Meldrum v. Meldrum

137 Misc. 364, 242 N.Y.S. 45, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1266
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 137 Misc. 364 (Meldrum v. Meldrum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meldrum v. Meldrum, 137 Misc. 364, 242 N.Y.S. 45, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1266 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Ross,

Official Referee. The parties were married in 1920; no children. In 1926 the husband and wife lived near Penn Yan; moved to Syracuse in December, 1926, where they lived until this action was commenced on April 8, 1929.

The plaintiff claims he first discovered evidence of his wife’s adultery in February, 1929, but had suspicions in 1926. (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 20.) The corespondent is forty years old; a married man; owns, or is employed in, a garage in Perm Yan. The plaintiff apparently is strong both physically and intellectually. The defendant is frail physically and of nervous temperament.

It is claimed that the adultery was committed about December 1, 1925, at the home of the parties near Penn Yan at a place called Bluff Point where they were living at the time. There is no dispute that the corespondent went to Bluff Point on the day in question in 1926 in a car owned and driven by the witness Allison; that the corespondent asked the witness Allison to stop; that he desired to look at a car; that the corespondent got out of the car and the witness Allison remained therein; that the corespondent went to the door or side porch of the bouse where the defendant lived, and was at the time, and stood for a moment at the door of the house; did not go in.

The following is an excerpt from Allison’s evidence: “ Q. And then what? A. Then he came back, I should say in a matter of a couple of minutes, just a short time and stepped out onto the [366]*366porch at the door again and then he came and got into the car.” (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 358.)

This witness fixes the time from the fact that he was getting ready to go to Florida.

The evidence of adultery rests upon a letter (Exhibit 1) written to her husband, dated March 28, 1929, at his request and mailed by him to himself (Stenographer’s Minutes, pp. 163, 164), in which the writer admitted having committed adultery with the corespondent three years before at the defendant’s home near Penn Yan. The defendant made similar admissions to her sister-in-law, the witness Ann Meldrum, and also to the process server, the witness Kinney D. Butcher.

The admissions to Butcher were in response to specific questions asked by him as to the details of her wrongdoing (Stenographer’s Minutes, pp. 58, 60), that she signed the statement, and that'the paper was read over to her and she was crying at the time. (See p. 81.) All of this is strongly suggestive that the defendant was following the instructions of the plaintiff.

The defendant made admissions to the witness Ann Meldrum. This was at a conversation had at the table in the house of the parties after the witness had learned of the trouble between them. The witness testifies as follows (p. 26): “ I said about this trouble and talk of separation and leaving, what does it mean? I said in New York there are just two reasons for such serious things. One is desertion and we must eliminate that, and the other is infidelity, and as Hugh [the plaintiff] is the one speaking of leaving, what is the answer? She [the defendant] said, ‘ I am guilty of infidelity.’

1 Well,’ I said, Maude, I am very, very sorry.’ I said, ' Have you met someone you care for more than you do for Hugh? ’ She said,

‘ No, Heavens, no.’ ‘ Well,’ I said, I can’t imagine a woman allowing such liberties with a man she cares nothing about.’ And she said, ‘ Well, that [naming the corespondent] thinks he owns every woman.’ ”

Testimony of defendant: Befendant testifies: That she had known the corespondent several years, but her only association with him was in 1918 when, her brother having gone into the military service, she desired to learn to drive the car which her brother had formerly driven. The garage man in Penn Yan sent the corespondent out to teach her, he being in the employ of the former. That she took three or four lessons. That on those occasions either one of her brothers or her mother was with her. That in Becember, 1926, the time the plaintiff alleges adultery was committed, the corespondent came to the house at Bluff Point where she and her husband resided, and it appears that she was there alone. That this was [367]*367in the daytime. That the corespondent told her he wanted to look at the old car and see if he might buy it for the parts. In her language, “ I told him where it was and he went and looked at it and returned and said he might make some use of it. That he would come Sunday and tell Hugh [the plaintiff] whether he would take it,” which he subsequently did. That he was there not to exceed fifteen minutes, and that the corespondent did not on that occasion come into the house, and the defendant specifically denies that she then or at any time committed adultery.

Further (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 155), that her husband went away in the morning saying that he was going to Rochester, and that he would be home at ten o’clock that night. This was in the latter part of February, 1929. That he did not return until the next morning, claiming that he had lost his train, and that the witness remained up all night. “ The next morning he would not speak to me and I asked him the reason and he said, That he couldn’t get along with me any longer,’ and I asked him why, and he said he couldn’t just seem to; that we couldn’t agree on anything and he wanted to get a separation. I said, ‘ Well, Hugh, why? ’ ‘ Because,’ he said, ' he couldn’t have children, couldn’t be happy without children in the home.’ ” (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 155.)

And she states again (p. 156) that he said on another occasion, “ I have got through living with you,” and that he had been to see a lawyer in regard to getting separation papers, and “ I said,1 Maybe it would be best to get separation papers,’ and it was agreed upon.”

And again subsequently at midnight they had another talk. “ I said, ‘ Hugh, why can’t we be happy? ’ (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 157.) He said,' Just for the reason that we can’t have children.’ And I said, ‘ Well, it is very strange that you should change the way you have in a short time,’ and I wrote the letter about which my sister-in-law [Mrs. Foltz] has testified. Q. And did he ask you to write? A. He asked me to write that I had relations "with the corespondent. * * * I told him I would not do it because it wasn’t so and he said I would do it and he kept at me and kept at me and he stood over me while this letter was written and told me to write it. * * * He said that the letter would have to contain that I had relations with the corespondent. * * * I said I wouldn’t write it because it wasn’t so and he said

I would have to write it in order to get a separation. * * *

I wrote that I had relations with the party but I wouldn’t tell who. Q. Didn't mention any names? A. I mentioned no names. Q. Just that you had relations? A. Yes. * * * Q. Now what did he say to you was the reason he wanted you to do that? A. Just so that he could get separation papers for us both. * * * [368]*368He talked to me hours up into the night before I wrote that letter and he told me that if I didn’t write that letter that he would commit suicide. * * * Well, I wrote it then by him standing over me making me write and telling me what to write. * * * I addressed it and he mailed it the next morning. * * * Addressed to himself at Brown, Lipe Gear Company. I saw him put it in the mail. On the corner — 154 South Avenue.”

That night they went out for a ride, and the witness says her husband said (p.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Misc. 364, 242 N.Y.S. 45, 1930 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meldrum-v-meldrum-nysupct-1930.