James v. James

8 N.E.2d 777, 297 Mass. 254, 1937 Mass. LEXIS 775
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 24, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 N.E.2d 777 (James v. James) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. James, 8 N.E.2d 777, 297 Mass. 254, 1937 Mass. LEXIS 775 (Mass. 1937).

Opinion

Rugg, C.J.

This is an appeal from a decree of a probate court allowing the motion of the libellee to dismiss a libel for divorce. The libel was filed on December 2, 1935. As amended, it was therein alleged that the libellee committed adultery at Moultonboro, New Hampshire, with a named man on September 29, 1931, and at divers other unspecified times and places. The answer of the libellee contained a denial of wrongdoing on her part, specification of several grounds of recrimination, including a charge that the libellant had contracted gross and confirmed habits of intoxication, and an averment that all matters alleged in the libel had been adjudicated in a former trial in the same court between the same parties. The libellee also filed a motion to dismiss the libel, assigning as causes (1) that the alleged adultery took place prior to the date of a former libel in the same court by the present libellant against the libellee charging adultery on the same date and at the same place, which was dismissed after a full hearing; (2) that the same charge of adultery was alleged in a former libel in the same court by and between the same parties and after a full hearing was dismissed; (3) that all matters and things set forth in the libel had been adjudicated by a former decree.

“A stenographer was appointed to take the evidence,, and the case was heard on statement of counsel and documentary evidence consisting of the record in the present divorce action and the records of former proceedings” between the same parties. The trial judge made a report of material facts found by him in substance as follows: The former libel was filed on September 6, 1934, and after full hearing was dismissed on February 12, 1935. No appeal was taken from that decree. In that libel as amended it was alleged that the libellee at Moultonboro, New Hampshire, and at other places and on dates unknown committed adultery with a person unknown. An answer was filed averring among other matters that the libellant had contracted gross and confirmed habits of intoxication. That case proceeded to trial before the same judge who heard the present libel. The person now alleged to be the co[256]*256respondent was summoned by the libellant as a witness but was not called to testify. The owners of the Moultonboro Inn were called as witnesses by the libellant and testified with relation to the visit of the libellee on September 28, 1931, with two other women and two men, one of whom was the corespondent, at the time when the adultery was alleged to have been committed. Their evidence was taken as to what took place during the stay of these five persons at the Inn at that time. No other witnesses testified touching the alleged adultery except that the libellee gave evidence in her own behalf. In September, 1934, the libellee filed in the same court a petition for separate support against her husband, which at her request was dismissed without prejudice. In that petition, in October, 1934, the libellant filed interrogatories touching the Moultonboro incident to be answered by the libellee. In her answers, which were filed on November 2, 1934, she stated that she had gone to Moultonboro, New Hampshire, on September 28, 1931, and stayed at the Moultonboro Inn until about 11: 30 p.m., where she had dinner, and gave the names and addresses of the two women and two men who accompanied her, among whom was the present corespondent. The trial judge further reports that the "libellant, in the hearing on the present motion to dismiss, offered to prove that while the adultery is alleged to have taken place on the same general occasion and in the same town, the evidence will show that it was committed in the early morning of September 29, 1931, in some place in Moultonboro, N. H., after the persons concerned and their companions left the Inn, but in exactly what dwelling in said Moultonboro, he is unable to specify. The witnesses he expects to prove his case by are the members of the same party which visited the Moultonboro Inn on the occasion in question, of whom Mrs. James was one. ... It thus appears that more than four months before the hearing and decree denying the former libel, the libellant was in possession of the exact date of Mrs. James’ visit and stay in Moultonboro, and of all the names and addresses of those who accompanied her on that visit, and through whom he [257]*257now offers to prove an adultery on the part of Mrs. James during said visit, although at the hearing of the formal [former] libel, this evidence was available to him but not offered by him. The only witnesses called at the trial of that libel to sustain the allegation of adultery, were the owners of the Inn at Moultonboro where the visitors, here referred to, had stayed from about 5 p.m. to 11.30 p.m. on said September 28, 1931.” During the hearing on the present libel, the pleadings in the earlier libel were before the trial judge and counsel. The trial judge stated that at that earlier hearing he found that the libellant “had acquired gross and confirmed habits of intoxication which was a bar to his libel for divorce.” The trial judge found in conclusion that “there is no evidence now to be offered on the part of the libellant that was not available to him by the exercise of ordinary diligence at the trial of the former libel.” He ruled that the decree dismissing the former libel after full hearing on the merits adjudicated against the libellant every issue raised and decided in the earlier libel and also every issue that could have been raised and decided therein. As a result, the plea of former adjudication was sustained and a decree was entered allowing the motion of the libellee to dismiss the present libel.

The doctrine of res judicata is applicable to libels for divorce as well as to other proceedings. Therefore, an adjudication on the merits in an earlier libel for divorce is a bar, as to every issue which in fact was or in law might have been litigated therein, to a later proceeding upon the same cause between the same parties. Wight v. Wight, 272 Mass. 154, 156. Fera v. Fera, 98 Mass. 155. Thurston v. Thurston, 99 Mass. 39. Lewis v. Lewis, 106 Mass. 309. Edgerly v. Edgerly, 112 Mass. 53. It has been held that a husband whose libel for divorce on the ground of desertion has been dismissed because the cause assigned was not proved cannot maintain a subsequent libel on the ground of an adultery which had been committed and was known to him at the time of the first libel. Bartlett v. Bartlett, 113 Mass. 312. The simple dismissal of the earlier libel omitting the words “without prejudice” purports to be a [258]*258final judgment barring subsequent proceedings upon the cause of action set out in the libel. Roach v. Roach, 190 Mass. 253. Lewis v. Lewis, 106 Mass. 309.

The inference from the facts disclosed on the present record seems irresistible that the instant libel is founded upon the identical act of adultery which was the basis of the first libel. There is now no contention that any act of adultery was committed by the libellee at the Moultonboro Inn on September 28, 1931. The adultery is alleged to have been committed with the same person and at the same place as that on which the earlier libel was founded and tried. The difference in date appears to be not more than the two or three hours between very late in the evening of September 28 and the early morning of September 29, 1931. The facts afford no justification for the deduction as a matter of common sense that the same act of adultery was not charged in each libel.

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22 N.E.2d 6 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.E.2d 777, 297 Mass. 254, 1937 Mass. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-james-mass-1937.