Marsh v. Marsh

13 N.J. Eq. 281
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 N.J. Eq. 281 (Marsh v. Marsh) 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
Marsh v. Marsh, 13 N.J. Eq. 281 (N.J. Ct. App. 1861).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

On the 6th of January, 1858, the complainant filed his petition in this court for a divorce on the ground of adultery. The adultery is alleged to have been committed in the months of March, April, May, June, and July, 1857, and especially with one J. H. G. Ilaines, on the 23d day of March, 1857, at the boarding house of the petitioner, in the city of Newark.

The defendant, by her answer, filed on the 15th of February, 1858, denies the charge preferred against her; and further, by way of defence, the answer states that for some time past she has been boarding at No. 3 Fair street, in the city of Newark, where the defendant has also boarded, and still boards, as the wife of the said petitioner, having occupied, and still occupying,' the same apartment and bed with the said petitioner, and where this defendant and the said petitioner have and still do in all things maintain the relations and intercourse of husband and wife.

[282]*282Two questions are made by the pleadings and involved in t-he evidence.

1. Is tbe offence charged proved to have been committed?

2. Has the offence been condoned ?

Before considering the evidence upon the question of the.guilt or innocence of the defendant of the offence charged, it will be proper to consider the second question, viz. whether the offence, if committed, has been condoned ; for if there has been a condonation of the alleged offence the complainant is not in a position to. enforce his remedy; and so far as the result of this suit is concerned, it is a matter of indifference whether the defendant be guilty or innocent of the crime charged.

It is a familiar principle, that a divorce cannot be had on account of adultery if the husband has been reconciled to his wife after the adultery committed by her, or knowingly retain her after she has committed adultery.

Condonation may be implied if the husband, after reasonable knowledge of the infidelity of his wife, continues to. admit her as the partner of his bed. Poynter on Mar. and Divorce 232.

In support of this principle, the author cites from Quqhton’s Ordo Judiciovum, tit. 214, the following passage. Though the party be proved guilty as alleged, yet if the complainant, before suit instituted, had notice, at least probable, of the crime committed and charged, and notwithstanding afterwards had carnal knowledge with the guilty party, the complainant shall have no decree of divorce, because by this it is said the complainant has forgiven and condoned the injury.

Reasonable knowledge may be said to. have been had when information of a fact is given by credible persons, speaking of their own knowledge particularly, if the same facts be afterwards proved and they become instrumental in the proof. Poynter on Mar. and Div. 232; Dobbyn v. Dobbyn, Ibid 233, note z.

[283]*283If the party accused of adultery shall prove that the accuser, before the commencement of the suit, had probable knowledge of the crime committed, and yet after-wards cohabited with the accused, in such case the accuser shall not obtain a sentence of divorce for the crime that shall be supposed to have been remitted. Shelford on Mar. and Div. 445; Bishop on Mar. and Div. § 359.

I have always understood (says. Poet. Lrashington, in delivering judgment in Dillon v. Dillon,) the legal principle to be this, that when a husband has received information respecting his wife’s guilt, and can place such reliance on the truth of it as to act on it, although he is not bound’ to remove his wife out of his house, he ought to cease marital cohabitation with her. 3 Curteis 86.

The adultery is charged in the complainant’s petition to have taken place from March to July, 1857, and the act more especially- relied on is charged to have occurred on the 23d of March, 1857. That occurrence is proved to have taken place upon that day. If the witness speak truly, it affords the most material evidence of the defendant’s guilt. Yet the only witness by whom that occurrence is proved to have taken place testifies that she told the complainant all that she saw soon after it occurred. She is sure that she told him before July 4th, 1857. Other circumstances, which occurred about the same time, and which are relied upon as. corroborative evidence of the defendant’s guilt, occurred at the boarding house where the parties and many others lived. They were not concealed, but many of them, in the language of one of the witnesses of the complainant, known to all the house.

It appears, then, as early as July 4th, 1857, the petitioner had not only probable knowledge, but if bis witness is truthful, certain information of his wife’s guilt. lie had the very information from the lips of the same witness upon which he asks this court to pronounce his wife [284]*284guilty. He, at least, must be presumed to have deemed the witness credible, (for he has placed her on the stand) to sustain his case.

It is the very case stated in the books already cited as showing reasonable knowledge, viz. information of the fact given by a credible person speaking of her own knowledge, and the same fact afterwards proved and the informer becoming instrumental in the proof. It was natural to suppose, as was said by Doct. Jenner, in Dobbyn v. Dobbyn, that after the information he had received, if he entertained any doubt of his wife’s guilt, he would have addressed himself to the persons who resided in the same house with his wife, or to those who visited her. All the facts appear to have been fully within his reach.

And yet the petition for his divorce was not filed until the 8th of January, 1858, six months after he received the information. During all this time he continued to cohabit with his wife as if nothing had occurred; and not only so, but what seems the most remarkable feature of the case, the evidence shows conclusively that the cohabitation continued up to the month of March, 1857, two months at least after the filing of the petition. The defendant, by her answer, filed on the 15th February, 1857, states that she and her husband were then occupying the same bed and cohabiting as man and wife. No less than four witnesses state the fact, that the parties continued together at their boarding house until the month of March, 1857. They occupied two rooms on the second floor. The petitioner occupied the front room as his office. The back room was his bed-room. It contained but one bed, and was occupied by both husband and wife. The proprietor of the house and his wife both state these facts, though they did not see the parties go to bed they both suppose that Mrs. Marsh slept in the bed in her husband’s bed-room. Another witness, who lived in the house, says, as long as they were there together they occupied [285]*285the same sleeping room; I never knew any difíbrence; I suppose they did; there was no more than one bed in it. Another witness, a female domestic in the family, says, I was with Mrs. Thompson for five months; was there when Mrs. Marsh left. Up to the time of Mrs. Marsh’s leaving, Doctor and Mrs. Marsh occupied the same bedchamber and the same bed.

The general presumption is that husband and wife living in the same house live on terms of matrimonial cohabitation. Beeby v. Beeby, 1 Haggard’s Ec. R. 789; Shelford on Mar. and Div. 488.

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Related

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110 A.2d 57 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1954)
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72 A.2d 412 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.J. Eq. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-marsh-njch-1861.