Badger v. . Badger

88 N.Y. 546, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 138
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 88 N.Y. 546 (Badger v. . Badger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Badger v. . Badger, 88 N.Y. 546, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 138 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The plaintiff claims dower in the lands of Jacob Badger, deceased, whom she alleges to have been her husband. The defendants deny the marriage, and so raise an issue of fact which forms the vital point of the controversy. Ho formal or ceremonial marriage is proven, nor any express agreement between the parties constituting such relation. The proof offered is that of cohabitation continued for a long period of time, *551 and characterized by general repute, and by conduct and conversation indicating, as is claimed, an intercourse rather matrimonial than meretricious. It is not our duty to solve the problem raised by the evidence, but some general understanding of the facts is necessary to a proper appreciation of the questions of law which are submitted for decision.-

The decedent appears to have lived two lives. They ran parallel with each other for more than a third of a century, and without approach or collision. In one locality, and among his own relatives and friends, be seemed to be a bachelor possessing considerable wealth; at the head of a respectable business; occupying rooms with his sister and with others during much of the period; and if not always at home, yet not so frequently absent as to arouse suspicion or remark. In another locality in the same city, but perhaps in an humbler neighborhood, he appears as John Baker; living with the plaintiff as his wife; introducing her as such; called uncle by her nephew, and deemed father by her daughter; paying her biffs and expenses; furnishing her with the food and shelter which he shared; nursing her through severe and continued illness; seldom absent at night; attending her mother’s funeral as one of the family of mourners; the intercourse creating no scandal, but reputed to be virtuous and respectable, and that of husband and wife.

It is over this cohabitation,, and its true character and meaning that the controversy arises. So far as we know, the association began when the plaintiff was young,' and the decedent in middle life, and continued until he fell dead, an old man of seventy-six. It lasted without break or interruption. It survived the loss of youth and its attractions; it ran on through sickness, paralysis, and some degree of mental weakness; it showed no trace of the satisfied passion that tires of its victim and abandons her for new temptation ; it did not change when the girl had grown into the matron and .become deaf and lame; it stayed with the tenacity of love and duty, remaining patient and faithful until the end. It is argued with great force, that if this relation was that only of lover and mistress, it approached strangely near to matrimonial truth and devotion, and gave to *552 unlawful lust an endurance and virtue not common or expected.

The reputation attending this cohabitation in the neighborhood where it existed and was known among those brought into its presence by relationship, business, or,society, was that which ordinarily attends the dwelling together of husband and wife. It has been well described as the shadow cast by their daily lives. (1 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, § 438.) In the general repute surrounding them, the slow growth of months and years, the resultant picture of forgotten incidents,. passing events, habitual and daily conduct, presumably honest because disinterested, and safer to be trusted because prone to suspect, we are enabled to see the character of the cohabitation, and discern its distinctive features. It is for that reason that such general repute is permitted to be proven. It sums up a multitude of trivial details. It compacts into the brief phrase of a verdict the teaching of many incidents and the conduct of years. It is the average intelligence drawing its conclusion. It would leave us without serious doubt of the true inference to be adopted, but for the apparent concealment indicated by the assumption of a false name, and the persistent silence of the decedent among his own relatives. We have no certain explanation of these facts. We cannot tell why they existed. While not necessarily inconsistent with the fact of a marriage, and perhaps possible of explanation, we cannot deny that they belong more naturally to, and are more easily explained by an illicit and clandestine intercourse, than one honest and open and not needing disguise. They tended, therefore, to throw some doubt upon the character of the cohabitation, and to raise over it a question as to the legitimate inferences to be drawn.

To another alleged fact, pressed upon us for the same purpose by the defendants, we give little heed. It was said that this cohabitation was illicit in its origin, and must be presumed to retain that character until proof is given of a change in its object and purpose. To establish the fact, the appellants go back to the girlhood of the plaintiff, and recall an event *553 which, they claim,-reflects upon her purity. At the age of about seventeen she returns to her home with an infant of tender years.- Ho husband comes with her or is known; there is no acknowledged father of the child; not a word of explanation seems to have been made ; and we are asked, for this reason, to infer that an illicit connection had existed between the mother and some person unknown. When this child was two or three years old, the mother and Jacob Badger are found living together in McDougal street, keeping house to all appearances, as husband and wife, and their cohabitation assuming at once to all outward seeming, the characteristics which attended it to the end. Because of this alleged lapse of virtue on the part of the woman, it is argued that the cohabitation was illicit in its origin. The proof does not warrant such a conclusion. It shows ho connection whatever between the parties prior to the commencement of their cohabitation in McDougal street. Back of that, it is sufficient to say, we have no information or evidence of any intercourse between them. We do not even know, except perhaps presumptively, that the child born before is the plaintiff’s daughter. We certainly do not know who was its father, nor whether the offspring of an illicit intercourse or a matrimonial connection. At all events the testimony introduces Jacob Badger for the first time at the commencement of the cohabitation which is the subject of dispute. To say that it was illicit in its origin is to assume its meretricious character in the face of the evidence which tends to show it to have been matrimonial, and so beg the question, since the cohabitation at the beginning is not shown to be other or different from its continuous character to the end. Prior to this we are without information, and must not presume guilt where innocence is possible, and, least of all, indulge in a mere guess that Jacob Badger was a party to the wrong.

The rule that a connection, confessedly illicit in its origin, or shown to have been such, will be presumed to retain that character until some change is established, is both logical and *554 just. The force and effect of such a fact is always very great, and we are not disposed in the least degree to weaken or disregard it. (Brinkley v. Brinkley, 50 N. Y. 198.) Very often the changed character of the cohabitation is indicated by facts and circumstances which explain the cause and locate the period of the change, so that in spite of the illicit origin the subsequent intercourse is deemed matrimonial.

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Bluebook (online)
88 N.Y. 546, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/badger-v-badger-ny-1882.