Brown v. Brown

50 A. 608, 63 N.J. Eq. 348, 18 Dickinson 348, 1901 N.J. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 A. 608 (Brown v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Brown, 50 A. 608, 63 N.J. Eq. 348, 18 Dickinson 348, 1901 N.J. LEXIS 192 (N.J. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Yredrnburgh, J.

This litigation was commenced on November 15th, 1898, by a petition of the husband, praying for a decree of divorce against the wife, filed under the divorce provisions of our statute, and based upon the alleged commission, by the wife, of adulterous acts, charged to have been committed with a designated person at the localities of Bogota, Jersey City and Eed Bank, in this state, during a period of four and a half months, viz., July, August, September, October and the first half of November, 1898. The large volume of facts in evidence (taken before a master, and covering, with the opinion below, irrespective of briefs of counsel, nearly five hundred printed pages) render it a practically impossible task, within the proper limits of this opinion, to deal either with all the minutiae of the case or with all the reasons which might be advanced for the conclusion now arrived at. This course is the less to be regretted because it makes possible the omission of many forbidding details of the evidence, which otherwise would unnecessarily encumber our reports, and tend to gratify prurient curiosity, rather than to accomplish useful results. 1 shall therefore condense the bounds of this opinion without, however, I hope, slighting any of the material features of the case, which have been so thoroughly and laboriously presented in the opinion below.

There aro but two occasions when it can be claimed, under the evidence, that adulterous acts were committed by the defendant. The first of these events is said to have taken place in the house and home where these parties and their children lived-—82 Glenwood avenue, Jersey City—on some night in the month of October, 1898 (the evidence of the time or date being extremely confused and indefinite); the second event is alleged to have happened on the night of November 5th, 1898, at the private dwelling-house and home of Mr. Graham Yan Keuren, [350]*350in the town of Bogota, New Jersey. The first charge depends for support entirely upon the credit that should be given to the testimony of a single witness, a servant woman, named Maria Mitchell; and the second accusation depends solely upon the credit that should be attached to the testimony of a single witness, an avowed detective, named James A. Coyne.

The initial question of fact to be met is: Was adultery committed on the first occasion above named? Is Maria Mitchell’s testimony entitled to belief ? As she acknowledged that she was under the pay and employ of the petitioner at the time she claimed to have seen the' acts of which she speaks, as well as at the time of her examination as a witness in this cause, it will be admitted that her statements in favor of her employer should be subjected to the most careful scrutiny. She was an interested witness and vitally essential to the petitioner’s success as to the charge she was relied upon to sustain. While it is well settled in this state that the testimony of a single witness may be sufficient proof of adultery to sustain a decree of divorce, though denied by the defendant upon oath, yet it is held that “such effect must depend upon the probability of the story, the character of the witness and the consistency of his [or her] evidence.”

The intelligence of this witness is well criticised in the opinion below, finding that she, to use its language, “is somewhat stupid, very illiterate, cannot read and has a poor command of language.” In adopting that estimate of her intelligence I shall add also that it appears by the record that she was so ignorant that she could not write her name, but affixed, at the end of her testimon)’, her cross-mark instead, stating to the master that she could'not write her name. I attach some importance to this fact, because it gives a needed inkling of her origin and character, or rather want of character, because all information as to her previous history she persistently denied to the cross-examiner. A brief transcript of a portion of her testimonjr will show this, as follows:

“Q. Iiow old are you?
“A. I don’t know.
“Q. How long have you been in this country?
“A. I can’t tell you; I’ll have to find out.
[351]*351“Q. Are you from Ireland?
“A. I don’t know where I am from.
“Q. Are you married?
“A. I don’t know.”

This last answer certainly caps a climax of agnosticism. The affirmative evidence of her antecedents being so meagre, we are forced to regard the negative side of the inquiry. How does it happen that the petitioner and his experienced counsel suffered a witness (so important to his case) to leave her testimony on the subject of her character in such doubtful shape on the record? We can understand that, in her direct examination, the party calling her could safely stand upon the usual presumption of her good character until it was questioned, but after it had been attacked in her cross-examination, and she had refused to answer proper questions affecting it (only a part of which I have above quoted), what reason could the petitioner’s counsel have had, upon her redirect examination, for avoiding that subject? If she had come from respectable associations or surroundings, it seems to me that counsel would have been quick to respond to the challenge offered by the other side, and prompt to strengthen her questioned antecedents. In this condition of the record I think her previous character must be regarded with great suspicion, and that her evasive answers as to her identity were probably due to a fear of disclosing that she had been employed through Coyne, the detective, and for an ulterior purpose, hereafter referred to.

But the probability of the story Mitchell tells, of what she claims to have observed as to the conduct of the defendant and co-respondent, provokes, from every point of view, still greater suspicion. In the first place, her identification of the affair to which she pretends to speak, so far as any date is concerned, is very unsatisfactory, if not disquieting. In her main examination she was permitted to answer the following leading question, itself suggestive of a fear of the witness’ ability to fix any time unless assisted by the form of the question, viz., “Q. Now tell us what happened on a Thursday night about a month after that?” The words “after that” in this question seem to have reference to an occasion when the witness had said, in her pre[352]*352vious answer, that Mrs. Brown and Mr. Cane had attended the theatre. It appeared in the case that they attended the theatretogether on two occasions, viz., on October 1st and on October 15th, 1898. ■ In her cross-examination she swore that she could not say whether the incident she refers to occurred two months after these persons went to the theatre or not, and in another part of her testimony she swore that she “was not really sure whether it was in October or in September.” This important date, fixed in such an ambulatory manner by this witness, can only be the subject of conjecture from her testimony. In the opinion below it was thought that the witness must have referred to some period between October 1st and the 14th, 1898. Adopting that, we proceed to her other statements of the circumstances surrounding the affair of which she speaks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 608, 63 N.J. Eq. 348, 18 Dickinson 348, 1901 N.J. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brown-nj-1901.