Feig v. Feig

232 A.D. 172, 249 N.Y.S. 695, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13762
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 232 A.D. 172 (Feig v. Feig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feig v. Feig, 232 A.D. 172, 249 N.Y.S. 695, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13762 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

Merrell, J.

Plaintiff and defendant were married at Sigid, Rumania, on July 8, 1928. Plaintiff and defendant were second [173]*173cousins. At the time of their marriage plaintiff was thirty-six years of age, and defendant nineteen years of age. The evidence indicates that, as was quite customary in Rumania, plaintiff’s proposal to marry defendant was conveyed through the intervention of defendant’s father, whom plaintiff first approached on the subject. Having received the father’s approval of the proposed alliance, plaintiff then went to call upon defendant at the home of defendant’s grandfather at Roddo, Czechoslovakia, a short distance from the home of defendant’s father. Plaintiff gave the improbable testimony that on the first occasion when he met defendant he asked her if she loved him and if she was willing to marry him, and that defendant replied that she did love him and was willing to marry plaintiff. This, defendant upon the trial denied, testifying that the proposal of marriage was made entirely by her father, who advised her to marry plaintiff, and that subsequently she consented to such union. Plaintiff in his complaint asked that the marriage be annulled upon the grounds that defendant had stated to him that she loved him, and would, therefore, consent to become his wife, and that later defendant repudiated such profession of affection and stated to plaintiff that she never had loved him. It was primarily by reason of such fraud that plaintiff sought to have the marriage between the parties annulled. After the marriage of the parties they lived and cohabited together as husband and wife at the home of defendant in Rumania for a period of three or four weeks, when plaintiff returned to the United States, where he had lived for twenty years prior to returning to Rumania, and subsequently obtained a visa to bring defendant, his wife, to this country, furnishing her with necessary money for that purpose. Defendant landed in the United States on December 20, 1928. She was met at the pier by plaintiff and his brother. On the way from the pier to the apartment which plaintiff had prepared for the reception of defendant, defendant stated that she was ill, and plaintiff testified that she looked bad — so much so that plaintiff testified that he offered to procure a doctor if she wished one. In the same apartment where plaintiff had planned to live with defendant, a brother of plaintiff and his wife also lived. Plaintiff’s sister-in-law had prepared a meal for plaintiff and his wife. As to what occurred after reaching the apartment of plaintiff’s brother and sister-in-law the evidence is in dispute. Plaintiff testified that when defendant reached the apartment she began to cry and stated that she was homesick for her mother; that when defendant continued to cry, she then stated to him that she wished to tell plaintiff something, and then stated to plaintiff that she did not love him and did not want to live with him, and that when he [174]*174asked her why she married him if she did not love him, defendant replied that she wanted to come to the United States, and that she had only married plaintiff for the purpose of avoiding the quota to come to this country. Two brothers of plaintiff and plaintiff’s sister-in-law testified in corroboration of plaintiff in almost the same words as those used by plaintiff as to this conversation as to her reason for marrying plaintiff. Defendant, on the other hand, testified at the trial that when she came to the apartment which plaintiff had prepared for her and as she sat down upon the edge of the bed to arrange her hair, plaintiff attempted to have sexual intercourse with her, and that she then told plaintiff that she could not permit of that at that time because she was not well and was menstruating, and that plaintiff replied that that was nothing, and that defendant then stated: “It is not as you say that it would be nothing. For sanitary reasons as well as religious reasons such is not right.” That plaintiff then attempted to force defendant, and she began to cry, whereupon plaintiff became very angry, and said: “.Who says that this is not allowed, who has the right over you. No one has anything — no one has any say over you except I who am your husband.”

Defendant then testified that she commenced to cry, and plaintiff started cursing her, saying that he wished the ship had sunk with her; that as the result defendant cried and became hysterical. There is no question upon the evidence of the witnesses sworn in behalf of plaintiff that after plaintiff and defendant came from their apartment and were about to eat the meal prepared for them, defendant was crying and hysterical. Jennie Feig, sister-in-law of plaintiff, testifying in plaintiff’s behalf, stated, with reference to defendant’s actions on this occasion: “ She began to holler, she made noise, it was about five hours, she wanted to throw herself but of the window, I held her back. After she ran to the door my brother-in-law said ‘ Please take care of her, she should not run in the street.’ * * * I was afraid she would kill herself. * * * She was like crazy.” Morris Feig, a brother of plaintiff, testified in this respect, that defendant was crying and continued crying.

It seems to me that the evidence clearly shows the truth of defendant’s testimony. The fact that plaintiff, his two brothers and his sister-in-law all testified to the highly nervous and hysterical condition of defendant furnishes convincing proof that plaintiff was responsible for the condition under which defendant was suffering. If defendant was the cool, designing person that the testimony of plaintiff and his kinspeople would indicate, and that she coolly informed plaintiff and his relatives that she did not love plaintiff [175]*175and had married him for the sole purpose of gaining entrance into this country, and had plaintiff manifested the kindness to her which he and his witnesses profess, there was no occasion for the defendant to become hysterical. Her nervousness and hysteria were not sham. There is no claim on the part of any witness that it was. Plaintiff and his witnesses all agree that it was with difficulty that defendant was restrained from throwing herself out of the window. I think such circumstances clearly corroborate defendant in her testimony that she cried and became nervous and hysterical because of the insistence on the part of plaintiff that she submit to his advances at a time when, according to her religious training and for sanitary reasons, the action was improper, and that thereupon plaintiff became abusive, tried to force defendant, and finally stated that he wished the ship on which she came to the United States had sunk with her. A cousin of defendant, with whom defendant was unacquainted, was called in an attempt to quiet defendant, and the cousin testified that she found defendant in a hysterical condition and, being unable to quiet her, was told by plaintiff’s kinspeople and by plaintiff to take her away. This the cousin did without taking defendant’s bag or belongings with her. Five days later plaintiff, having retained a lawyer, brought the present action to annul the marriage between the parties on account of the fraud of defendant in telling plaintiff prior to their marriage that she loved him.

In my opinion, the additional ground urged by plaintiff that defendant had married plaintiff for the sole purpose of evading the immigration restrictions imposed by this country was an afterthought, and that the evidence of plaintiff in support of such claim is unworthy of belief.

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Bluebook (online)
232 A.D. 172, 249 N.Y.S. 695, 1931 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feig-v-feig-nyappdiv-1931.