Arnaboldi v. Arnaboldi

138 A. 116, 101 N.J. Eq. 126, 16 Stock. 126, 1927 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 A. 116 (Arnaboldi v. Arnaboldi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnaboldi v. Arnaboldi, 138 A. 116, 101 N.J. Eq. 126, 16 Stock. 126, 1927 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89 (N.J. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

This proceeding is based on a petition filed by a husband charging adultery and a counter-claim alleging desertion.

The parties were married in 1919. They have three young children, and the early days that they spent with each other appear to have marked them as leading ordinary lives. The petitioner seduced the defendant before marriage.

On August 27th, 1923, the petitioner left the defendant and their children and has never returned. They differ widely as to the cause of his departure. He says she was leading a life that no husband should be expected to tolerate. That she not only neglected nearly all of her household duties, making it necessary for him to do much of it, including even laundering of some of the apparel for his children and constantly cooking his own meals, but, in addition to that, he says that his principal concern was over the frequent, if not habitual, absences of the defendant from the home until late at night. In the month of May she willfully and against his determined efforts departed from her home for the day with a man unknown to her husband, giving as her excuse that he was a salesman who was going to assist her in the selection and purchase of an overcoat for herself, notwithstanding the fact that the trip was made on a Sunday. The defendant does not seriously contradict this testimony, but she alleges that the reason her husband left her was his objection to any more children. She says that at the time of his departure, or the night before, she told him that she thought she was again pregnant and that he, thereupon, went away.

As between these two stories it seems to me that the probabilities are all in favor of the petitioner. My reasons for so believing it would be intolerable to publish in this opinion, and they have been completely indicated to the parties and their counsel. After the petitioner had left his home the defendant fell in with a man named Lehey, with whom she unquestionably committed adultery, although she denies it. My reasons for so deciding have also been sufficiently indicated to counsel and it would serve no good purpose to *Page 128 reproduce them here. Thus, we have a situation in which it is shown that a man who was dissatisfied with his wife's conduct left her, although that conduct did not amount to a matrimonial wrong recognized by our divorce statute as a ground for divorce. There is no proof of any adultery before the separation, and no extreme cruelty or desertion by the wife.

The first point made against any decree in favor of the petitioner is, that he himself was guilty of desertion when he left his wife who had not been guilty at that time of any matrimonial offense recognized by our legislature. There can be no question that the great weight of authority is expressed in 1Bish. M., D. S. § 1742, where it is said:

"Where there is no consent, acquiescence or estoppel * * * no ills arising out of the marriage, or ill conduct of one party to the other, will so justify a breaking off of the cohabitation as to prevent its being desertion, except ill conduct of the sort and degree which the law has made foundation for divorce."

This learned and most careful author says that after more than forty years spent in uninterrupted reading of judicial decisions and interpreting them, the dicta of judges constitute such a mass of contradictions that an author by skillful selection could write any sort of a doctrine on any subject by repeating the words of the selected dicta "and all the fools would praise his book for its marvelous accuracy." He says that with all the volumes that have been written he cannot say there is one case in which it is authoritatively laid down that the above rule is not the true one. Sections 1747, 1748. In this court, in the case ofMoores v. Moores, 16 N.J. Eq. 275, Chancellor Green, in passing upon a defense of justification in a suit for desertion, said: "The conduct which will justify the wife in abandoning her husband must be such as would constitute a ground for divorce or alimony" (citing authorities). In the later case of Laing v.Laing, 21 N.J. Eq. 248, Chancellor Zabriskie laid down the opposite rule, saying that conduct less atrocious than was requisite to sustain a suit for divorce might excuse the offended spouse leaving the wrong-doer; but a careful reading of his opinion *Page 129 will show that he actually decided the case as he did because the wife had condoned the offenses of which she complained, and they had never been repeated. Consequently, what he had to say on the subject under discussion amounted, in fact, to no more than an expression of his individual opinion, and not a decision of the case. Anything said in that opinion at variance with the views expressed in Moores v. Moores, supra, does not in any way shake the authority of the latter case. In Boyce v. Boyce,23 N.J. Eq. 337, Chancellor Zabriskie seemed to reconsider hisdictum in the Laing Case, because he there found, and decided, that the most provocative kind of conduct on the part of a wife, but not amounting to a matrimonial offense, invested the husband with no right to separate himself from her. InMeldowney v. Meldowney, 27 N.J. Eq. 328, Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet said, "that by personal violence, coarse language and constant neglect not amounting to extreme cruelty the petitioner had driven the defendant away from him quite as effectually as if he had bodily put her out of the house;" but he actually rendered his decision on the ground that there was no obstinacy in the separation. Furthermore, there is not a scintilla of proof shown in the opinion from which the extent and character of the misconduct of the petitioner in that case may be inferred. It is merely said that a daughter testified: "Mother left because she could not stand it any longer." Of course, that great judge never considered the daughter's opinion to be evidence. In Drayton v.Drayton, 54 N.J. Eq. 298, Chancellor McGill said:

"The generally accepted, and, I think, the true, doctrine is, that continued desertion, as contemplated by such a statute as ours, is justified only when it is shown by clear and satisfactory proof that the deserting party has been so offended against as to authorize, at his instance, a decree for divorce or judicial separation," citing many decisions in this and other jurisdictions, including some of those already cited herein. The present chancellor, in Suydam v. Suydam, 79 N.J. Eq. 144, declared the law to be the same way at page 155, as he also did in Csanyi v. Csanyi, 93 N.J. Eq. 11, and *Page 130 Danielly v. Danielly, 93 N.J. Eq. 556, as well as inHauenstein v. Hauenstein, 95 N.J. Eq. 34.

In the case of Doty v. Doty, 92 N.J. Eq. 660, while the rule was not discussed, it would appear to be some support to the rule adopted in this court. There, a woman left her husband because of conduct upon his part which caused "her to be afflicted with a serious nervous trouble that threatened to permanently destroy her health and comfort if she continued to live with her husband." This, of course, fits the rule, defining extreme cruelty, in Black v. Black, 30 N.J. Eq. 215

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Bluebook (online)
138 A. 116, 101 N.J. Eq. 126, 16 Stock. 126, 1927 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnaboldi-v-arnaboldi-njch-1927.