Farden v. Farden

179 A. 317, 13 N.J. Misc. 606, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 18
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 2, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 179 A. 317 (Farden v. Farden) 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
Farden v. Farden, 179 A. 317, 13 N.J. Misc. 606, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 18 (N.J. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Here, A. M.

The petition praj^s for a decree of divorce a vinculo on the ground of adultery, the charge being that the defendant on [607]*607December 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th, 1931, committed adultery “at some place unknown to your petitioner with a person whose name is unknown to petitioner and whom petitioner is unable to describe,” and that thereafter the defendant became ill and was discovered to be suffering “from a sudden acute fresh attack of a vile and loathsome venereal disease, which disease she acquired and contracted through her adulterous relations between the dates of December 5th and December 13th, 1931.”

The answer denies adultery, and denies that the defendant suffered “from a sudden acute fresh attack of a vile and loathsome venereal disease.” It sets up that the defendant was discovered to be suffering from “a gonorrheal infection of long standing,” which was transmitted to her by the petitioner through sexual intercourse, the petitioner having been for a number of years afflicted with gonorrhea.

The defendant also counter-claims for separate maintenance on the ground of extreme cruelty, setting up sundry instances of alleged extreme cruelty practiced upon her by the petitioner, culminating in the charges of adultery brought against her by the petitioner, which she says were false charges, aggravated by his “calling her vile and indecent names, such as 'dirty rat,’ 'that she was worse than a dirty street bum/ that she was dower and rottener than the worst nigger in the world/ and in his communication to her of the venereal disease of gonorrhea,” whereby her health became greatly impaired, &c.; and charges that he is still afflicted with the disease and that it would be greatly prejudicial to her health to continue to cohabit with him. In his answer to the counter-claim the petitioner admits having accused his wife of adultery and having characterized her as charged, and admits having himself suffered from the disease of gonorrhea prior to his marriage, but alleges that he was cured of the disease and was not responsible for his wife’s infection, and further that she had never had the disease prior to December, 1931. He also denies that he has refused to support the defendant, as she charges.

On the issue of adultery the factual question is whether or [608]*608not there is a reasonable possibility that the infection of the wife was transmitted by the husband: If there was such reasonable possibility, the husband’s suit must fail.

The petitioner is a practicing physician in Newark, and his marriage to defendant took place on October 4th, 1919. During all of their married life the parties have lived in Newark. Until 1928 their relations to each other were harmonious and their marriage happy. Difficulties then arose, due principally to the wife’s jealousy because of the husband’s apparently undue familiarity with a female patient. It is not necessary to determine whether such jealousy was justified, since the wife does not charge her husband with adultery nor does the husband charge the wife with extreme cruelty. Suffice it to say that the parties commenced to draw apart from then on, and that the husband commenced to chafe under the yoke of his marriage and showed on more than one occasion that a divorce from her would be welcome to him.

When the petitioner was about eighteen years of age he contracted the venereal disease known as gonorrhea. Apparently his infection was not promptly or efficiently treated, but he believed himself to be cured and married a nurse whom he had met in his army service. In 1918, after cohabitation with her, he came reinfected with the disease, and claiming (and perhaps believing) that the reinfection was contracted from her, secured a divorce from her in Maryland on the ground of adultery, the action being undefended.

The reinfection produced an acute and severe attack of the disease which incapacitated him for many weeks, ever since which time he has suffered from rheumatism. It was a fact issue in the case whether this rheumatism was caused by the continued presence of gonococci in his system. That he believes it might be so is proved, in my judgment, not only by his declarations to that effect, but by the character of the remedial measures adopted and pursued by him.

It is difficult to believe that after the experience which the petitioner had had, in view of his training and experience as a physician with considerable genito-urinary practice, he could have believed that it was safe for him to marry the defendant, [609]*609as lie did on October 4th, 1919. Even though he was, or professed to be a disciple of that school of medicine which holds that a deep-seated infection such as his had been can bo positively pronounced cured on the basis of negative tests, still as a physician he was well aware of the Imposing medical authority to the contrary. The only conclusion possible Is that he recklessly exposed his wife to an infection which he knew or should have known was at least a reasonable possibility, using no contraceptives of prophylactics in his sexual relations with her, and taking no precautions to minimize the danger.

The defendant, a healthy and normal woman before her marriage to the petitioner, suffered during her marriage abdominal pains and other symptoms consistent with the presence of a gonococcal infection in her body. She was treated by the petitioner from time to time by applying tampons, a treatment indicated in cases of infection. Here again it is difficult to credit the petitioner’s claim that defendant could not have been suffering from a gonococcal infection. He certainly should have known or at least suspected it, as I believe he did.

In the early part of December, 1931, the defendant developed an acute salpingitis, due to gonococcal infection. It is conceded that the petitioner and defendant had had no sexual relations for several weeks prior to defendant’s illness, so that the petitioner could scarcely have infected his wife with a fresh case of gonorrhea, hut there is ample medical evidence in the case to justify the conclusion that the defendant’s infection, although acute, was not fresh, but an exascerbation of a long standing chronic gonorrhea, which might have been latent in her system for many years, and which was originally communicated to her from her husband.

On the question of adultery, the only issue which the defendant was called upon to meet was whether she had contracted the disease otherwise than from her husband. The charge is that she had committed adultery on certain dates at places unknown and with a person or persons unknown. Under this general charge it was sought to show that the [610]*610defendant had misconducted herself with one Harrison. In my judgment these charges were fully met and overcome by the proofs.

The petitioner’s solicitor insists that where it appears, or is conceded as it is in this case, that the defendant is suffering from gonorrhea, the burden is on her to prove by a preponderance of the evidence, at least, that she derived it from contact with her husband, citing as authority Thornton v. Thornton, 67 N. J. Eq. 499; 58 Atl. Rep. 647, and quoting from page 501:

“In my judgment the presence of this disease places upon the husband [the defendant] the duty of clearly satisfying the court that he contracted it from his wife, if he would avoid the proper inference to be drawn from his condition.”

But he failed to quote the very next sentence:

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Related

Hill v. Hill
127 A. 584 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1925)
Thornton v. Thornton
58 A. 647 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1904)
Danielly v. Danielly
118 A. 335 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 A. 317, 13 N.J. Misc. 606, 1935 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farden-v-farden-njch-1935.