Mott v. Mott

73 N.Y. St. Rep. 742

This text of 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 742 (Mott v. Mott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mott v. Mott, 73 N.Y. St. Rep. 742 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

PATTERSON, J.

It is unnecessary to make extended refer ence to the unsavory details of the evidence in this action. It1 was instituted to procure a divorce, and was referred to a referee, who reported that on the 3d day of August, 1893, the defendant committed adultery with a woman known as Frankie Stewart, at Ho. 1007 Sixth avenue, in the city of Hew York, and that during the month of September, 1893,'he committed adultery with another woman, known as Hina Mann, at the same place. The judgment entered upon this report, and now appealed from, must stand or fall by the findings of the referee as to these two periods! of time. All that is really involved in. the action is connected) with a disputed question of dates. The infant plaintiff and the! defendant were married on the 28th day of July, 1893. The marriage was a ceremonial one, but clandestine, and the parties have never lived together or cohabited. The referee found that the first act of infidelity complained of was committed by the defendant within a week after his marriage, and the second within [743]*743six weeks. We are unable to concur with the referee in his finding respecting the alleged occurrence in August. That the defendant had before that date been a frequenter of the brothel in .Sixth avenue stands uncontradicted ; that he there consorted with prostitutes, he is obliged to admit; that he was acquainted with, •and was the companion at times in that apartment of, the woman named by the referee, is also undeniable; but he has successfully repelled the charge that on the 3d day of August he committed adultery with that woman. The only positive testimony to establish the accusation as to that day comes from the witness Marshall, the sister of the woman (Mrs. Adams) who kept the apartment in which it is alleged the act occurred. She testifies quite distinctly that it was on the 3d day of August, and she fixes the date as being a day or two before the police authorities made a raid upon the premises, which raid was made on the 5th day of August, 1893. She swears that the defendant was in the apartment on the night of the raid, and was in company with his cousin, Cooper •and that she never saw Mott in the apartment except when accompanied by Cooper, and she states that she recollects more positively •that they were present on the 5th than that they were on the 3d of August. The Adams woman, who kept the apartment, does not testify to having seen Mott there on the 3d of August, or about that •date, but only that she heard voices, but did not recognize Mott’s •as one of them. Now, it distinctly appears by testimony which cannot be rejected that Cooper was not in New York on the 3d or 5th of August, but that he was in Chicago, and had gone there -early in July, and did not return until about the end of August; and ■it is also shown that the defendant, Mott, was not in the city of New York oh the 5th of August, but was at Narragansett Pier. He arrived there on the morning of the 5th of August, and his name was inscribed in the hotel register by his father, who testifies to the fact, and that his son did not return’ to the city of New York until the 20th day of August." The father also testified that during all the interval the son was at Narragansett Pier. It is •evident, therefore, that the witness Marshall was mistaken as to the date, and that the intercourse which she says Mott had with the woman named by the referee in his finding new under consideration must have taken place some time prior to August 3, 1893. She probably referred to an occasion when the defendant admitted that he had intercourse with this woman,—an occasion which he ■doubtless intended to say was prior to the marriage, though singularly enough, when narrating the occurrence, he failed to specify ■any date.

When, however, we come to the consideration of the finding respecting the month of September, we must hold that sufficient appeared in evidence to authorize the decision the. referee made concerning the act of adultery charged as having been committed that month with the woman known as Nina Mann. The wit: ness Katherine Richards testifies very distinctly and clearly to the -occurrence having taken place in the latter part of August or the oarly part of September, 1893. It is not denied that Mott at that [744]*744time was in New York city. The witness testified that Mott, came into the apartment alone ; that Nina Mann was there; that Mott said he did not want Richards; that he did not like- her; that Nina Mann then went in to him; that.Nina Mann and Mott retired together to a bedroom, remained there an hour, and that then Nina Mann came out, and handed Mrs. Adams a bill, which, the latter changed. Nina Mann then went back to the bedroom, and the witness left the two there. The defendant was not specifically interrogated as to these details. He contented himself' with a general denial of the main facts thus testified to, and an-assertion that he was not in the flat between the date of his marriage and the following Thanksgiving Day. It is urged that the testimony of this witness Richards should be disregarded, and that it is insufficient to form the basis of a decree, because it was given by a confessed prostitute; and that, under the rule which obtains respecting the testimony of such discredited witnesses, it should be unavailing, because it lacks corroboration. In Moller v. Moller, 115 N. Y. 466; 26 St. Rep. 207, it is said that the-courts regard the uncorroborated evidence of prostitutes and private detectives as insufficient to break the bonds of matrimony,, but that in divorce cases the courts must take such evidence as the nature of the case permits, circumstantial, direct, or positive; and must bring to bear upon it the tests of observation and experience, in the exercise of good judgment. It is to be weighed! with prudence and care, and effect must be given to its just preponderance. In McCarthy v. McCarthy, 143 N. Y. 235; 62 St. Rep. 184, this rule was substantially reiterated. Wo are therefore compelled to examine the whole proofs before us to ascertain if there is to be found corroboration by facts or circumstances-sufficient to justify the acceptance of what was deposed to by the-witness Richards as a truthful statement of an occurrence bap-'pening at or about the time sworn to by her, and found by the-referee. Of the fact that Mott knew, and was intimate and had. sexual relations with," Nina Mann at some date,—at all events,, before his marriage,—there can be no doubt. In fact, Mott scarcely denies it. At one point in his examination, when he-was asked the direct question, “ Bid you, at any time after your marriage, have intercourse with Nina Mann?” he answered, “ That was before.” He admits that he was a frequenter of the-apartment in Sixth avenue, and that he had illicit intercourse-there with at least two other women. He was known in this apartment by the sobriquet of “Poker Joe." He will go no-further in his testimony as to Nina Mann than to say that he does not remember having had sexual intercourse with this particular-woman. This statement is incredible. And it. is inconsistent with what he said as above quoted, when for a moment he was-off his guard. He undoubtedly remembered whether he had or; had not had intercourse with this woman. His assertion of lack of memory with regard to such a matter can hardly be true, and, if untrue, it discredits him as a witness generally. It is proven-by other witnesses, whose testimony on this particular point is not, to be assailed, and among them by his own cousin, Cooper, that. [745]*745this Kina Mann was known among the lewd persons of their acquaintance as “ the friend ” of this defendant.

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Related

Moller v. . Moller
22 N.E. 169 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)
McCarthy v. . McCarthy
38 N.E. 288 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)
Commonwealth v. McCarthy
14 N.E. 643 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. St. Rep. 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-mott-nyappdiv-1896.