108 N.Y.S. 428 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
When plaintiff rested- his case on the trial the oral proof before the court was limited to the formal proof given - by plaintiff on his examination as a witness and some vague testimony as to the birth of a child tq defendant in.October or November, 1905. With tMaoral evidence plaintiff seems to have relied in establishing his charge of adultery upon certain admissions in. defendant’s answer, though' on the argument of this appeal, his counsel practically, admits that the motion for a nonsuit should have been granted when made after plaintiff had rested. ■
Defendant’s answer contains two defenses. By the first her marriage with plaintiff is. admitted, as is also the residence in this State of both parties at the time of the marriage, and the birth of' the child, Luther, issue of that marriage.. Then follows a general denial of all other facts alleged in the complaint. The second defense is affirmative, in which she says she left plaintiff on account of cruel and inhuman treatment and failure to properly support. her, “and for acts on his part amounting to principal cause” (what-/ ever that may mean); and went to the State of Texas to reside with friends, having the intention of making that State her home. She then sets out at length the obtaining of a divorce by her in a Texas court, and her marriage w-itli one. Cloud thereafter. She further alleges that she has not cohabited with plaintiff since February 24, 1903. It is clear, therefore, that defendant has put in issue the charge of adultery, and also the further allegation of her pregnancy and birth of a- child to her while separated from her husband, which plaintiff’s complaint contains.
The admissions in the .answer, taken in connection with the fact of the birth of the child in 1905, which plaintiff sought by the oral evidence offered on the trial; to establish, were evidently relied upon by plaintiff, at the time lie rested his case, as establishing the charge
Plaintiff’s evidence in regard to defendant’s leaving him in February, 1903, and that he did not again see her till May or June, 1905, cannot be competent, if any inference of non-access is to be drawn therefrom, from which the further inference of her adultery is to be established, based on the claim that he could not in that case have been the father of the child born in October or November of that year. No objection to the competency of the proof for that purpose was necessary. (Fanning v. Fanning, 2 Misc. Rep. 90; 20 N. Y. Supp. 849.)
Therefore on the evidence, as it stood at the time plaintiff rested I do not see how it could be held that a prima facie case had been made out. Defendant’s proof and plaintiff’s proof in rebuttal do not aid in that result. This further proof by defendant, so far as it in any way bears .upon this question, is limited td the introduction of the copy of papers, which is practically a copy of the judgment roll in the Texas divorce action, the marriage license and certificate of defendant’s marriage with Cloud and an admission that she swore to her answer, which contained the statement, to which her attention was called. When plaintiff again had the case some further testimony was offered,' and the birth of a child to defendant in the latter part of October or in November, 1905, I think was established by competent proof. The proof of the adultery charged still hinged on the marriage of defendant with Cloud and the birth of this child:
All concurred, except.Williams and Kruse, JJ., who dissented.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.