Cusick v. Cusick

18 A.2d 292, 129 N.J. Eq. 82
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 5, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 A.2d 292 (Cusick v. Cusick) 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
Cusick v. Cusick, 18 A.2d 292, 129 N.J. Eq. 82 (N.J. 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wells, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Court of Chancery dismissing the wife’s petition for a divorce from her husband on the ground of desertion. The case was uneontested.

The only evidence offered by the petitioner was her own testimony, the testimony of one DeYoung, and the marriage certificate.

The parties were married October 5th, 1929, and at the time of the marriage they were both living in the State of New Jersey, and continued to reside there up until the time of the hearing June 21st, 1940.

So far as the record discloses there was no marital difficulties from the time, of the marriage up until December 11th, 193T, when the parties separated under circumstances presently to be related.

Ror two years prior to the separation they had lived together as man and wife at 105 Parker avenue, Hawthorne, Passaic county, New Jersey. The husband was employed at *84 the time of his marriage and up until the time of the hearing as an employe in the Paterson post office. Two children were born of the marriage, a boy now ten and a girl seven years of age. They are now in a home.

The husband on Saturday nights was accustomed to going to the saloon of one DeYoung at Paterson and assisting him in tending bar. On Saturday evening, December 10th, 1937, DeYoung called at the apartment of the petitioner and defendant in Hawthorne and took them in his automobile to his saloon and the defendant there assisted him that evening in tending bar. About three o’clock the following morning DeYoung returned with them and two other couples to their apartment, the intention being to have a party. DeYoung brought along a bottle of apple whiskey and there was some drinking at the apartment. The two couples “started fooling around” and the defendant husband “started fooling also” with one of the girls and finally took one of them and went into the parlor and pretended to be asleep. He, however, finally came out of the parlor and, finding his wife sitting on DeYoung’s lap, he became incensed and accused them of making love to one another, stating that he had heard his wife say that she loved DeYoung. This they both denied. He ordered DeYoung to leave and threatened to “punch” his wife, “pushed her around for awhile,” threatening that unless she did leave he would put her out. She begged him not to do this, assuring him that there was nothing to the affair and that everything would be all right, and that after all they were all “going out that night.” DeYoung also implored him not to put his wife out and promised that he would not call at the apartment any more, to which the defendant replied — “If you don’t get out I will push her out before you get out.” All this time defendant’s wife was coaxing him not to put her out. In spite of all protestations, the husband “pushed his wife out.” DeYoung followed her and asked her where she intended to go and she replied that she was going to her “mother’s and father’s.” They lived in Paterson.

The party had continued from three o’clock until some time after five in the morning and instead of going immediately *85 to the parents’ home, the testimony is that DeYoung drove the petitioner around for about an hour and a half or two hours, “until her parents got up.”

The petitioner testified that she remained in the home of her parents for over a year and then she went to live with her sister at Hawthorne for about six weeks and from the sister’s home she moved to 51 Clark street, Paterson, and lived there alone up until the time of the hearing, that during all this time she had been visited by DeYoung “now and then.”

Petitioner further testified that she had seen her husband about ten times since the separation; the time, place and circumstances not being stated. She did testify, however, that he was still working in the Paterson post office and that he had never come to see her with reference to her marital status, nor did he ever ask her to come back, and that she had not cohabited with him since December 11th, 1937.

At the conclusion of the testimony the advisory master advised the petitioner’s attorney that he considered that this was a constructive rather than a simple desertion case, citing Succhierelli v. Succhierelli, 101 N. J. Eq. 30, &c., whereupon after some argument the petitioner’s attorney, first insisting that it was a simple desertion, finally said it was a constructive desertion and asked to amend his petition, to which the advisory master replied that he would permit the amendment, but on the merits of the case he was going to advise a decree dismissing the petition. The advisory master also declined to reopen the case to permit the petitioner to bring in additional proof, the purpose of which was to prove that the husband was not drunk and that he put his wife out.

In the advisory master’s conclusions, after reciting some of his impressions of the testimony, he stated that the undisputed testimony in the case showed that the petitioner was not without fault, but, in reality, the provocation was on her part and not on the part of the defendant, that what happened she brought upon herself.

The advisory master then concluded as follows: “The conduct of the petitioner on the evening and early morning in question, and her conduct subsequent to the separation, *86 and her association with the witness DeYoung on and after December 11th, 1937, leads the court to believe that she was not an unwilling victim; that the separation was not against her will and consent, and that the separation and its continuance was agreeable to her, and therefore not obstinate on the part of the defendant.”

In reaching this conclusion we think the advisory master erred.

Whether the case be one of simple desertion or constructive desertion makes little difference here, except as to the pleadings. If it was a simple desertion on the part of the husband, as the petitioner’s solicitor first insisted it was, the law imposed upon him a duty to use active efforts to bring the separation to an end. Norcross v. Norcross, 82 N. J. Eq. 195. This the defendant did not do.

“If a husband drives his wife from his house, and if she is allowed to stay away for two years without solicitation to return and proper assurances of better treatment on his part, it is constructive desertion by the husband for which the wife is entitled to a divorce.” Hauenstein v. Hauenstein, 95 N. J. Eq. 34.

If it was a constructive desertion, as the advisory master held, it was the duty of the offending party to endeavor to terminate the separation by manifesting reformation and applying for restoration of marital relationship, giving reasonable assurance of sincerity and probable safety of the injured party in resuming cohabitation. Danielly v. Danielly, 98 N. J. Eq. 556. Neither did the husband do this.

The only legal justification for a husband or wife putting an end to an existing cohabitation is by misconduct of one of them, provided such misconduct is itself a ground for divorce a vinculo or a divorce a mensa. Csanyi

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Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 292, 129 N.J. Eq. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cusick-v-cusick-nj-1941.