165 N.Y. 553 | NY | 1901
The plaintiff brought this action in order to obtain a judgment of absolute divorce from the defendant, upon the ground of her adultery. The defendant denied the allegations of the complaint and set up two defenses. She made recriminatory charges against the plaintiff, to the effect that he had been guilty of adultery, and set up a decree of divorce from the plaintiff, procured by her in the courts of the territory of Oklahoma, which authorized her remarriage. The referee, before whom the trial was had, dismissed the complaint, upon the ground that, notwithstanding the plaintiff had made out a case against the defendant, he, himself, was *555 proved to have been guilty of similar misconduct. Upon the report of the referee it was adjudged, in the first place, that the Oklahoma divorce was invalid and, in the next place, that the complaint was dismissed upon the merits. From this judgment both parties appealed; the plaintiff, because of the dismissal of the complaint, and the defendant, because of the adjudication with respect to the Oklahoma divorce. The Appellate Division, in the first department, affirmed the judgment and both parties have taken cross-appeals to this court from the judgment of affirmance.
The evidence showed the Oklahoma decree of divorce, relied upon by the defendant, to have been invalid, because obtained without personal service of process upon this plaintiff, the defendant therein. The offense charged by the complaint against the defendant had consisted in the latter's marriage, after the Oklahoma decree, with the co-respondent named and the question was whether the relation thus established was lawful in its nature, or meretricious. That a judgment, rendered upon the constructive service of process, is without force against the personal status of a non-resident and non-appearing defendant, has been frequently the subject of judicial discussion and that the divorce decree, in question, was without jurisdiction as to this plaintiff, always a resident of this state, cannot be questioned under the authorities. (Lynde v. Lynde,
Upon the plaintiff's appeal, the question is made whether the evidence to establish his guilt was sufficient in law. If he had been guilty of adultery, then he was not entitled to the divorce prayed for. (Code Civ. Pro. § 1758, subd. 4.) That evidence was given, in part, by three detectives, who were employed to watch the plaintiff and to report his conduct, and, in part, by a woman, who had charge of that portion of the house in which was the room where the detectives testified to finding the plaintiff under the criminating circumstances. The testimony of the detectives was to the effect that the plaintiff was followed; that he with a woman, not the defendant, went into a certain house, in the city of New York, and that they found him and the woman together in a room, under circumstances which would warrant the inference of their illicit relations. It is contended that, within the doctrine of certain cases in this court, their testimony was insufficient as evidence, unless corroborated. The reference is to the cases of Moller v. Moller, (
The plaintiff did not take the stand to deny the testimony of the detectives and, in our judgment, there was that corroboration of the testimony which the referee might be satisfied with.
The judgment should be affirmed; but without costs to either party.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, LANDON, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.