Helbig v. Helbig

143 A. 338, 103 N.J. Eq. 348, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 A. 338 (Helbig v. Helbig) 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
Helbig v. Helbig, 143 A. 338, 103 N.J. Eq. 348, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 661 (N.J. 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the court of chancery vacating a decree nisi in favor of the wife for an absolute- *349 divorce, and dismissing the bill upon which that decree had been entered. The ground for the order appealed from was alleged adultery by the wife four days before the six months’ nisi period had elapsed.

The husband had deserted his wife and their son (then about twelve years old), and had willfully and obstinately continued such desertion for a period of two years, whereupon the wife, on September 30th, 1926, upon her petition, was awarded a decree nisi for an absolute divorce. At this time and thereafter she and her son, and a Mrs. Davidson, and the latter’s two sons, ten and twelve years old, respectively, were living in apartments in a three-family house, 189 Central avenue, East Orange, which the two mothers had rented together, contributing equally to the rent and to the joint expenses of the establishment. Here they were sometimes visited by two single young men,- of about their ages, who drove out from Passaic, and the four went to movies together and sometimes to public supper and dance resorts afterward. On the night of March 26th, 1927, they drove out to the Colonial Inn at Singac, where they danced and had sandwiches, and leaving about one o’clock arrived at the women’s home at two a. m. of the 27th. According to the testimony of these four, it was a cold night and the men were invited to come in and have hot coffee in the women’s apartments before starting on their ten-mile drive to Passaic. A few minutes later the apartments were raided by'the husband’s sister and her nephew, and four detectives employed in behalf of the husband to secure evidence against his wife. The detectives forcibly broke open the locked street door, shattering the large glass with a hammer, and then at the head of the first flight of stairs burst the upper panel of and broke open the locked door of these women’s apartments, which were on that floor. The two detectives who testified, and the husband’s sister, say that they found Mrs. Davidson and one of the young men, Rinzler, undressed and in bed together in the bedroom (which was the room broken into), and Mrs. Helbig (the appellant) and the other young man, Alberts, getting up from a sitting position on a divan or couch in the living room, which communicated with the bed *350 room by an eight-feet wide open doorsyay, and that Mrs. Helbig had a towel in her hand, which'the detectives took away from her against her violent protest; that Alberts had his coat and overcoat off and his vest unbuttoned while Mrs. Helbig was fully dressed; that the entire flat (which they say had been lighted up for about five minutes after the Helbig party returned and went in, and then the lights turned off) was in utter darkness at the time of the raid, the raiders using flashlights to see what they saw, until, after a minute or so of delay while hunting the switch, the lights were turned on by one of the detectives; and that the detectives captured the towel and Rinzler’s vest and also Rinzler’s trousers, which latter, however, they did not produce at the trial, saying that they returned them to Rinzler within a few moments after their capture, because Rinzler requested it with much earnestness, and they felt rather sorry for him, as it was a cold night and he had ten miles to drive. We can understand Rinzler’s earnestness, but the compassion of the detectives who were hired to procure just such highly suggestive evidence does not seem so convincing.

On the other hand, Mrs. Helbig and Mrs. Davidson and the two young men denied the important parts of this story absolutely. According to their testimony there was a light on the radio between the two rooms, also one in the kitchen, all the time, and, besides, a large arc street light directly in front of the apartments and level with their windows, lighted the rooms thoroughly; that the shades to the windows were not drawn clown; that Mrs. Iielbig and Mrs. Davidson were in the kitchen making the coffee which the young men had been invited in to take before their cold ride home, and the young men were in the front room, when they heard the crash of glass of the street door at the foot of the stairs with which the raid started, and they all assembled in the front room to see what was happening; that when the appartment door was burst open they were all so standing; that neither Mrs. Davidson nor Mr. Rinzler had been on the bed, nor had either Hrs. Helbig nor Mrs. Alberts been on the divan or couch; that they were all fully dressed except Mr. Rinzler, who was in his shirt sleeves, and that no adultery or other *351 improper conduct had taken place. Mr. Rinzler said that when they came upstairs and the women went into the kitchen he had to go into the bathroom and remove his coat and vest, and that he laid them on a chair beside the bathroom door, because there was not a chair or hook upon which to hang them in the bathroom, and when the noise of crashing glass occurred he came out of the bathroom as he was and joined the others without remembering that he was in his shirt sleeves, and that one of the detectives picked up his vest from the chair where he laid it. He said (and the others corroborated him) that he did not remove his trousers at all, and, of course, did not put them on (as the detectives testified he did) in the presence of the whole group, including Mrs. Helbig’s fourteen-year-old son, Milton, who had been awakened by the crashing glass and had come into the room while the detectives, as they testified, were still in possession of the trousers. The boy, Milton, also testified that the testimony of the detectives about Mr. Rinzler’s trousers was untrue. As to the towel, Mrs. Helbig, after describing the raid into the apartments, was asked: Q. “Now, do you remember anything about a towel there?” A. “Yes, I knew that the towel was hanging over the bed, and the men (the detectives) were there quite a while standing around, didn’t know what to do, when Mr. Corbally (the head detective) noticed the towel on the bed and he said, “Look at this,” and he handed it to one of his operators, and I took it out of his hand, as I resented his taking my property.”

Upon the close of the testimony the learned vice-chancellor delivered himself orally as follows: “There is no use in repetition. This is not — it is not a decree for divorce. This is a motion to vacate a decree nisi, and the testimony in support of such an intervening motion is not governed by the same strict rules as possibly might apply to a case for divorce on the ground of adultery. But a decree nisi means that a decree of divorce will be granted within six months— as it used to be — provided nothing arises in the meantime which might prevent such a decree from operating.

“It seems to me that this performance at two o’clock in the morning is such an incident as will fully justify me in *352 advising a decree vacating the decree nisi, bnt, of course, that does not in any way signify that the vice-chancellor to whom the new divorce case is referred, if one is brought, will decide that adultery has been actually proven.

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Related

Loeb v. Loeb
235 A.2d 20 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1967)
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191 A.2d 763 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1963)
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144 A. 333 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 A. 338, 103 N.J. Eq. 348, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helbig-v-helbig-nj-1928.