Blackwell v. Blackwell

178 A. 279, 13 N.J. Misc. 341, 1935 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 11
CourtEssex County Family Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 178 A. 279 (Blackwell v. Blackwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Essex County Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackwell v. Blackwell, 178 A. 279, 13 N.J. Misc. 341, 1935 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 11 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

Sieglbr, J.

This is an action for support and maintenance brought under the provisions of the Juvenile and Domestic Delations act of 1929 (Devision), alleging as its major ground for relief extreme cruelty by the defendant. The petition was filed on May 4th, 1934, and the acts of cruelty complained of took place on several occasions prior to April 24th, 1934.

I have very carefully considered all of the testimony, briefs, exhibits, and pleadings in this matter. The parties were married on March 5th, 1919, and resided in the town of Montclair most of their married life. Two children were born of the marriage, now of the ages of fourteen years and ten years. The petitioner in 1929 left her husband because of the unkind names and things the defendant allegedly said and did, and his disparaging remarks about her to persons in the neighborhood. Petitioner claims that the defendant tried to turn her mother and father against her; and that on another occasion he had refused to retire to bed with her, and when he did he saturated her pajamas with mentholatum [342]*342or some other irritant, causing her much anguish. Reconciliation followed four months later. They appeared to' be happy for about a year when, she charges, similar annoyances by the defendant began disturbing the social and marital calm of the home. She says the defendant resorted to many annoying practices; to wit.: listening to conversations of petitioner over the telephone; putting a padlock on the garage to deprive her of use of the automobile; and frequent verbal threats to “drive her crazy and break her damned neck.”

It appears that the petitioner worked the greater part of her married life and used the income from these exertions for her own use, and that defendant did not provide adequately for all her needs, and that she was thus constrained to' accept employment to meet her financial requirements. The children were left at home, during her working hours, in care of a maid. She did furnish slight requirements to the children in the morning and sometimes in the evening when she returned.

The petitioner testified that except for these incidents she enjoyed the hospitality, society and companionship of her husband in and out of the home. They entertained friends and accepted invitations outside their home. In February, 1934, the petitioner had a breakdown and was in bed for two weeks under the doctor’s care. She describes an incident early in March as follows: As she was about to go to business one morning her husband insisted that she remain in bed. She refused; whereupon he kicked her with great force, throwing her against a dressing table, as a result of which she received a severe bruise on her thigh. He then picked up a shoe and threw it at her, but missed; the shoe, however, struck the dresser, knocked the lamp off and broke a perfume bottle. She, nevertheless, continued to live with her husband after this episode.

She tells of another incident early in April, after returning from a dinner with her husband and friends in Hew York City. They were about to retire when he commenced to pace up and down the room, calling her vile names and accusing her of diverse acts of improprieties; he then threw [343]*343various missiles at her and finally struck her in the back of the head with a shoe. She complains of petty annoyances by the defendant for ten days thereafter until, on April 23d, 1934, petitioner left the defendant’s home and went to live in a furnished room. She left her children in the custody of her husband where they have been ever since.

Among other things, she charges that on several occasions the defendant falsely stated to her that he saw the petitioner running around with other men and accepting their society; and that he told many of petitioner’s friends derogatory things about her in connection with their married life, all of which she alleges caused her considerable mental anguish. The petitioner also claims that there was an undue demand on the part of the defendant for cohabitation, which undermined her health.

The other witnesses produced by the petitioner indicate that the petitioner and the defendant were always found to be hospitable and respectable persons; that on some few occasions the defendant had spoken disparagingly o'f his wife to them concerning her leisure time activities.

To best illustrate the state of mind of the petitioner at and about the time she finally left him, I quote from her testimony, state of case, page 62: "Q. When you left him, did you tell your maid, T am going to get a divorce?’ A. The last time I left; yes, I did. Q. Did you mean that? A. I certainly did. .Q. Did you say, T hate him’ [meaning the husband] ‘I cannot tolerate him, I don’t want him near me?’ A. I probably said it. Q. You meant it, too, didn’t you? A. I did. Q. You said on that note, ‘with love and kisses, pooh.’ A. Yes. Q. You meant that, too, didn’t you? A. That is just the way I felt. Q. And you had been feeling that way for a long time after, haven’t you? A. I have.”

The defense is a denial of all that the petitioner has said as to physical violence. Mrs. Mitchell, a maid in the home at the time of the separation and for a year prior thereto, and who co’uld support petitioner’s charges, if true, testified that she never observed any act of cruelty, nor was she told of any assaults upon petitioner as stated by petitioner. She did not see Mrs. Blackwell come out of the room crying on [344]*344the morning petitioner says she was struck. Mrs. Mitchell tells of a conversation she had on the morning Mrs. Blackwell left the home; that she asked Mrs. Blackwell not to go and Mrs. Blackwell said that she made up her mind and she would not change it. She further testified that Mr. and Mrs. Blackwell went out to a party in New York City for dinner the night before she left her husband. She also said that she was present when Mrs. Blackwell kissed a man who was then in the living room at a party held in her home several months prior to the separation. She also testified that Mrs. Blackwell told her about a Mr. Buckley, whom she met at a birthday party in a studio where Mrs. Blackwell was employed, and that petitioner said he was very nice. Mrs. Blackwell made an arrangement with her, the witness said, that if Mr. Buckley called on the telephone and Mr. Blackwell was in the home at the time, she (Mrs. Mitchell) was to take the telephone call and tell Mr. Buckley “Beverly is not in.”

The testimony of Mrs. Parker is a recital of admissions by Mrs. Blackwell of her activities which, to say the least, are suspicious and seem to' corroborate much of the testimony of Mrs. Mitchell.

The witness Sid Kalli testified to a clandestine meeting of Buckley and Mrs. Blackwell in a room behind the studio. He (Sid Kalli) saw Buckley kiss her and call her “darling” and “sweetheart;” and told of the chase with Mrs. Blackwell in an automobile to overtake Mr. Buckley at Ampere Parkway, Bloomfield.

Christine Gustavson, a former employe of the Blackwells, states that Mrs. Blackwell said to her, “Mr. Blackwell didn’t know how to love, any more than a jack rabbit.” There was also the episode that happened in October, 1934, at the home of Mr. Leach. Mr. Kestner, a guest there, had arranged to go to the Pour Towers by taxi with Mrs. Blackwell, when Mr. Blackwell suddenly appeared on the scene as they were about to enter the cab. Kestner knew that Mrs. Blackwell was a married woman who had at that time been separated from her husband for several months.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 A. 279, 13 N.J. Misc. 341, 1935 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackwell-v-blackwell-njfamctessex-1935.