must be a suit for divorce, and it must be a suit for divorce in which she is defendant. So that if she should, as plaintiff, bring suit against her husband for divorce for his adultery, if he, on the hearing, should make proof of her adultery and she be found guilty thereof, and thus bar her action for divorce, this section would not apply. We cannot agree that the word conviction, in the place in which it is found, means only the establishing her adultery as a fact, by proof. We think that it is charged with the fuller meaning that, upon the proof and finding or verdict of her adultery, the court has given judgment of divorce against her, and dissolved the marriage between her and the husband. Dower is the adjunct of marriage and survivorship; and by the statute, as well as by the common law, every wife becoming a widow shall be endowed. It does not seem, when the statutes on dower and divorce are read together, that the legislature meant to take away from her the right of dower as a punishment for her adultery, and at the same time leave her a wife, and thus entitled to rights and relations of much greater significance and value. And it is here to be observed of the former statutes of England (13 Edw. I, chap. 34), and of this State (2 Greenl., Laws of N.Y., p. 274, § 7; 1 Rev. Laws 1813, p. 58, § 8), cited by the plaintiff, by which the adulterous wife was barred of her dower, that they included in the offence, the willingly leaving her husband and going away from him and continuing with her adulterer; thus contemplating as part of the offence which was to work that punishment, the notorious and continued breaking of the vows, and the practical breaking of *51 the bonds, of matrimony. And force is added to this notion, when it is found that notwithstanding the elopement and adultery, if there was a voluntary reconciliation on the part of the husband and wife, she was still entitled to dower (2 Inst., 435); for, as it is there said, the cause of the bar of dower is not the manner of the going away, but the remaining with the adulterer in avoutry without reconciliation. It is to have weight, too, that the section relied upon was not passed with the primary object of affecting dower. It is found in a part of the Revised Statutes touching the domestic relations. The article which contains it is headed thus: "Of divorces dissolving the marriage contract." The main purpose of the enactment is to declare the cause for which, and the manner in which, a judgment of a court may be got decreeing a divorce and a dissolution of the marriage contract. When this has been provided for, the enactment then proceeds naturally, to set forth the consequences of that judgment, one of which is the loss of dower by the guilty wife when a defendant. But the spirit of the enactment is, that it is a consequence of the judgment, which is founded upon the fact of the offence, and not a consequence of the offence without a judgment thereupon. Such we consider was the intent of the section. We are helped to this conclusion by the next section, the forty-ninth (2 R.S., 146, § 49), which declares that, when a marriage is dissolved pursuant to the article, the complainant may marry again during the lifetime of the defendant; but no defendant convicted of adultery shall marry again until the death of the complainant. Here again is the phrase "convicted of adultery," but used in such collocation that, beyond doubt, it means convicted of adultery, not only by proof and verdict of the fact, but by a judgment of the court upon the fact, convicting of the adultery, and adjudging a dissolution of the then existing marriage contract, so that, it being naught, another new marriage might be had but for the prohibition of the statute.
Again, our decision in Pitts v. Pitts (
Nor does an adherence to the literal reading of the section relied upon unavoidably lead to the conclusion of the plaintiff. Doubtless the word conviction ordinarily signifies the finding of the jury by a verdict that the accused is guilty. Yet the word sometimes denotes the final judgment of the court. (2 Dwarris on Stat. [2d London ed.], 683; Foster's Case, 11 Rep., 107;Keithler v. State 10 Sm. M. [18 Miss.], 192; Reg. v.Hincks, 1 Den. Cr. Cas., 84.) Thus the case of a witness rendered incompetent to testify, by conviction for an infamous crime, has an analogy. The language of the law is, that he is rendered incompetent by his conviction of treason, felony orcrimen falsi; but to shut him from the witness-box, his conviction must be shown by a judgment. (The People v.Herrick, 13 J.R., 82; The People v. Whipple, 9 Cow., 707; see, also, 10 Sm. M., supra; 1 Den. Cr. Cas., supra, where POLLOCK, B., says: "A verdict of a jury in a civil cause is not evidence without judgment.")
We are therefore of the opinion that Harriet Dietz, though declared by the finding of fact of the referee to have committed adultery, yet never adjudged therefor to be divorced from her husband, is still his wife, and entitled to her dower in his lands if she survives him.
It follows that this possibility of dower affects the title tendered by the plaintiff, and that the judgment of the General Term was right and must be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *53