Minichello v. Minichello

51 A.2d 210, 139 N.J. Eq. 464, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 10, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 51 A.2d 210 (Minichello v. Minichello) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minichello v. Minichello, 51 A.2d 210, 139 N.J. Eq. 464, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 466 (N.J. 1947).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wells, J.

This is an appeal by a husband from a decree dismissing a petition for divorce filed by him December 8th, 1944, against his wife on the grounds of her desertion on May 19th, 1939. The wife filed an answer wherein she denied deserting her husband and alleged that he had deliberately and willfully *465 deserted her in May, 1939, and had “thereafter made every effort to remain away from her” and had “at no time made any sincere offer for her return,” and had instituted several suits thereafter against her “manifesting his strong desire to dissolve the bonds of matrimony existing between them.”

The only prayer for relief by the wife is that the petition filed against her be dismissed with costs.

The case was tried by Advisory Master Campbell, to whom it had been referred, and he, at the conclusion of the husband’s case, without hearing the wife’s defense, orally expressed his views to the effect that the wife’s refusal to accompany her husband to and reside with him in another home may have been willful and continuous, but it was not obstinate.

With this we are in accord.

The parties were married September 29th, 1936, and both have continuously lived in the State of New Jersey ever since. At the time of the marriage the husband had seven children by his first wife, three of whom were over 21, and the others were 19, 17, 15 and 8 years of age, respectively. The husband testified that he had known his wife only “a couple months” before the marriage, and during the time she had visited his and met his family at Emerson, New Jersey, where he lived with five of his children, and that during this visit he had a conversation with his intended wife to the effect that upon their marriage he and his children, presumably referring to the five, were to live with them in the wife’s four-room apartment in Garfield, New Jersey. The wife did the cooking and household work, and, according to the husband, for one’year and eight months they all got along well together until he discovered that the wife was buying food at his expense and giving some of it to her sister, who lived in the upstairs apartment. He said that in 1938, upon his wife’s refusing to stop this practice, he and his children left the wife in the Garfield apartment and went to Passaic where they occupied rooms on Summer Street. Within two weeks, the wife, Avho had not heard from him since he left, sought him out and told him she wanted to live with him again, and she went to *466 Passaic and rejoined her husband and his family. They lived together there for some time when, at the tearful entreaties of the wife, he says he moved back to the wife’s apartment in Garfield, taking his children with him; but he says that the wife resumed the practice of taking his food upstairs to her sister, and he told her that this time he was going to move and that he had rooms in an apartment at 187 Grove Street, Passaic. He said that he asked her to come over and look at them. She refused to do so, and on May 18th, 1939, he and his children moved back to Passaic and have lived there ever since. The husband says that, on the day of the moving, after he had loaded his furniture on the van he invited his wife in the presence of two witnesses, whom he had requested to be present, to “come along and live with us.” The substance of the testimony of the two witnesses was that the husband did ask the wife to go with him and his family to Passaic and she declined, giving as a reason that she couldn’t live with the older children, who were the cause of their trouble. Both witnesses said the husband showed no signs of affection for his wife. His invitation was manifestly perfunctory and for evidential purposes.

Prom this time the husband and wife lived separate and apart and have had no marital relations.

The husband at first denied that there was any friction between the wife and children, but on cross-examination he admitted he knew his wife and his daughter, Helen, who was about 16 at the time of the marriage, did not get along, that they had had a fight in which the wife threw a coffee pot at Helen and received a black eye, and that Helen had the wife arrested and brought before the police court.

Helen said that friction arose about three and a half to four months after the marriage; that there were quarrels, arguments and constant bickering on account of the children, who, the wife complained, made the conditions unlivable. The husband said that he always took the children’s side.

On May 19th, 1939, the day following the moving to Passaic, Helen, at her father’s dictation, sent a registered letter to the wife beginning: “Dear Mrs. Minichello.” He and the *467 family had always called her “Fancy.” The husband says he wrote her a nice letter, but it was returned unopened. He did not offer it in evidence.

However, assuming, but not deciding, that the conduct-of the wife constituted desertion on her part, we are confronted with two questions. First, did he sincerely seek her return, and second, if not, were the facts and circumstances such as to justify him in failing to make an effort to bring about a reconciliation. In other words, was the desertion obstinate? Was it against the husband’s wishes? We think not.

As was said by this court in Baxter v. Baxter, 101 N. J. Eq. 236:

“The rule in cases of this kind has been settled in a number of our decisions, a leading authority being Hall v. Hall, 60 N. J. Eq. 469, where it was said: “That a desertion, in order to be obstinate, must be persisted in against the willingness of the injured party to have it concluded is declared by all our cases; and, ordinarily, when the husband, has, by his conduct toward his wife, contributed in any degree to her original desertion, the law requires that he should evidence that willingness by making such advances or concessions to his wife as might he reasonably expected to induce her to return to him. (Citing cases.)’”

Mr. Justice Gummere (later Chief-Justice) who delivered the opinion in the Hall Case, from which the above rule was quoted, stated the. following exception to that rule:

“But the law does not impose this duty upon the husband in every ease, arbitrarily, and without regard to the facts and circumstances by which it is surrounded. The husband is bound to make such advances and concessions only when there is reasonable ground to suppose that such action on his part will terminate the wife’s desertion. Where it is manifest from the circumstances under which the desertion took place or from her temper and disposition, or from any other fact in the case that honest effort on the husband’s part to. terminate the separation would be unavailing, or, if successful in bringing the desertion to an end, would be so only temporarily, the duty of making it does not exist. (Citing eases.) The burden rests upon the husband of showing the futility of *468

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Related

Cole v. Cole
104 A.2d 866 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1954)
Zieper v. Zieper
96 A.2d 769 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
51 A.2d 210, 139 N.J. Eq. 464, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minichello-v-minichello-nj-1947.