29 N.Y.S. 313 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1894
In actions for divorce, courts must take such evidence as the nature of the case permits,—circumstantial, direct, or positive,—and bring to bear upon it the experiences and observa
It is said that, if the acts of parties are capable of two constructions,—one innocent, and the other not,—the former is to prevail. Pollock v. Pollock, 71 N. Y. 137. This is certainly the rule, but not applicable where a combination of circumstances appears logically pointing to guilt with a potency excluding any other hypothesis. In criminal cases, guilt must be established beyond all reasonable doubt; while all that is required in civil causes is that there shall be a “preponderance of proof,”—a term which means that the plaintiff must produce evidence which carries conviction to the human mind; a process which in its own peculiar manner dispels doubt. The defendant and co-respondent professed their innocence, and, if it should be that they are innocent of wrongdoing, it is unfortunate that they surrounded themselves with circumstances of suspicion evidencing great indiscretion, amounting in legal acceptation to proof of guilt. Defendant was living apart from the plaintiff, his second wife, and the co-respondent was living apart from her second husband. The conduct of either was liable to be criticised, particularly in view of the fact that the co-respondent at this very time was under charges made by her husband in an action for divorce on the ground of adultery with one Kochfort; and the defendant had been divorced from his first wife. It was unfortunate, therefore, that the defendant and the co-respondent came together under such circumstances, in disregard of the admonition “Lead us not into temptation.” Even the appearance of evil should have been carefully avoided. The relations existing between the defendant and the co-respondent were evidently more intimate than those of boarding-house keeper and boarder. Why did they assume a false relationship and go to a theater together? Did he not appreciate1 the peril, or did he defy consequences? The co-respondent admits to smoking cigarettes, and that in the Fifty-Fourth street house nothing but the portieres divided her bedroom from that of the defendant. The defendant and the co-respondent are educated people, with an intelligence that precludes any idea that they were unconscious that their relations were not free from suspicion. Under the circumstances in this case, it is reasonably clear that the defendant is guilty of the charges made. People are to be judged by their acts, which speak louder than words, and often render subsequent explanations unsatisfactory. Let us reverse the order of things and suppose Warren to be the boarding-house keeper, with a suit pending against him by his second wife for divorce on the ground of adultery, and the co-respondent a wife separated from her second husband. Take the fact that she became security for his