Everett v. . Everett

73 N.E. 231, 180 N.Y. 452, 18 Bedell 452, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 1101
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 231 (Everett v. . Everett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Everett v. . Everett, 73 N.E. 231, 180 N.Y. 452, 18 Bedell 452, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 1101 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 455 In this action the plaintiff sought to set aside a judgment which the defendant had procured against her in the year 1888. The allegations of the complaint in substance are that the judgment was procured by the defendant against the plaintiff by fraud. The courts below have impeached the judgment for fraud and have set it aside.

The appeal presents one of those matrimonial tangles involving numerous contradictions and intricacies. The record contains a mass of testimony, oral and written, which we may not deal with, since the learned court below was unanimous in its decision vacating the judgment. We will in this review deal only with certain questions that arise upon conceded facts, or upon the pleadings, or that have been found by the trial court, and with the exceptions taken to the decision of the trial court upon questions of law. It will require some time and space to state the facts involved in the questions presented in such a way as to make our conclusions intelligible. Some minor questions that were the subject of controversy at the trial need not be referred to. The testimony at the trial discloses numerous contradictions and conflicts, but we think it has little, if any, bearing upon the questions of law that ought to control the case.

On the 30th of October, 1884, the plaintiff and defendant were married by a justice of the peace in Brooklyn. There is no dispute about the fact that a marriage ceremony was performed which was valid in the eye of the law, providing that the parties were qualified to enter into such a contract. It has been found that in December, 1887, the defendant, that is, the husband, commenced an action in the Supreme Court against the plaintiff, the wife, to annul the marriage between the parties. That thereupon such proceedings were had that a judgment was rendered on April 9th, 1888, whereby it was adjudged that no valid contract of marriage had been entered *Page 457 into between the plaintiff and defendant, and that the marriage contract entered into between them on October 30th, 1884, was void, and that the said marriage be, and the same by said judgment was, annulled. The judgment so procured annulling the marriage was based entirely upon the ground that at the time of the ceremony before the justice of the peace in Brooklyn, the plaintiff in this action, that is, the wife, had another husband living, and the testimony of that person was taken at the trial of the present action. A certified copy of the judgment annulling the marriage was served on the wife, plaintiff in this action, on the 3rd day of June, 1888.

On the 27th day of May, 1892, nearly four years after the entry of the judgment, the plaintiff herein made a motion to the court in which the judgment was rendered showing that the judgment had been obtained by default, and that she was induced to abstain from defending the same by reason of false and fraudulent representations on the part of her husband, the defendant herein. There is no dispute about the fact that in the action resulting in the judgment the wife made no defense, but the allegations of the complaint were, under the practice of the court, referred to a referee to take testimony as to the facts and report the same to the court. A full hearing was had before the referee. Witnesses were examined and the testimony reported to the court, with the referee's conclusions, to the effect that the prayer of the complaint should be granted. This report was confirmed and judgment ordered for the plaintiff in the action. The application of the wife to open the judgment and to be permitted to defend was fully heard at a Special Term of the court; all the facts bearing upon the merits of the action and upon the allegations of fraud on the part of the husband were fully presented on both sides by affidavits, and the court granted the motion, opened the judgment and allowed the wife to come in and defend; but the husband appealed from this order to the General Term, where the case was fully heard, and the order of the Special Term was reversed and the application of the wife was denied. Subsequently a motion was made to the *Page 458 General Term for a reargument, which was denied on the 10th of May, 1893.

On the 21st of February, 1895, the wife commenced a proceeding against the husband in the Probate Court for Suffolk county, in the state of Massachusetts, alleging in her petition that she was the defendant's wife, and that he without just cause failed to furnish suitable support for her and had deserted her, and that she was living apart from him for justifiable cause, and in her prayer for judgment she asked that the court make such order as it deemed expedient concerning her support. Pursuant to an order made by the court the plaintiff in that proceeding filed specifications stating that she was married to the defendant on October 31st, 1884, and, further, that a legal marriage according to the laws of the state of New York was entered into in that state between her and the defendant on April 15th, 1888. This last marriage is what was termed in the case a common-law marriage. It was also alleged in the petition that the defendant had deserted her on the 30th day of May, 1891, and had since contributed nothing to her support. The husband, who is the defendant in this action, admitted the early marriage and alleged that the same had been declared null and void by the judgment hereinbefore referred to, and further alleged that at the time of the marriage, and also at the time of the alleged subsequent common-law marriage, the plaintiff herein was the wife of another man, giving his name, and that by reason thereof both the supposed marriages between the plaintiff and the defendant, by her alleged, were null and void. On the 25th of March, 1897, the court made a decree whereby it found and decided that the prayer of the plaintiff's petition should not be granted and adjudged that the petition be dismissed and a few days thereafter the present action was commenced. It seems that there have been three trials and three appeals to the Appellate Division in which some feature of the case has been referred to. (Everett v.Everett, 48 App. Div. 475; 75 id. 369; 89 id. 619.)

In the defendant's answer in this action he sets forth certain *Page 459 adjudications which he claims were conclusive against the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action. These adjudications are the judgment annulling the marriage, the order made upon the motion to set this judgment aside and to permit the wife to come in and defend and the decree entered in the Probate Court in Massachusetts upon the wife's application to compel the husband to furnish support. Perhaps the most important question of law in this case arises upon these defenses. They were disposed of by the learned trial court in his eighth finding of fact which is in the following words: "That the matters set forth in the second, third and fifth defenses, or either of them, in the answer therein, are not res adjudicata as to the issues herein." Although this purports to be a finding of fact, it is clearly nothing but a conclusion of law. It expresses the decision of the trial court on a matter of law and not upon a matter of fact. It is substantially the decision of the court that these defenses are not available to the defendant herein. The question presented on this ruling is substantially the same as if the plaintiff had demurred to these several separate defenses on the ground that in law they constituted no defense to the action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 231, 180 N.Y. 452, 18 Bedell 452, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everett-v-everett-ny-1905.