Judges: Collin, Cullen, Gray, Hiscock, Haight, Vann, Bartlett
Filed Date: 11/22/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The parties intermarried December 18, 1889, in the city of Brooklyn, New York, where they resided until January 21, 1891, when the defendant, by reason of a criminal charge against him, left the state of New York. In October, 1891, defendant was for a few days at Roselle, New Jersey, where the plaintiff visited him. He then went to Florida, where, on November 9, 1891, he was arrested, taken to Chicago and afterwards confined in the Illinois state penitentiary. Upon his release he went to and became a resident of Florida. On the 30th day of November, 1895, he filed in the Circuit Court of St. Johns county, Florida, a bill asking for absolute divorce from the plaintiff on the ground of desertion. This action proceeded to a decree of February 27, 1896, dissolving the marriage between the parties. The plaintiff in this action (the defendant in the Florida action) was never served with process within the state of Florida, nor did she appear in said action in the state of Florida or voluntarily submit to the jurisdiction of the Florida court. The defendant told the plaintiff in a letter of October 6, 1896, received by her that he had obtained the divorce. October 14, 1896, the defendant remarried at Ocala, Florida, and thence, until the commencement of this action, the parties to such marriage continuously lived as husband and wife. From October 14, 1896, to February, 1897, they lived in Gainesville, Florida, and since February, 1897, they have lived at Baltimore, Maryland. The review of the evidence, permitted by the fact that the decision of the Appellate Division was not *Page 75 unanimous, apprises us that the remarriage of defendant and cohabitation between the parties thereto is the only proof of the adultery of the defendant upon which the decree is based. About the 19th day of October, 1896, the plaintiff received a letter from the defendant's mother telling plaintiff of the defendant's remarriage. Thereupon plaintiff wrote to the defendant's sister informing her of defendant's remarriage, and thereafter often wrote and talked to defendant's sisters regarding said remarriage and the defendant's living with his second wife, and asked if the defendant and his second wife had any children. In October, 1896, plaintiff's brother-in-law, acting upon plaintiff's request, investigated defendant's remarriage by corresponding with various parties in Florida, from whom he received letters about that time informing him that the defendant had remarried and was living in Florida with his second wife, and he then sought to bring the matter before a grand jury in Florida to have the defendant committed for bigamy. In 1902 or 1903 plaintiff's brother-in-law located the defendant at Baltimore, Maryland. The plaintiff has been at all times since December 18, 1889, a resident of the city or borough of Brooklyn, New York. This action was commenced January 27, 1906. The complaint alleged that between the first day of January, 1904, and the first day of December, 1905, the defendant committed adultery at Baltimore with the woman whom he married in Florida. The Trial Term held that the decree of the Circuit Court of Florida assuming to dissolve the marriage between the parties to this action had no binding force or effect upon this plaintiff, and that a divorce should be granted her in this action on the ground of adultery.
The conclusion of the trial court that the Florida divorce was void as to this plaintiff is uncontested by defendant and is indubitable (Olmsted v. Olmsted,
This is a statutory action. The courts of this state have no common-law jurisdiction over the subject of divorce, and their authority is confined altogether to the exercise of such express and incidental powers as are conferred by the statute. (Walker
v. Walker,
Was the judgment forbidden by section 1758 of the Code of Civil Procedure? The language of the introductory clause of that section is in its effect absolute and peremptory. The origin of the section is section 42 of title 1, chapter 8 of part 2 of the Revised Statutes of 1829, wherein the introductory clause read: "Although the fact of adultery be established, the court may deny a divorce in the following cases:" This language remained unchanged, under the several revisions of the statutes, until 1880, and it gave the court the power to grant or deny, in his discretion, the divorce. In 1880 that part of the Revised Statutes which related to matrimonial actions was made a part of chapter 15 of the Code of Civil Procedure and said section 42 became section 1758 of the Code, with, however, the introductory clause amended for the purpose of making it peremptory "in accordance with the settled construction thereof," to its present language. (See note of Mr. Throop to the section.) The words "is not entitled to" therein are, therefore, the equivalent of the words "shall not have."
The findings of the trial court make the conclusion unavoidable that plaintiff discovered the divorce and remarriage and consequently the adultery of defendant in October, 1896. She then became aware of the existence of the divorce and second marriage. She then ceased to be ignorant of them. Her husband then told her that he had obtained the divorce *Page 78 and within a short time thereafter her husband's mother told her that he had married another woman. Her brother-in-law, in an investigation of these matters, made at about the same time at her request, obtained the information that defendant was divorced from plaintiff, had remarried and was living with his second wife in Florida. Such information gave just and cogent reason to plaintiff to believe that defendant had obtained a divorce from her and had married and was living with his second wife. When the plaintiff in October, 1896, ceased to be ignorant of those facts, when she was apprised of them by such sources and in such wise that she had just ground to believe them, then there was a discovery by her of them and of the adultery committed by defendant through them.
