Beebe v. Beebe

174 A.D. 408, 160 N.Y.S. 967, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7699
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 174 A.D. 408 (Beebe v. Beebe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beebe v. Beebe, 174 A.D. 408, 160 N.Y.S. 967, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7699 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Thomas J.:

The parties were married in 1896 and lived in apparent happiness until their fourth child was born, on March 14, 1911, although for some months before that date the wife was concerned by defendant’s abstraction, appearance of weariness or overwork, with accompanying indifference to her and the children. Several weeks before the birth of the last child, named Shaler, the defendant informed the plaintiff that they would no longer occupy the same room, and that they would have no more children. He repeated the statement a few days after the birth of Shaler. On May 6, 1911, urged by plaintiff’s questioning, he indicated that the cause of his trouble, if made known to plaintiff, would provoke her censure, and on the following day, still importuned, he stated to plaintiff that he cared á “great deal for someone else,” who knew of his disposition towards her and felt similarly towards him, but he disclaimed intimate relations between them. On the previous night the present parties occupied the same bed for the first time since the birth of the child. On May tenth the defendant appeared distressed and, enforced by plaintiff, disclosed that a physician thought that she should go to a sanitarium for mental treatment, and on the following morning, May eleventh, the plaintiff accompanied defendant to the locality of the depot, and on the way the defendant showed much emotion. Whether [410]*410it was real or feigned, it was moved by the expectation that on that day two physicians would remove plaintiff to the insane asylum at Amityville, L. I., by virtue of an order of the judge of the County Court of the county of Queens, which was based upon the petition of defendant and a certificate of lunacy, verified hy such physicians. During the afternoon of May eleventh the physicians did go to the house and she yielded to their representation that defendant had sent them, and after some half hour for preparation went with them to the asylum, where she remained until June seventeenth, meantime receiving several visits from defendant and exchanging with bim letters, some of which are returned. Some weeks before the commitment, defendant had suggested that plaintiff, with the daughter Ruth and without the infant, go to California for a year, but after her removal to the asylum a plan was made that she, with the baby and a nurse, should go to her sister in South Dakota; but the defendant consented only upon the condition that she should limit her return home to the few days necessary for preparation. It is not certain whether the visit to the west was proposed by defendant, as there is evidence that plaintiff had considered it, but it is inferable that she conceived it as a means of deliverance from the asylum, and that he accepted it on the condition of her divorcing herself from her home, as he declared to her that she could not come home or resume the old life, although during her few nights thereafter at home they shared the same bed. The plaintiff went west, but returned on August eleventh, and although the defendant was not pleased, he occupied the same bed with her on that night, but on the next day left the house and did not thereafter make his home there, although he came quite often and remained over night on a few occasions. Later, with Mr. Young acting as lawyer for both of them, the agreement for separation was executed under date of December 11, 1911. It contemplates (1) that the parties shall live apart with unconstrained right of individual action; (2) that the wife shall have the exclusive possession and control of the four children, and of their education until they severally attain the age of fourteen years, with opportunity of access to them by the defendant; (3). that the defendant shall pay plaintiff $5,000 per annum in equal [411]*411monthly payments, beginning December fifteenth, during her natural life and her observance of the agreement, for her maintenance and that of the children, as well, as for their education, and that for the expenses of the children (except Doris) at college the defendant shall, upon the occasion arising, pay plaintiff the additional sum of $1,000 for four years for each child; (4) that the plaintiff shall have the effects “now in her dwelling,” except books, bookcases and desk, which defendant had selected for removal; (5) that defendant shall meet the expense of extraordinary medical treatment and insure his life for $20,000, or further sums, but that the wife shall pay the premiums; (6) that the wife does not release her dower. When the present action was begun the defendant had been somewhat dilatory in making payments and was so in arrears that the court found due the sum of $2,492. This action is brought (1) for a separation on account of cruel and inhuman treatment and abandonment; (2) to recover the arrears on the contract. The court granted judgment only for the arrears and found that the cruel and inhuman treatment had not been proven; that if it had been practiced it was prior to the agreement, and refused to find plaintiff’s conclusion of law that defendant was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment in particulars named and that he abandoned her. The court apparently proceeded upon the ground that the official commitment precluded a finding that defendant offended in obtaining it, and that the cohabitation on August eleventh, upon her return from the west, and the agreement for separation, condoned the offense if committed, and the subsequent abandonment. If the order for commitment be disregarded the proof is that the plaintiff was rational, and that the defendant’s action was not taken in good faith. This appears from the following circumstances: The defendant in their usual domestic life had left to her the customary charge of the children, and in the separation agreement made in the December following the commitment to the asylum in May, he consigned the possession, uprearing and education to the plaintiff, although in his petition in the lunacy proceeding on May tenth he had stated that she was insane, at times violent, had requested him to destroy her life; that he was “fearing for the lives of herself [412]*412and children,” and had referred to the certificate of lunacy, which stated that the present attack began in 1905, and other matters which I shall mention. There were two physicians who attended her at the asylum. Dr. Husik, who saw her two or three times each day, could not, after daily observation, discover any symptoms of insanity, and the defendant stated that although the other physician, Dr. Wiltsie, was in court, he would not cairhim. Several of the plaintiff’s acquaintances testified that she was rational in her conversation, and the nurse, who for six weeks attended upon the birth of the last child and who saw her every hour in the day, stated that she was rational, and the servant who accompanied plaintiff on the visit to the west testified that her acts and words were rational. Nor do I find in her testimony, her letters or otherwise, any indications of mental disturbance other than would flow from her husband’s disclosure and commitment. On the other hand, the husband confessed his passion for another woman; he obtained in March, 1911, a policy of insurance on his own life for $7,000, payable to that woman, for which he agreed to pay an annual premium of $600, and canceled it in July, 1913; he at least inconsiderately repeated his decision to leave his wife’s room and bed and to have no more children following the birth of the child; he declared to her before and while she was in the asylum that she could not come home and resume the old relations, and that she would have to live by herself. He caused her to be committed to an insane asylum on account of homicidal and suicidal tendencies of long standing.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A.D. 408, 160 N.Y.S. 967, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beebe-v-beebe-nyappdiv-1916.