Anonymous

17 Abb. Pr. 48
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedSeptember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 Abb. Pr. 48 (Anonymous) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anonymous, 17 Abb. Pr. 48 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinion

Murray Hoffman, Referee.—The investigation of this interesting case will be conducted under two leading heads. First, upon the case made under the plaintiff’s • complaint as to the adultery of the defendant; second, upon the defendant’s recriminating charges of adultery committed by the plaintiff. The last, if established, serves not merely as a perfect defence to the plaintiff’s action, but will afford a ground for the affirmative relief asked for in the answer.

[50]*50I consider the decision of Justice Bosworth, in the case from 11 N. Y. Leg. Obs., 350 (B. a. B.), as sufficient, if not decisive authority for this last proposition; it is also sustained by reasoning entirely satisfactory.

I. Upon this first issue, I shall examine the direct evidence given by the plaintiff; what it proves, assuming it to be credible ; and what portion of it is credible or otherwise.

W., the leading witness, swears directly and positively to the following facts, of which he made memoranda at the time. That the defendant and Y., her alleged paramour, were in his room or her room many times, and at late hours of the night, till twelve o’clock and later. On one particular night, between twelve and oné o’clock, he saw Y. come out of her room with nothing but his night-shirt on; was without drawers. On another occasion, he was in bed and sick. She was partly on the bed kissing him, her breast was on his. On another night, about one o’clock, he saw Y. go into her room, with nothing on but his night-shirt, that he could see. He heard the bed move as if there was some action upon it. Other instances are mentioned by him of a similar nature: and he says that on these occasions, at such late hours, they were alone.

If these statements came from a credible witness, who had escaped a severe cross-examination without inconsistency in material matters; and brought to the stand an unblemished character,, they would need very little, if any, corroborating evidence, to justify a sentence for the plaintiff.

But W. was hired as a spy to watch the conduct of the de fendant; to supply the testimony necessary for the plaintiff’s purpose. There is no legal evidence that the plaintiff employed K., who employed W. I could scarcely resist the presumption that he did so, if it were essential to make it; but I consider it unimportant.

Whatever discredit properly attaches to the witness, results from his engaging in this employment for money; impelled by an irresistible impulse to serve his employer, earn or increase his compensation, and with the reward depending on success.

But a case within my own knowledge, where a clergyman was entrapped into a marriage with a harridan, whose cunning was equal to her infamy, and drove him to use similar means [51]*51as the only mode of extrication, has taught me that crime may remain wholly undetected, if evidence from such a source be disregarded. And the only rule can be, that the judge should give the most scrupulous and minute consideration'to every thing that is stated by such a witness. These observations are confirmed by Dr. Lushington, in Ciocci a. Ciocci (26 Eng. L. & Eq. R., 604, 613).

I do not find that the cross-examination of W. has shaken his testimony. I have not found any thing of contradictions or inconsistencies from his own lips to impair his own statements, and this test of truth has failed to prove him false or unreliable.

But. his character for truth and. veracity has been most seriously impeached. It is an inevitable conclusion, that if the character he maintained in Connecticut is to be adopted as the test, 'he is utterly unworthy of credit. In my experience, I never met with a case in which the trustworthiness of a witness was more effectually destroyed. Nor can I think that it would be unjust or illogical to presume, that the repute then earned must be treated as continuing, until full evidence is produced of a change of reputation from a change of conduct.

But besides this, some testimony proves that .there has been no change or reformation since his removal to New York.

The evidence to repel all this, and- support his character, is very slight. With but one exception, it" comes from persons who never heard any common acquaintance speak of his character. . They give their own opinions. The exception I refer to is that of a witness whose evidence is of little weight.

I cannot then but say, that this witness brings to the stand a reputation so successfully assailed for truth, that I may not rely on his testimony at all. I must strike it from the case, and must find ground for the judgment sought by the plaintiff-as if it had never been given.

The next witness to support the plaintiff’s case is J. M. B.

I have read and reread his testimony with great care. I need not give it in detail, or in substance. (My conclusion is, that standing alone, it would be plainly insufficient to establish guilt. That it might by itself alone' prove a suspicious intimacy, and in minor yet pertinent matters tend to corroborate W.’s, is not to be disputed. But by itself, it never could warrant a judgment for the plaintiff. •

[52]*52The witness is open to the same- tinge of discredit as W., from being hired to watch the defendant.

The witness denies stating to two other persons his ignorance of any thing tending to prove the defendant guilty. Both of these parties contradict him.

I conclude that the plaintiff’s case is not made out by the testimony on his behalf, without any reference to the defendant’s evidence, other than as it relates to the general reputation of W., and the contradictions of B.

But when the defendant’s direct evidence is considered, the pointed testimony of Y., who, I think, is entitled to belief, and the corroboration of others, the result seems inevitable that the plaintiff has wholly failed in his case.

II. I come now to the far more difficult part of the case—the allegation, in the answer, of the plaintiff’s criminality.

The statements in the pleadings must first be noticed.

The offences are first charged in the fifth article, in general terms, as having been frequently committed- since the marriage, with persons únknown and at places which the defendant cannot specify. Next, it is averred that between the first of May, 1860, and the first of Movember, 1861, the defendant was a frequent and regular visitor at Mo. 52, in a designated street, a house kept by Ann Richards for the purposes of assignation and prostitution.

That the plaintiff visited such house for the purpose of having illicit intercourse with one or more females whose names are unknown, and did, during such period, commit adultery with one or more females whose names are unknown, and at the particular times and under the particular circumstances specified in the seventh and eighth paragraphs of this answer; and at various other times during said period, at said house, which this defendant is unable to specify, and with one or more females whose names are unknown to this defendant.”

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Bluebook (online)
17 Abb. Pr. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anonymous-nysuperctnyc-1862.