The complaint alleges and the finding is that the defendant committed the adultery between the first day of January, 1904, and the first day of December, 1905; the view underlying such averment and finding being, undoubtedly, that the cohabitation through each day constituted a new and independent offense discovered by plaintiff at the time of its commission. If this is the true view, this action was obviously commenced within five years after the discovery, by the plaintiff, of the offense charged. The authorities have firmly established, as it seems to us, the rule that the period of five years began when the plaintiff discovered in October, 1896, that the defendant had contracted a second marriage and was living and cohabiting with the woman, as his wife, whom he then married, although such cohabitation was continued down to the commencement of the action. The principle of such rule was declared and applied by Chancellor KENT in Williamson v. Williamson (1 Johns. Ch. 488), in 1815, in the absence of a rule or statute upon the subject, upon the ground of public morality and security. The chancellor said: "The lapse of time will, also, and on the soundest principles of justice and policy, form another exception (than condonation) to the right of prosecution for a divorce. An acquiescence of five years, without any existing disability, was, by the civil law, and is, by the law of the continental nations who have adopted the civil *Page 79
law, a bar to a prosecution for adultery. The injured party is presumed to have pardoned or remitted the offense. * * * We may, perhaps, venture to say, that to sustain a bill of divorce for adultery, after the husband (as in this case) has acquiesced under a knowledge of it, for twenty years, would be repugnant to the institutions of all mankind." (p. 492.) The legislature intended to and did incorporate in the Revised Statutes of 1829, in these words of limitation under consideration the principle declared in the Williamson case that a husband or wife who acquiesces through the period of five years in the adultery of his or her spouse, consisting in a second marriage and continuous cohabitation thereunder, shall be denied a divorce. (Revisers' notes, 5 Edmunds' Stat. at Large, 40.) In Valleau v. Valleau
(6 Paige, 207) the wife, the defendant, remarried after her husband had absented himself from her for the space of more than six years. She after her remarriage continued to reside and cohabit with her second husband, which was the adultery complained of in the bill. The suit was commenced in 1836, the Revised Statutes of 1829 being then, of course, in force. Chancellor WALWORTH held that the complainant, the husband, had not proved that he was ignorant of the marriage and continued cohabitation of his wife with her second husband until within five years of the commencement of the suit, and said: "I presume the complainant in this case has proceeded upon the supposition that the adultery continued down to the death of Morin (the second husband), and that it was sufficient if the bill was filed within five years from that time. * * * The decision of this court, however, in the case of Williamson v. Williamson, did not proceed upon any such ground; as the defendant in that case had continued to cohabit with the husband of the second marriage down to the very time of the filing of the complainant's bill. But that case went upon the ground that the defendant had contracted a second marriage during the complainant's absence in the West Indies, and had from the time of such marriage continued to reside and cohabit with Parisien as her husband; and that the complainant *Page 80
after his return had acquiesced therein by neglecting to commence his suit for more than five years; which, according to the principles of the civil law, was a sufficient acquiescence in the continued adultery of the defendant to bar a suit for a divorce by the lapse of time. The revisers in their report to the legislature refer to this decision, as containing the principles which they had introduced into the Revised Statutes on this subject. In conformity with that decision, therefore, I must declare the true construction, of the third subdivision of the 42d section of the article of the Revised Statutes relative to divorces dissolving the marriage contract, to be that if the complainant knows that his wife has contracted a second marriage and continues openly to cohabit with such second husband, or that she it living in open and continued adultery with another person even without the usual form of a marriage, the right to file a bill for a divorce for such adultery will be barred after the expiration of five years, although such cohabitation or adulterous intercourse is continued down to the time of the commencement of the suit." (p. 210.) The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, basing its decision upon Williamson v. Williamson
and Valleau v. Valleau, has given to the statute of that state, copied from our statute, the same force and effect. (Dutcher v. Dutcher,
We must now determine the effect of the finding of the trial court that after November, 1895, the defendant was continuously *Page 81
a non-resident. Section 401 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: "If, when the cause of action accrues against a person, he is without the State, the action may be commenced within the time limited therefor, after hisre turn into the State." If the provision of section 1758 that the court must deny the divorce where the action was not commenced within five years after the discovery by the plaintiff of the offense charged, is a mere limitation barring to the plaintiff the remedy and, if section 401 applies to the action for divorce, the decree herein is obviously lawful. Such provision of section 1758 made statutory the principles declared and applied in Williamson v.Williamson, and its scope and nature are indicated by the reasoning and decision from which it sprang. The language of the opinion makes it clear that the court applied a limitation of time upon the right of plaintiff to enforce his cause of action, and that the cause of action did not depend upon or have as an integral part of itself the condition that it be begun within the five years. The decision did not deny or destroy the liability of the defendant or plaintiff's right of action, but denied to plaintiff his remedy and created a judicial limitation of time in cases of that class. Undoubtedly a limitation of time may be the essence of and qualify a right of action so that it does not exist independent of the limitation (Hill v. Supervisors ofRenss. Co.,
At the time plaintiff's cause of action accrued defendant was without the state within the meaning of the provision of section 401 already quoted, and which is applicable to non-residents. (Mayer v. Friedman, 7 Hun, 218; affirmed,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY and HISCOCK, JJ., concur; HAIGHT, VANN and WILLARD BARTLETT, JJ., concur in result upon the ground that each act of adultery constitutes a new cause of action.
Judgment affirmed.