Moller v. . Moller

22 N.E. 169, 115 N.Y. 466, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 207, 70 Sickels 466, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1227
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 169 (Moller v. . Moller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moller v. . Moller, 22 N.E. 169, 115 N.Y. 466, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 207, 70 Sickels 466, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1227 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Earl, J.

We agree with the learned judges of the General Term in their low estimate of the value in divorce cases of the evidence of ¡Di’ostitutes and jnivate detectives. The courts ' have come to regard the uncorroborated evidence of such witnesses as insufficient to break the bonds of matrimony. (Sopwith v. Sopwith, 4 Sw. & Tr. 246; Ginger v. Ginger, L. R., 1 P. & D. 38; Banta v. Banta, 3 Edw. Ch. 295; Turney v. Turney, 4 id. 566; Platt v. Platt, 5 Daly, 295 ; Anonymous, 5 Robt. 611.) The consequences which follow a judgment of divorce are so serious and momentous that such a judgment should not be granted without the evidence which Burnishes the basis therefor, is, after very careful scrutiny, satisfactory and such as can command the confidence of a careful, prudent and cautious judge. But the illicit amours of faithless husbands and wives are usually clandestine, and their wicked paths are hidden from public observation; and hence courts must not be duped, and they must take such evidence as the nature of the case permits, circumstantial, direct or positive, and bringing to bear upon it the experiences and observations of life, and thus weighing it with prudence and care, give effect to its just preponderance.

Applying these rules we are constrained to differ from the learned General Term as to the force of the evidence in this case. All the facts must be grouped around the central figure, Lotta Forbes, with whom the defendant has been found to have committed adultery. She is an acknowledged prostitute, and testified that the defendant committed adultery with her, *469 besides other times, in the evening .of the 28th day of November, 1885, in the third story front-room of No. 48 West Twenty-sixth street, after which he accompanied her to Koster & Bial’s place of amusement. It is not needful to criticise her evidence or to call particular attention to any portion thereof. It is sufficient to say that, if uncorroborated, she would be unworthy of credit.

George S. Chase, a private detective, employed on behalf of the plaintiff to watch the conduct and movements of the defendant, testified that in the evening of November twenty-eighth, he saw the defendant enter the house No. 48; that he watched from the opposite side of the street, and saw Mm, soon after entering the house, appear with a woman, whom he identified upon the trial as Lotta Forbes, in the third story front-room when she lit the light and pulled down the window shades; that he remained there aboutthree-quarters of an hour and then came out of the house and accompanied her to Koster & Bial’s. There is much in the character, position and evidence of Chase to discredit him; and if Lotta Forbes’ evidence was corroborated only by his, the case for the plaintiff would still, in our opinion, lack that strength which would justify a judgment in her favor. But there is much corroboration of the evidence of these two witnesses to which we will now call attention. William S. Chase, a brother of the detective, on the twenty-eighth day of November met him near Twenty-sixth street, and at his request went with him to No. 48 and then saw the defendant enter that house, appear in the third story front room with Lotta Forbes, and after remaining there about half an hour leave with her and go to Koster & Bial’s, as testified to by the detective. This witness was in no way impeached, and no doubt whatever is cast upon his story, except by the singular coincidence that he met his brother, without any prior appointment, at the particular time when he could be a convenient support to him in the evidence which he was expected to furnish. Alice Brooks, a colored washerwoman, testified that in the latter part of November,' .1885, she saw the defendant in the third story front-room *470 of Ho. 48, then unquestionably occupied by Lotta Forbes,, and that he gave a woman, who was then with him, $3.50 to pay her washing bill, and that she saw his photograph on the mantel-piece in the same room on the next day. It is true-that she says that woman’s name was Annie De Forest, but the description which she gives of her corresponds with that of Lotta Forbes, and no one by the name of- Annie De Forest occupied that room, or was in the house at that time. Alice Jones, who was a sertant in Ho. 48 during the months of October, Hovember and December, 1885, testified that the defendant called there once and inquired at the door for Lotta Forbes. Mrs. Swinyard, who was mistress of the house Ho. 48, testified, as a witness for the defendant, that Lotta Forbes occupied the front-room in the third story from October 12 to December 12, 1885. The proof is abundant that the house Ho. 48, if not a house of common prostitution, bore such a strong resemblance to one that the difference was scarcely noticeable. While there may have been some, respectable people living in the house, prostitutes were harbored there who plied their vocation in the house with the-knowledge of the mistress thereof.

If we should stop here, would not the story of Lotta Forbes-be sufficiently corroborated? It is unquestioned that she at the time mentioned occupied the particular room, and that the-defendant was a visitor at that house of bad repute. How is it possible that the plaintiff, said to be the daughter of a clergyman, was able to suborn so many witnesses and engage them in a criminal conspiracy to furnish the perjured evidence which would convict the defendant of adultery ? It is rare that more evidence can be furnished to establish the charge of adultery. The corroboration gives such strength and weight to the evidence of the prostitute and detective as to induce-belief in its truth. But there is still more important corroboration, that which, it seems to us, leaves no reasonable doubt that the referee reached the correct conclusion. Before the action was referred, and before the plaintiff, so far as appears, had any knowledge whatever of Lotta Forbes, the defend *471 ant had, by inquiring, found that she was in New Orleans living with a man by the name of Withers, as his mistress, and he addressed her the following letter, underscored as the same now appears.

“11 and 12 Butler Exchange, )

“ Providence, April 17, 1886. j

Dear Friend Lotta :

“ I have with great difficulty learned, and in fact by accident, your present address. Having done so I have taken my first moment to write you.

“ I think, I am sure in fact, that you knew in N. Y. that a separation had taken place between myself and wife. Since leaving N. Y. for Providence, P. I., where I now am, ^,y wife has seen fit to institute a suit for a di/vorce in N. Y., and charges me with improper relations with two different women, one at 18 West Twenty-sixth street and one at another place at a later date.

“ I have every reason to believe that Mrs. M. is ignorant of any fact which in any manner connects me with you in any relation but a perfectly proper one. Still, I think, she, knowing of your absence and my inability to testify

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E. 169, 115 N.Y. 466, 26 N.Y. St. Rep. 207, 70 Sickels 466, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moller-v-moller-ny-1889.