Morello v. Cantalupo

111 A. 255, 91 N.J. Eq. 415, 6 Stock. 415, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 A. 255 (Morello v. Cantalupo) 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
Morello v. Cantalupo, 111 A. 255, 91 N.J. Eq. 415, 6 Stock. 415, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53 (N.J. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Foster., V. C.

This is a suit to quiet title to certain lands in the city of Newark, owned by complainant and in hier possession, and which were conveyed to her on November 30th, 1918, by her brother, Antonio Cantalupo, who died testate on May 23d, 1919. The answer and counter-claim admit these facts, but state that defendant married Antonio Cantalupo on October 18th, 1900; that subsequent to the marriage and during the coverture, on September 5t!hl, 1918, Cantalupo became seized in fee of the premises in question; that defendant did not join in the conveyance made by her husband to complainant, and she has never released her right of dower therein, and that upon the death of her husband she repeatedly requested complainant to adjust or settle with her ifor her right of dower in the premises, and this complainant refused to do, and defendant asks for an accounting of the rents and' income of the property and for the assignment of her dower.

Complainant’s answer to the counter-claim charges defendant with) deserting her husband and having adulterous relations with one Frank Duco, and pleads in bar of her claim for dower, s’ection 14 of the act relative to dower. Comp. Stat. p. 2948.

In support of complainant’s contention, the proof is that one child, a boy now about eighteen years, was bom about a year after defendant’s marriage to Cantalupo (and it would appear ■that complainant held title to the premises in question for his benefit); that about 1903, when this child was1 ’about a year old, defendant began to receive attentions from Duco; her husband .objected and became jealous and 'angry and on one occa: sion he slapped defendant’s face for dancing too often with Duco; shortly thereafter defendant left her home and went to Germantown, Pennsylvania, where she remained in Duco’fe com[417]*417pany for some days, where fhter husband found her and brought her back to her home in Newark; on her return she told complainant and others that she had sinned with Duco and was going away again, and a few days latex defendant left her husband and child and was not seen again by any of her husband’s family for nearly seventeen years; when she left her -husband defendant went to Germantown and resumed her relations with Duco; they lived as, and claimed to be, man and wife; three children were bom to them, and complainant and Duco still continue to live together as man and wife. Frank Cantalupo, the son, had not seen his mother since she deserted him, until the past year when’he called at her home in Germantown for the purpose of obtaining from her a release of her dower or any interest she had in the property in question; defendant refused to give him this release, but later she called on him and on complainant and demanded $£>'00 for the release of her dower.

Defendant states that she left her husband not in 1903 but in 1907; that he had always cruelly treated and abused her; that she was obliged to work to support herself; fhlat the immediate cause for leaving her husband was a quarrel they had because she would not give him her wages; that he then stabbed her and drove liter from her home, and he then ran away; that she went to a neighbor’s in Newark .and remained there for some days'until she recovered ¡from her wound, and on her recovery she went to her husband’s home, removled her effects and went to Germantown, to a Mrs. Cappello, a stranger whom she ' had met but once and who invited her to visit her; that she was then pregnant and later gave birth to a girl who is now twelve or thirteen years old, and is the daughter of decedent; that she never met Frank Duco before 1909, and he became a boarder in her home in Germantown and has lived with h'er ever since; that her husband neva- became reconciled to her and made no effort to have her return and live with him; she states she has three children living with her, the oldest being the girl mentioned, but she refused to state whlo was the father of the other two children, one of them being only three years old:

[418]*418It was admitted that Cantalupo had married again on May 26th, 1910, and defendant states that she called at her husband’s home in Newark in 1910, and was told by his mother that he had obtained a divorce from her and had remarried.

Section 14 of the Dower act, which is in substance a re-enactment of the statute called Westminster Second, 13 Edw. I. c. 34, provides:

“Tibat if a wife valunitarily leave .her husband and go away and continue with her adulterer, ¡she shall be disabled and forever barred from having her jointure or dower, unless her husband be voluntarily reconciled to ber, and suffer her to dwell with him. in which case she shall be restored to her jointure or dower.” r-r« •

This section of the act does not appear to have been construed in any of th'e published opinions of our courts.

Soon after the passage of the statute of Westminster, in 1285, it received an exposition that has been uniformly acted upon by the English courts to the present time, but this exposition has not always been followed in the several states in which the statute has been re-enacted, in substance or effect, or recognized as part of our common law. The point of departure between tifie English cases and most of those in this country being over the construction placed upon the Avord “willingly” as used in the statute of Westminster, and the word “voluntarily” as used in our OAm and similar statutes in various states. Based on Coke Com. in 2 Inst. 435, and the statement in Bacon's Abridgement, as quoted' iu & Rui. Gas. L. §‘ 46, the English courts have uniformly hold, “that it is not the manner of the going away, but the remaining with the adulterer in avowtry, without reconciliation, that is the bar of the dower.” Hetherington v. Graham, 6 Bingh. 135-31 Y. & P. 399; Woodward v. Dowse, 10 C B (N. S.) 722; 142 Eng. Reprints 637.

In Woodward v. Dowse, supra, Mr. Justice Willis said that, “I think it is impossible more distinctly to lay d'OAvn the law to be that, if the wife leaves her husband’s house, no matter for what cause, and commits adultery, the penalty of the statute attaches.”

[419]*419The prevailing rale in this country is stated in Scrib. Dow. 531, and in 14 Gyc. 933, to be that under the statutes of the states which have adopted adulterous elopement as a bar, two things must combine to constitute the bar: The departure of the wife must be voluntary on her part and she. must continue with tlie adulterer. So that where the wife’s desertion was caused by the cruelty or neglect of her husband -her subsequent adultery will not constitute a bar. Citing Rawlins v. Buttel (Del.), 1 Houst. 224; Walters v. Jordan (N. C.), 35 N. C. 361; Heslop v. Heslop, 82 Pa. St. 537; Stegall v. Stegall, 22 Fed. Cas. (13,351) on the Virginia statute. See also Cogswell v. Tibbetts, 3 N. H. 41; Payne v. Dotson, 81 Mo. 145; Reel v. Elder, 62 Pa. St. 308, and see also 5 Am. & Eng. Anno. Cas. 231; Bish. M. & D. (6th ed.) 627.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 255, 91 N.J. Eq. 415, 6 Stock. 415, 1920 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morello-v-cantalupo-njch-1920.