Clark v. Clark

52 N.J. Eq. 650
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 N.J. Eq. 650 (Clark v. Clark) 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
Clark v. Clark, 52 N.J. Eq. 650 (N.J. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

This case presents but a single question, and that is, is the defendant the husband of thé complainant ? The suit is founded on the twentieth section of our statute concerning divorces, and is brought for the purpose of obtaining a decree compelling the defendant to support the complainant. The defendant denies that he ever, in any way or form, entered into a contract of marriage with the complainant. His defence confesses necessarily [651]*651abandonment and refusal to support. Hence the complainant’s right to the relief she asks depends entirely upon whether or not the marriage she alleges has been satisfactorily proved.

The contract, on which the complainant rests her right to relief, is alleged to have been made in the city of New York, on the 29th day of May, 1889, at a house near- one of the entrances to Central Park. For nearly a year prior to the date just mentioned, the complainant had lived with the defendant’s father in the village of Lebanon, Hunterdon county, as his housekeeper. The father at this time was about ninety years old, and • his family consisted of nobody but the complainant and himself. The defendant, at the time of the alleged marriage, was a widower, about fifty years old, and the father of three children, and had for several years resided in the city of New York, ■where he was engaged in the business of selling liquors and groceries, by traveling over certain routes, extending through the country adjacent to the city, at stated intervals, to solicit orders. While passing over one of these routes, it was his custom to stop at his father’s house at Lebanon and remain there over night. He did so usually once in each fortnight throughout the year. The complainant went to live with the defendant’s father in July, 1888, and the defendant made her acquaintance there shortly afterwards. She was then a maiden about twenty-six years old. Soon after they became acquainted, the complainant testifies that the defendant made love to her and asked her to marry him. He admits that he kissed her, romped with her, brought her flowers and gave her a silk umbrella. The complainant says that the defendant repeatedly asked her to marry him, but that she did not consent until March, 1889. Then she says he said to her that he loved her so deeply he could not live without her, and asked her if she loved anybody else, and that she replied that she did not, but confessed that she loved him, and promised that she would marry him, but stated that she could not then because she was not ready. The defendant had a brother living in Paterson. A few days before the day on which it is alleged the marriage took place, the complainant went with Austin Clark (the defendant’s father) to Paterson [652]*652to visit his son. It had been previously arranged, between the complainant and the defendant, that if the complainant would go to New York, while Austin Clark' was in Paterson, the defendant would take her to the Eden Musée. In pursuance of this arrangement, the complainant went from Paterson to New York on the 29th day of May, 1889. She first went to the store where the defendant was employed. From there the defendant took her to a restaurant. While in the restaurant, the complainant swears the defendant reminded her of her promise to marry him, and asked why not do it then. She replied that she was not ready. To which he said that she was as ready then as she ever would be. To this she'said she was not properly dressed to marry — she had an old dress on — and he answered that that was the smallest part of it. They then went to the Eden Musée. While there, the complainant says the defendant again urged her to marry him and that she declined because her gloves were too much soiled, whereupon the defendant said he would get her a new pair, and she then consented. On leaving the Eden Musée, the complainant says the defendant took her to a store near the Eden Musée and. bought her a pair of gloves, and while there told her that he knew a clergyman living near Central Park, whom he would get to solemnize their marriage. They then went to Central Park, and after visiting several places of interest, the complainant says as they came out the defendant took her to a house near the park, which he said was the residence of the Rev. Mr. Smith. On entering this house, the complainant swears the defendant stated that he and she had come there to be married. They were requested to pass into the front room, and that very soon after-wards the person who had admitted them brought in a book and asked her her age, and after she had given it they were directed to write their names in the book, and, after they had done so, they stood up side by side and joined hands. Then the person who had admitted them and brought in the book asked the defendant if he took the complainant as his wife. He replied he did. The complainant was then asked if she took the defendant as her husband. She replied she did. A short [653]*653prayer followed, and at its conclusion the person who had aslted the questions and made the prayer pronounced them to be husband and wife. The complainant further says that the defendant gave the person who acted the part of a clergyman some money — how much she does not know — and that this person then remarked that he had no blank certificate of marriage, but would make out one and send it to the defendant, whereupon the defendant gave his address at his place of business and not at his residence. As they left the house, the complainant also says the defendant directed her to say nothing about their marriage to anyone, but to return with his father to Lebanon and remain there until the following fall when he would take her to his home. The defendant then went with the complainant to the depot of the Erie railway, and she returned to Paterson, Before they separated, the complainant says it was arranged that the defendant should go to Lebanon the following Saturday and that she should be there to meet him, but that she was prevented from performing her part of the arrangement by a storm which made it imprudent for her to attempt to take Austin Clark to Lebanon on Saturday, and that, in consequence of the storm, they did not return until the following Monday. On Tuesday, the next day after the complainant and Austin returned, the complainant swears that she received a letter from the defendant, addressed to her by her maiden name, and which had been mailed at Yonkers, the opening words of which were “My darling wife,” and the closing, “Your happy husband, Ramsey,” and in which the defendant said he had been at Lebanon the previous Saturday, was disappointed not to find the complainant there, and stayed in the house alone over night and had been so lonesome that he could not sleep, and then expressed a hope that when he came out again he would have an opportunity to see the complainant alone. The complainant' also says that the defendant did not gome to*Lebanon again until Thursday of the following week, and that the marriage was then consummated by sexual intercourse, and that that was the first time that the defendant and she had ever had sexual intercourse.

[654]*654The defendant admitted that on the 29th day of May, 1889, he took the complainant to the Eden Musée and to Central Park, and that he went with her from the park to the depot of the Erie railway; indeed, he admitted all the occurrences described by the complainant as having taken place on that day, except that then or on any other day he asked her to marry him, or that on that day he bought her a pair of gloves, or that on that day they went into a house near the park and made a contract of marriage.

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Related

Sturm v. Sturm
163 A. 5 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.J. Eq. 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-clark-njch-1894.