Maxwell v. Maxwell

131 A. 215, 98 N.J. Eq. 493, 13 Stock. 493, 1925 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 15
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 131 A. 215 (Maxwell v. Maxwell) 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
Maxwell v. Maxwell, 131 A. 215, 98 N.J. Eq. 493, 13 Stock. 493, 1925 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 15 (N.J. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

The bill in this cause is filed by Gertrude E. Maxwell against her husband, William T. Maxwell, for maintenance under section 26 of the Divorce act. The defendant answered, *Page 494 admitting going through a form of ceremony of marriage with the complainant, and, by a cross-petition, charges that the complainant entered into a common law marriage with one Charles McClellan, and lived with him as his wife for many years, and that there is one child born of the union; that Charles McClellan was living at the time of the supposed marriage to the defendant, and is still living, and that the said marriage has not been dissolved or annulled, but was then subsisting, and that at the time of the marriage to defendant she held herself out to be the widow of Charles McClellan, and that the said child was the issue of such marriage.

The answer of the complainant to this cross-petition denies the common law marriage, as well as the facts alleged in the cross-petition, which tended to show the same, and says that at the time of the marriage said defendant had full knowledge of the fact that, although she had a child born to her, she was unmarried.

The parties in this suit were married at Ridgefield, Bergen county, New Jersey, on November 28th, 1923. In the certificate and record of marriage the complainant's maiden name was given as Gertrude Nadratoska. The defendant gave his age as thirty-five years, and the complainant gave hers at twenty-five years. In one column are the words "Single, Widowed or Divorced," and in this column the words "Single" and "Divorced" are erased as to the defendant, and the words "Widowed" and "Divorced" erased as to the complainant; thus the representation contained in the certificate is that the defendant was a widower and the complainant single. Under the column "No. of Marriage" the certificate shows that this was the second marriage of the defendant and the first marriage of the complainant. The answer of the defendant says that the defendant had four children by his previous marriage, one of whom was married and three were under the age of twenty-one years, and that the complainant had one child, a boy of six years of age.

It seems that some dissension arose between the parties concerning the treatment of the defendant's children by the *Page 495 complainant, which resulted in their separation on January 8th, 1924, less than two months after the marriage, the defendant taking his children with him. Afterwards, learning, as he says, of the common law marriage between the complainant and McClellan, he says he took his "stuff" away January 18th, 1924, and did not return to her. After the separation and before the trial a child was born to the complainant and defendant.

When the case was opened it was considered wise to try the annulment case first, as the result of such trial might dispose of the case for separate maintenance, at least as to the complainant, and the case was thereupon proceeded with on the defendant's cross-petition for annulment.

The facts are as follows: On August 8th, 1918, a child, Charles Wilfred McClellan, was born to the complainant and Charles W. McClellan. The attending physician was Dr. Charles H. Fink. The mother's age in the certificate of birth was given as twenty years, and the father's thirty-three. The complainant was delivered at the home of her mother, 437 Pacific avenue, Jersey City. There was present at the time the father, Charles McClellan. This is testified to by McClellan, but is denied by the complainant. The residence of McClellan was at 267 Washington street, Jersey City, at which place his family owned a saloon, and he acted as bartender there, and the family, including McClellan, lived in the floors above the saloon. Thus, McClellan and the complainant lived about a mile and a half apart. At the time of the birth of this child McClellan was a married man, having been married to Mabel Withers at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on November 5th, 1913, who divorced him on August 12th, 1918, in the court of common pleas of Dauphin county, Pennsylvania, four days after the birth of the child, Charles Wilfred McClellan. Prior to the birth of this child the complainant held herself out as being married to McClellan. After the child was born she visited McClellan at the saloon in Washington street four or five times a week, taking the baby with her, and seemed to be on friendly relations with McClellan, his mother and the members of his family. *Page 496

The testimony of McClellan was taken in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, prior to the hearing, and he testified that she, at the time the child was born, asked him to marry her, and he told her he would later on. He did not tell her, however, that he was then the husband of another woman, and his story throughout is to the effect that he promised her, from time to time, to marry her by a ceremonious marriage, or otherwise.

The evidence is overwhelming that, during the time from the birth of the child down to the time McClellan left the city and went to Pennsylvania, in June, 1920, she held herself out to the community in the neighborhood of 267 Washington street and 437 Pacific avenue, Jersey City, as the wife of McClellan, and was known by the neighbors as being such.

After the child was born the complainant made a complaint to the overseer of the poor in Jersey City that her husband, Charles McClellan, was not supporting her and her child, and the poor master fixed an appointment and wrote to McClellan to meet him with his wife. The parties appeared before him, and the poor master directed him to pay $10 a week. The poor master had several assistants who sometimes interviewed the applicants, and both the poor master and his assistants made entries in a book, which was their record of what transpired at the meetings, and, while the poor master knew, in a general way, the history of this case, and saw the parties frequently, it would appear that he did not, in every instance, attend to these parties when they came to his office. On being examined as to the dates when his record shows that he handled their case, he found that his name appeared only as to the examinations on June 5th, June 8th and June 28th, 1920. He says that McClellan and Mrs. Maxwell appeared on June 8th, 1920, and that, on that occasion, "the two of them called at my office in Bright street, and they told me they were going to look for rooms and get away from both parties [that is, the relations]; that they thought they could get along better together if they got away from both sides." I have ignored the testimony of the poor *Page 497 master as to what transpired on other occasions than June 5th, June 8th and June 28th, because he, apparently, made no record of it. On June 30th, 1920, the complainant called at the office of the poor master and saw Mr. Gately, a clerk of the poor master, and she said to him that "her husband was at Harrisburg, and that she had a warrant issued June 29th, 1920, from Judge Sullivan's court; she said he ran away on Monday to Harrisburg." On June 29th, 1920, she went with John Eggers, a detective, to the prosecutor's office with the warrant for McClellan, to have him extradited. She was turned over to one of the prosecutors. Nothing further was done.

On September 16th, 1919, shortly after the birth of the child, complainant "of No.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Estate of Thompson
346 A.2d 442 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1975)
Dunn v. O'Day
16 A.2d 195 (New Jersey Department of Labor Workmen's Compensation Bureau, 1940)
Suozzo v. Suozzo
1 A.2d 930 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1938)
Richard v. Richard
1935 OK 436 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Cooper v. Cooper
168 A. 153 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 A. 215, 98 N.J. Eq. 493, 13 Stock. 493, 1925 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-maxwell-njch-1925.