Blake v. Blake

70 Ill. 618
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 70 Ill. 618 (Blake v. Blake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. Blake, 70 Ill. 618 (Ill. 1873).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill for divorce, filed by Barnum Blake against Christine Blake, in the circuit court of Cook county. A change of venue was subsequently taken to the Superior Court.

The bill charged that the defendant committed adultery with one Thomas M. Thompson, at various times, in Cook county.

The defendant filed an answer under oath, in which she denied each and every charge of adultery alleged in the bill, and expressly denied that she ever, at any time or place, committed adultery with Thompson or any other person.

The defendant also filed a cross-bill, in which she charged the complainant with extreme and repeated cruelty, and adultery, and prayed for a divorce. The complainant answered the cross-bill, under oath, denying the charges therein, and alleged that the defendant was guilty of drunkenness, vulgarity and lewdness.

In July, 1872, a trial was had before a jury, which resulted in a verdict that the defendant was not guilty of the adultery charged. Ho evidence was introduced in support of the cross-bill.

The complainant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and a decree signed according to the finding of the jury.

The complainant brings the cause to this court by appeal, and asks a reversal of the decree on the following grounds: 1st. Because the verdict is contrary to the evidence. 2d, The court erred in instructing the jury. 3d. The court erred in not granting a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. 4th. The court erred in allowing solicitors’ fees to defendant’s solicitors.

It appears by the record that these parties were married in 1851, in the State of Wisconsin. At the time of their marriage the defendant was 16 years of age and the complainant was 34; that about three months before their marriage the complainant obtained a divorce from a former wife, on the ground of adultery. They resided in Wisconsin until 1867, when they moved to Winnetka, in Cook county, where" they resided until the 8th day of June, 1870, when complainant drove defendant from his house. They have five children, residing with complainant at Winnetka.

It further appears that T. M. Thompson resides in Winnetka, near the residence of complainant; that he is a lawyer by profession, a married man, keeps an"office in Chicago, where •he is engaged in the practice of law; that Winnetka is a village sixteen miles from Chicago, containing about thirty houses; that the residents of Winnetka, most of them, do business in Chicago, and travel to and from Chicago morning and evening, on the cars.

The evidence of the complainant to prove adultery is entirely circumstantial. No direct or positive proof of the commission of the act was introduced.

The first and main testimony relied upon to establish adultery, was that of one Gleason, who was a hired detective, residing in Chicago. He was employed in October, 1869, and from that time until May, 1870, he followed and watched the defendant and Thompson each time she went to Chicago. During that time, he swears to twelve or fourteen visits she made to Chicago, and was in company with Thompson on the street and in the office of Thompson & Osborn. He swears that he met them at the depot, and followed them in their walks on the street: followed them to the office of Thompson, where the defendant would sometimes remain a short time, and on other occasions, as long as an hour or longer.

If the testimony of this witness was entirely reliable, it is barely possible that adultery was committed, but it is not probable. It is to be remembered that these meetings of the defendant and Thompson occurred in the day time, on the street of a populous city, at the office of an attorney, during business hours, where the public were invited to go to transact legal business. On the streets she never took his arm; in the office, no improper intimacy was observed by this ever watchful hired searcher after crime, save, on one occasion, he saw Thompson’s hand upon her lap. If the defendant’s chastity was not above reproach, and her virtue as pure as the purest, it is astonishing that this witness, with all his vigilance, research, and his eyes ever on the defendant when she was in the city, during a period of six months, did not discover more.

But the important question arises, were the jury bound to believe the testimony of this witness ? He was employed by the complainant to dog and follow the tracks of his wife in a secret manner, and learn what facts he could, for the purpose of becoming a witness against her. Up to the time this cause was tried, he had received $350, and his account -was still unsettled. How much more he is to receive, or whether the amount depended upon the effect his evidence should produce on the jury, is not disclosed. He was uncorroborated, although others were about the office at the times he swears to the interviews. Hone are called to sustain and corroborate what he saw and testified to. This is somewhat remarkable; and, when considered in connection with the fact that he was in the employ of complainant, is calculated to cast suspicion upon his evidence.

It is said, in Browning on the Laws of Marriage and Divorce, citing from Sir Cresswell : “The employment of a private detective, for the purpose of getting up evidence, though in some few eases they may afford useful assistance, is, as a rule, very objectionable. They are most dangerous agents, and the court looks upon their evidence with much suspicion. When a man sets up as a.hired discoverer of supposed delinquencies, when the amount of his pay depends upon the extent of his employment, and the extent of his employment depends upon the discoveries he is able to make, then the man becomes a most dangerous instrument.”

While it is true, under the law, Gleason was a competent witness, yet his credibility was a question solely for the jury. Aside from the evidence of Gleason, the complainant is compelled to rely alone on the conduct of the defendant and the accomplice at Winnetka, to establish adultery.

The conduct proven at Winnetka, aside from what was shown by the testimony of the two small sons of complainant, of which we shall speak hereafter, consisted of frequent walks and drives that the defendant and Thompson had together. Sometimes they rode and walked alone; on other occasions, in company with the wife of Thompson. That there was any improper intimacy between them on any of these occasions, the evidence entirely fails to show.

One of complainant’s witnesses, Schoder, testifies, on a Sunday night in May, 1870, at 11 o’clock, he saw the defendant, in company with Thompson, walking towards Wright’s grove. The next witness called by complainant swears that he walked past Wright’s grove, on the night in question, with Mrs. Blake, and that with the knowledge and consent of complainant. This illustrates very fairly two things, first, that it is not safe to place too great reliance on that class of evidence to establish adultery; second, that Mrs. Blake’s walks and rides were not altogether without the knowledge and approbation of her husband. Great reliance is, however, placed on the evidence of complainant’s two sons, one 15 years old and the other 11. They testify that, on a certain night their mother came home at 12 o’clock, Thompson with her.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ill. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-blake-ill-1873.