Armour v. Armour

46 A.2d 826, 138 N.J. Eq. 145
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 5, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 A.2d 826 (Armour v. Armour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armour v. Armour, 46 A.2d 826, 138 N.J. Eq. 145 (N.J. 1946).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, Chief-Justice.

Other phases of the litigation between the parties are reported in 131 N. J. Eq. 110; 132 N. J. Eq. 298, and 135 N. J. Eq. 47.

This is an appeal by Mrs.. Armour from a decree nisi against her for divorce on the ground of adultery and from the order fixing counsel fees (including disbursements) to *147 defendant’s counsel at $10,000. Numerous acts are charged in the petition and three corespondents are named, Nathan Berger, Robert C. Ellis and Dr. Benjamin Kramer. Misconduct is alleged to have occurred with these men during the periods from August 23d, 1941, to October, 1941, from October 20th, 1941, to February 17th, 1942, and from May 15th, 1942, to November 6th, 1942, respectively. The decree finds that “the defendant has been guilty of the adultery charged against her in said petition.” There is not testimony to sustain all of the charges, «but there is testimony which, if believed, would sustain some of them; nevertheless, weighing the case as a whole we are not satisfied that the husband’s proofs carry the burden of the wife’s guilt. We shall not make reference to, much less a critical analysis of, the testimony of all of the nearly ninety witnesses or the proofs contained in all of the 140 exhibits; but we shall endeavor to give enough detail to point the reasons for our conclusions.

As to the alleged Berger offenses: The charges seriously supported are laid at a cottage connected with the Hollywood Hotel, West End, where Mrs. Armour, with her children, was spending a part of the late summer of 1941. Mrs. Armour testified that her husband told her she was to go to that particular hotel or nowhere; an assertion -which the husband denies; wherefore the incident, with its implications of an entrapment planned by the husband, is left for the moment in equipoise. For a part of the time Nathan Berger was there also, and he and Mrs. Armour met and on occasions were together. The most damaging proof of guilt comes from the witness Samuel Lassman. Lassman and Berger were there together; they were there for the pru-pose of showing and selling furs. They were and are partners in the fur business. That Lassman should come forward with evidence involving his friend and business associate in a clandestine and adulterous act and should still further, entirely without support, attempt to involve him and Mrs. Armour at a meeting in Berger’s room at the Hotel Clinton in New York City is provocative of thought. It was developed by the defense that Lassman had, on February 19th, 1937, been convicted in the Court of General Sessions of the State of New York of grand *148 larceny in the second degree, and that on March 9th,. 1937, he had been sentenced on that conviction to imprisonment in the penitentiary of the County of New York. In addition to this cloud upon Lassman’s veracity, there was a further incident to which we attach high significance.

In November of 1942, a little more than a year after the Hollywood Hotel affair, Berger, the alleged paramour, asked Mrs. Armour to make an appointment with him in New York City. Mrs. Armour communicated with her then solicitor, Mr. Ralph E. Lum, who was representing her in the Chancery proceeding against her husband for separate maintenance. Lum advised that it was proper for her to make the character of appointment that was proposed. Berger met Mrs. Armour with his automobile, presumably to take her to some public eating place for dinner. What he did was to drive to a business building in which he had offices and invite her to go upstairs with him. She refused and waited in the automobile. Berger went upstairs alone and presently came out with a group of men, of whom the above named Lassman was one and Sigmund Thiel, a brother-in-law of Armour, was another. The group, or some of them, thrust themselves into the automobile, took flashlight photographs of Mrs. Armour and in so doing tore some of her clothing and generally acted monstrously towards her. That is Mrs. Armour’s testimony.

Mrs. Armour forthwith, on the night of the event, reported the experience by telephone to Mr. Lum who, the next da}r, went, unsuccessfully, before the Chancellor with a verified petition setting forth the incident and praying that Armour be held in contempt in the suit then pending. The incident so far as it concerned Mr. Lum was related by him on the witness stand, and we accept his testimony unqualifiedly. The present divorce suit was not instituted until May 1st, 1944. No matter had come to Mrs. Armour’s attention to put her on notice that her husband was proposing to bring a divorce action or that he proposed to allege occurrences with Berger at the Hollywood Hotel or that he was aware that there were such occurrences.

Armour testified that he knew nothing about the matter, but he may not so lightly brush away the searching implica *149 tions of the charge. Lassman was not called upon to contradict the statement and Armour’s brother-in-law, Thiel, was not put upon the stand. The proof, left in that shape, leads us to the conclusion that Berger, the alleged paramour, and Lassman, the chief witness as to the Berger incidents, were in an active conspiracy with persons close to and working in behalf of the husband to ensnare Mrs. Armour or to manufacture fictitious proof against her. The contention that there was a burden upon Mrs. Armour to call Berger as a witness is, under the circumstances, without force. Our confidence in so much of the petitioner’s case as involves Berger is greatly shaken. Having thus appraised the Berger incidents, we approach the remaining charges with caution.

As to Robert C. Ellis: On this phase of the case the chief witnesses for the petitioner are Dominic Caso, Caso’s wife and Ellis himself. Caso was a retired detective of the New York police department. After his retirement he undertook for a time to operate a private detective agency. Then, about the month of February, 1941, he entered the employ of Armour’s company, the American Aniline Company. About the middle of September of that year he was given Mrs. Armour’s photograph, her name, address and automobile number and was told to investigate her and see what he could find out. His wife worked with him in that effort. We consider that the Casos come within the classification of paid detectives and, therefore, under the rule that although their evidence is competent it is to be received with caution and scrupulously and minutely scrutinized. Bemis v. Bemis, 114 N. J. Eq. 53. Caso in more than one instance manifested a willingness to say what the occasion seemed to call for. He testified in great detail of the happenings of different days. He tells, for instance, of driving to Mrs. Armour’s house about 9:15 in the morning of March 7th, 1942, to watch for her. Presently he drove to the Pennsylvania Station in Newark and there parked his car. Shortly after one o’clock he saw Mrs. Armour get on a Pennsylvania train for New York City. Caso left his car parked at the Pennsylvania station in Newark and took the same train. Mrs. Armour alighted at the Pennsylvania station on Seventh Avenue in New York *150 City and took a cab to Tenth Street and Sixth Avenue. Caso, following, did the same. He saw Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.2d 826, 138 N.J. Eq. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armour-v-armour-nj-1946.