Brown v. Brown

49 A. 589, 62 N.J. Eq. 29, 17 Dickinson 29, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 47
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 25, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 49 A. 589 (Brown v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Brown, 49 A. 589, 62 N.J. Eq. 29, 17 Dickinson 29, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 47 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The petition was, filed on November 16th, 1898, and in it the petitioner charges his wife with several acts of adultery com[30]*30mittecl during the previous summer with one William H. Cane, Jr., at the village of Bogota, on the Hackensack river, opposite Hackensack, in Bergen county; at Red Bank,. in Monmouth countjr, and at the residence of the petitioner, No. 82 Glenwood avenue, Jersey City. The adultery is denied by the defendant.

A mass of evidence was produced by the petitioner tending to show a strong disposition on the part of the defendant and her alleged paramour to be in each other’s company during the period mentioned, and frequent meetings with more or less of opportunity to indulge illicit desires, if any they had, and acts of familiarity, such as kissing and embracing; and further, on two occasions, actual acts of adultery. These acts were all denied on the witness-stand in the most explicit and positive manner by the defendant and the co-respondent, and their denial is supported by other persons, who in some instances at least must have known of the improper intimacy, if it existed.

It may be said, generally, of the evidence, that it is contradictory to a painful ■ extent. That on the part of the petitioner comes mainly, with two notable exceptions, from the mouths of domestic servants.

The proper weight to be given to the evidence under such circumstances induces me to consider at the start the indis.putable facts of the case.

The petitioner and defendant are both natives, I believe, of the county of Hudson. Petitioner’s father was the founder of a retail dry goods business in Jersey City, and the petitioner was Connected therewith as an employe, and presumably had a large interest in the. concern. The defendant’s parents lived at Bayonne, in said county. They were married December 27th, 1888. At that time the petitioner was about twenty-one or twenty-two years of age, and the defendant about two. years younger; so that the petitioner was past thirty, and the defendant about twenty-nine years old at the time of the occurrences covered by the testimony.

Two children were born of the marriage—George T., on August 5th, 1893, and Gordon, in January, 1896. In the spring of 1895 the petitioner rented a house in Bogota, and lived there with the defendant until December, 1896, and it was at that house that [31]*31their youngest child was born. In the same village lived the Cane family, consisting ■ of a grandfather, William H.' Cane, Sr.; his son, and head of the house, Frederick W. Cane, and the latter’s son William H. Cane, Jr., the co-respondent, who was born in August, 1874, and was about twenty-one' or twenty-two years old at the time the parties hereto lived at Bogota. Besides the grandfather, son and grandson, the grandson’s .sister, a Mrs. Van Keuren, with her husband, lived in the family and was the housekeeper. She had a daughter about the same age as the older Brown boy. The wife of Mr. Frederick W. Cane, the mother of the co-respondent, was living separately from her husband.

While the parties to this suit were living at Bogota they became acquainted with the Cane famity, and the acquaintance ripened into an intimacy, which continued to the time of the bringing of this suit.

In December, 1896, the parties removed to Jersey City and occupied a house on York street until the spring of 1898, when they moved into a house on Glenwood avenue, on what is called the Hill, and one of the most desirable neighborhoods for residence in Jersey City.

In the summer of 1897, while living in the York street house, the defendant and her children and maid-servant, spent several weeks at Bogota, boarding with a Mrs. Brinkerhoff, and in June, 1898, she again went there with her two children and maid-servant and boarded with a Mrs. Ludwig until August 5th, ■when she went with her children and maid-servant, and with Mrs. Van ICeuren and her child, to board with a Miss Bussell at Eed Bank, on the shore of the inland tide waters which lead from Eed Bank to Long Branch and its neighborhood.

It is clearly shown that both Mrs. Van Iveuren and her brother, the co-respondent, visited at petitioner’s house on Glen-wood avenue in the spring of 1898; and when the defendant and her children went to board with Mrs. Ludwig, at Bogota, 'in June of the same year, she was a frequent visitor at the Cane house, and when not visiting there, that young Mr. Cane visited her frequently at the Ludwig house. Her husband visited her very seldom at that place. He never stayed over night.

[32]*32Two notable facts arrest attentioi in connection with the conduct of defendant while boarding ’ th Mrs. Ludwig.

The maid-servant, Lizzie McCabe, ’ ¡on whose testimony reliance is had for undue familiarity from the latter part of June to September 1st, swears—in addition to the other acts of familiarity to be mentioned hereafter—that one afternoon Mrs. Brown and young Mr. Cane went away on their wheels, and were gone the whole evening, and did not return until about two o’clock in the morning. It should be here observed that Bogota is about six miles north of the line between Hudson and Bergen counties, and that the county line is the northerly end of a boulevard which extends thence southerly fourteen miles or more through Bergen county to Bergen Point.

Further, the co-respondent, Cane, was at that time engaged in business in Hoboken. Now both Mrs. Brown and the corespondent swear that, on the afternoon referred to by McCabe, they met by appointment about five o’clock, with their wheels, at a road-house at the north end, or top, I believe it is called, of the boulevard; that they rode together the whole length of the boulevard to a house of refreshment, called a shore-house, on the banks of New York bay at Bergen Point; that they arrived there about seven o’clock, took dinner there together, sat on the piazza with a crowd of other guests of miscellaneous character, such as patronize that sort of a house, listening to music and enjoying themselves, until—Mr. Cane says after ten, and Mrs. Brown says nearly eleven o’clock; that they then started for home on their wheels; that they were interrupted by showers and obliged to take shelter under sheds of various kinds; that Cane’s wheel became disabled; that the roads were heavy, and that they arrived at Mrs. Ludwig’s about two o’clock-in the morning. They swear that they saw, and presumably were seen at the shore-house by, one of the solicitors of the petitioner herein.

Now I cannot but consider this excursion a most significant circumstance. Whether it would have been so frankly admitted but for the fact that they were seen at the> shore-house by a witness who happened afterwards to be interested in making known the fact, is quite impossible to say. But the fact that [33]*33they do frankly admit- i does not detract from the significance of the transaction. It', lust be observed that the defendant was not lured unawares ox' oughtlessly into an act of indiscretion, but that it was done'-' eliberately and by preconcert. I am unable to reconcile such conduct on the part of a married woman with purity of mind and purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A. 589, 62 N.J. Eq. 29, 17 Dickinson 29, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brown-njch-1901.