McLaughlin v. McLaughlin

107 A. 260, 90 N.J. Eq. 322, 5 Stock. 322, 1919 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 42
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 A. 260 (McLaughlin v. McLaughlin) 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
McLaughlin v. McLaughlin, 107 A. 260, 90 N.J. Eq. 322, 5 Stock. 322, 1919 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 42 (N.J. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Walker, Chancellor.

On October 28th, 1916, the petition in this canso was filed. It charged the defendant with having deserted the petitioner in September, 1912, ever since which time, and for more than two years then last past, the defendant had willfully, continuedlv and obstinately deserted the petitioner. The defendant being served with citation and certified copy of the petition, filed an answer on December 21st. 1916, in which he denied-the desertion charged. On December 23d, 1916, on motion of petitioner’s solicitor, and by convent of the solicitor of defendant, this cause [323]*323was referred to Hon. Joseph Thompson, advisory master, to hear for the chancellor and to report thereon and advise what order or decree should be made therein. The cause has since been pending but has never been brought to trial.

On October 30th, 1918, the petitioner commenced a new and independent -suit for divorce against the defendant by petition filed on that date, in which she alleged that in September, 1912, defendant commenced a course of cruel and abusive treatment toward petitioner and continued the same without provocation or just cause until she was compelled to cease cohabitation with him,- particularly, specifying defendant’s misconduct, and cruel acts.; wherefore, she alleged, that by the true intent and meaning of the statute in such case made and provided the defendant had ever since October 23d, 1916, and for more than two years then last past, willfully, continuedly and obstinately deserted her.

On March 18th, 1919, the petitioner gave to the defendant notice of a motion for an order to dismiss the above-entitled cause as of June 1st, 1918, and thereto attached an affidavit upon which the motion was based, the salient facts in which are that after the filing of the petition in this cause (the first petition) Mr. Bloom, counsel for the petitioner, who made the affidavit, learned that the petitioner had been mistaken in some of the facts given him, whereby the petition would not lie; and that the petitioner had caused a new petition to be filed (the second petition), alleging constructive desertion on the part of the defendant instead of actual desertion, as alleged in the first petition, and that, in answer, the defendant had set up the first petition being undisposed of, in bar of the second suit.

Just why the defendant’s notice is of an application to dismiss the first suit as of June 1st, 1918, I am unaware. The second petition, filed October 30th, 1918, alleges that petitioner was compelled by reason of the defendant’s extreme' cruelty to refuse to further cohabit with him; in other -words, that the desertion commenced on that date, which was two years and one week prior to the filing of the petition. If I should grant the order asked for and dismiss the first petition as of June 1st, 1918, then the [324]*324parties would have been living separate and apart during the pendency of a suit for divorce between them up to and within four months prior to the commencement-of the second suit, and, under the statute, the desertion must have been willful, continued and obstinate for an uninterrupted period of two years next before the filing of the petition. This brings me to the question in the ease, which is, whether, as the first suit is still pending, there could be any obstinate desertion by the defendant of the petitioner between the time of the filing of the first petition; on October 28th, 1916, and the present time. I presume that the date mentioned- — June 1st, 1918 — is a mistake, and that the petitioner desires to have the first petition dismissed as of some date anterior to two years last past, expecting there!)}'' to avoid prejudice to the second suit by. the pendency of the first one.

Counsel for the defendant resists the motion upon the ground that there could) be no desertion'by the defendant of the petitioner during the period in which a suit for divorce was pending against him instituted by the petitioner, and relies upon Weigel v. Weigel, 63 N. J. Eq. 677; affirmed on opinion below, 65 N. J. Eq. 398; Johnson v. Johnson, 65 N. J. Eq. 606, and von Bernuth v. von Bernuth, 76 N. J. Eq. 494.

In Weigel v. Weigel the defendant pleaded that- part of the time during which she was alleged to have deserted her husband was occupied by the pendency of her suit against him for divorce for constructive desertion, and that as she could not have cohabited with him pending that suit without condoning the offence, she alleged that the time occupied by her suit should not be counted as part of the desertion. In that case her contention was decided adversely to her, but upon another ground, namely, that her suit was not brought in good faith, but was a fraud on the court, on the law and on the defendant; that, however, is immaterial to the present inquiry. It will, nevertheless, be observed that in the Weigel Geese the contention that the time occupied by the prior divorce case between the same parties could not be computed as any part of the period of desertion alleged hv the petitioner in the then instant case, was made by the de[325]*325fondant, who was the petitioner in the former suit, and who alleged that she could not.have cohabited with her husband during the pendency of her own suit against him without condoning the alleged offence. And that is quite different from one married party filing a petition for divorce against the other spouse, for desertion, and, subsequently, filing another suit for the same cause of action while the former one is still pending, because the party in the first suit could answer denying guilt, and that matter of defence could be pleaded in the second suit as well as in the first one. In other words, a defendant charged with a matrimonial offence can hardly say that he or she cannot safely cohabit with the other one, when, in fact, the other party is not charged by the defendant with any dereliction which would entitle the defendant to a divorce. In still other words, a defendant who is complained against and asserts his innocence has nothing to condone, condonation being a privilege of the injured "party, not of the injurer. And if the defendant were guilty he would not be prejudiced by the former suit in which he was also a defendant.

In the domain of reason it may well bo that the first suit pending between the parties in the case sub jiulice ought to" be no bar to the prosecution of the second suit; but Vice-Chancellor Grey, in the case of Johnson v. Johnson, appears to have decided otherwise. There the petitioner brought suit for divorce against his wife for desertion, and it appeared that each party had previously sued the other for dissolution of the marriage tie, the petitioner for adultery against the defendant, which petition was dismissed, and the defendant for desertion against the petitioner, which also was dismissed; but both of these cases were pending during a portion of the time that the petitioner in the then instant case urged before the court was the period of desertion for which he was entitled to a divorce, and Vice-Chancellor Grey observed (at p. 60S) that no portion of the time during which either of the previous suits between the parties were pending could be comparted in making up the, term of the two years during which the desertion of the defendant must have been willful, continued and obstinate to entitle him to a decree.

[326]*326In von Bernuth v. von Bernuth

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Bluebook (online)
107 A. 260, 90 N.J. Eq. 322, 5 Stock. 322, 1919 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-mclaughlin-njch-1919.