Lourie v. Melnick

146 A. 84, 128 Me. 148, 1929 Me. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 A. 84 (Lourie v. Melnick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lourie v. Melnick, 146 A. 84, 128 Me. 148, 1929 Me. LEXIS 73 (Me. 1929).

Opinion

Pattangall, J.

Petition under Sec. 11, Chap. 65, R. S. Dismissed below. Case comes forward on exceptions.

Jacob Melnick and Bessie R.Melnick were married June 15,1915. They lived together for three years, during which time two children were born to them, and then separated by mutual agreement as evidenced by a document which they subscribed.

On August 17, 1925, the husband brought a libel for divorce, charging his wife with utter desertion for the statutory period of three years and with cruel and abusive treatment, also praying for the custody of the minor children. The libel, in the regular course of proceedings, came on for hearing in November, 1925, the wife being represented by counsel. The presiding Justice was then informed that the wife was insane. The case was continued, provision being made for the support of the wife and children.

On May 12, 1926, the husband filed a petition in the Probate Court for Cumberland County, in which he represented his wife as insane, praying that she be committed to the State Insane Hospital ; and on the same day he, being a practising physician, filed a certificate to which he made oath that, after due inquiry and personal examination, it was his opinion that his wife was insane. Whether this certificate satisfied the requirements of Sec. 25, Chap. 145, or not is not the point; the certificate was filed. The certificate and the knowledge which it disclosed became of record. This petition was dismissed, the ground therefor not appearing.

No guardian ad litem, was appointed. On July 8, 1926, and on February 12, 1927, the case-was called up and in each instance after hearing evidence was continued, counsel for the wife appearing and urging the insanity of the libellee.

On April 20, 1927, the case was finally decided. Counsel still insisted upon the insanity of the wife, who all of this time had been resident of another state, is not shown by the record to have personally taken part in any of the proceedings and who was not even present in court at the time of the final hearing.

The presiding Justice found the libellee sane and that she had been sane during the entire period covering the three years immedi[150]*150ately preceding the filing of the libel and a divorce was granted on the ground of desertion. Exceptions were taken, and the case was in order for argument before the full bench on June 30, 1927, at which time it was dismissed for want of prosecution.

December 27, 1927, in the Probate Court of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, a guardian was appointed for the wife, she having been adjudged a person of unsound mind, and on January 5,1928, these proceedings were begun and hearing was had thereon before the same trial Judge who heard the original case. At the February term, 1928, the Justice dismissed this petition.

Such a petition is somewhat in the nature of a petition for review. Simpson v. Simpson, 119 Me., 17. Petitioner seeks to establish, in the words of the statute, that in the original proceedings justice failed by reason of' “fraud, accident, mistake or misfortune.” These words are a repetition of a like phrase in Paragraph vii, Sec. 1, Chap. 94, R. S., relating to petitions for review in civil cases.

The petition in the case at bar, so far as now relied upon, was based on the following allegations: (1) That Bessie R. Melnick was, at the time of the acts complained of in the libel for divorce and at the time of the trial thereof, of unsound mind. (2) That at the time she purported to answer and defend the libel, she was not legally competent to act without a guardian ad litem and one was not appointed. (3) That at the time of the final hearing on the libel, she was unable to be present by reason of physical illness and unable to instruct her counsel by reason of mental incapacity. (4) That her husband was aware of her condition but deceived the court concerning the same. (5) “That since the date of the hearing on said libel certain newly discovered evidence material to the issues involved in said trial has come to the attention of your petitioner which was not available or known to the libellee at the time of said trial, to wit: the testimony of certain attorneys-at-law, neighbors and other persons relating to the facts constituting the said alleged desertion and including certain material circumstances tending to prove that no such desertion took place or was contemplated by the said libellee.”

The exceptions, so far as they need to be considered here, are (1) to the exclusion of the testimony of Dr. Henry M'. Swift, an expert on mental diseases, as to an examination of the libellee made by him , [151]*151on .November 30, 1925, about the time of the first hearing on the divorce libel; (2) to the exclusion of evidence of the same character by Dr. Clement P. Wescott, an expert on mental diseases; (3) to the ruling of the presiding Justice, denying the petition for a new hearing.

The decree dismissing the petition states that “the issue of insanity was passed upon in the original hearing. Evidence was introduced, arguments made and after long and careful consideration I concluded that this petitioner, then the libellee, was sane; that a divorce should be granted and so decreed. And at this time, after hearing all testimony and consideration of same, I am of the same opinion.

“The allegation in the petition that a new trial should be granted because of newly discovered evidence (even if it be a cause) is not sustained. Petitioner is not within the rule. While it may be newly discovered by present attorneys, it must have been necessarily known by attorneys in the former proceedings but, if not known, is not sufficient to change the findings.”

In considering the exceptions, it must be kept in mind that the fact that the petition was heard before the same Justice who heard the original case does not in any way affect the rules of evidence. The issue involved was whether or not the judgment adverse to the petitioner’s Avard had been rendered by reason of “fraud, accident,mistake or misfortune” and that, therefore, “justice had failed.”

Petitioner’s case rests on two propositions: (1) that because of her mental condition during the entire period covered by the divorce proceedings including the spring and summer of 1927 and because of her physical illness in April of that year, Mrs. Melnick Avas unable to properly present her defense; and (2) that the divorce was procured by the fraud of her husband in deceiving the court both as to her mental condition and as to the real facts with regard to their separation; facts Avhich it is contended are inconsistent with a finding that she Avas guilty of desertion.

Her sanity for three years prior to August 17, 1925, the date of her husband’s libel, Avas in issue in the court below as was her sanity during the progress of the case, from the date of the libel to the date of the nisi prius decree.

These questions having been determined were not open under [152]*152this petition. The judgment of the trial court in these respects must stand, assuming that the record discloses evidence in its support, and whether or not such basis for the judgment exists is a question to be raised by exceptions, not by such a petition as this.

In these proceedings it is incumbent on petitioner to show that justice has failed, not because petitioner regards the findings of the court below as erroneous, but because of fraud, accident, mistake or misfortune.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 84, 128 Me. 148, 1929 Me. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lourie-v-melnick-me-1929.