Noel v. Noel

24 N.J. Eq. 137
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 24 N.J. Eq. 137 (Noel v. Noel) 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
Noel v. Noel, 24 N.J. Eq. 137 (N.J. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor.

The parties to this suit for a divorce, were married in Philadelphia, on the 31st'of August, 1869. The defendant, who belongs to a highly respectable family in Canada, where he was brought up, is a young man, and by profession a. physician. The- complainant, is the daughter of Edward Harris, deceased, late of Moorestown, in the county of Burlington, in this state. At her marriage, she was living with her mother, then a widow, in the family residence at Moorestown. A few weeks afterwards, her husband took a house in Philadelphia, with a view to practicing his profession, but having little success, went back, in June, 1870, with his wife,, to her mother’s house, where she has since lived. He soon after engaged in mercantile pursuits, with moneys loaned by his mother-in-law, but did not succeed. He was addicted to intoxicating drinks, having occasional periods of excessive intemperance, and in March, 1872, was so far disabled and reduced by his courses, that his removal from Moorestown, and a year’s stay with his relatives in Canada, were agreed upon as measures for reforming his habits and restoring his health. He left Moorestown April 5th, 1872, and has not since lived with complainant, who, soon after he had gone, was surprised by discovering, from his papers, and in other ways, the evidences of his guilt of adultery. On the 23d of July, 1872,' she filed her bill of complaint. The alleged adulterous acts are with one C. E. S., in the city of Philadelphia also, with one or more persons in Pottsville, Pennsylvania; also, with one or more persons in houses of ill-fame in Philadelphia; also, with some person in a house of ill-fame in New York, on his way from Moorestown to Canada. The times, places, and persons are alleged with as much certainty as the complainant was then able to state, and in these respects the pleading is sufficient.

The answer of the defendant is a general denial of the charges of the bill, and a large mass of testimony has been taken, and numerous exhibits offered. It is unnecessary, in [139]*139my judgment, to review, or even to refer to the largest part of the evidence. It will be sufficient to exhibit only so much of it, in general terms, as establishes conclusively the truth of some of the charges, and clearly entitles the complainant to the decree prayed for in her bill.

In respect to the illicit connection of the defendant with C. F. S., there is scarcely the semblance of a defence. Among the papers found in his secretary, soon after his departure for Canada, were fifteen of her letters, together with her photograph. The first of the letters is dated August 19th, 1869, eleven days before his marriage to the complainant. The last is dated March 26th, 1870, and sufficiently evinces the relations that had existed between the writer and himself.

I left Philadelphia,” she writes, “ nearly a month ago. Constantly I found myself, in spite of myself, in the places that we had gone over together, and the place where you left me the last time, became a veritable place of torment. "Why do I not know how to return contempt for contempt ? Yon are right, however; your conduct is just. My love was in former times pure, and although I had not the right to love you, I ought not to blush for it.....Now it is different, and I feel all the enormity of my fault. Perhaps I ought to suffer the consequences. I can no longer pity myself, for I, myself, in one of my letters, remember to have said to you, that if I succumbed, I would consent to receive your contempt. I feel the weight of it now, and it is only the heavier. Yon assured me (afterwards) that I need not be troubled; that you had been prudent, and that there would not be any consequences. I took you at your word, and have been without fear, up to the present moment. Bat I must confess to you the whole truth. I have not had my periods since I saw you. At the commencement of their disappearance, I felt no uneasiness, for I had never been entirely regular. But now three months and a half have gone. If I remember well, we saw each other the 15th of December ; and the last time that I was unwell was the 10th of [140]*140December. It has required a great effort in me to tell you this, but in face of the horrible truth, no false modesty can exist.”

The unhappy writer continues in a similar strain, which need not be quoted. Her letters are admitted to be genuine, and the interview on the 15th of December, or thereabouts, to which she refers, is admitted to have occurred. His criminal conduct on that occasion is hardly denied. He affects, indeed, to doubt whether pregnancy was, in fact, the result of it, but his suggestions and pretences in regard to it are unworthy of notice. That he was guilty of adultery with the unfortunate 'writer of these letters, it is impossible to doubt.

Besides the letters thus carefully preserved, other evidences appeared from his papers, which, connected with the proofs in the cause, if they do not prove the licentiousness of his conduct, exhibit painfully the impurity and pollution of his mind. These evidences and proofs are obscene pictures and books. His fondness for them is spoken of as a mania by one of the witnesses, and no denial is attempted to be made of his habits respecting them. Samples of them have been offered as exhibits. They have no possible relation to medical purposes, and none can be pretended. The possession and use of them by a physician, are quite as incapable of apology or palliation — nay, more so — than they would be in the case of a vulgar, uneducated reader. They are of the worst conceivable kind, such as the law prohibits, and such as a mind of ordinary intelligence and virtue must instinctively recoil from with detestation and disgust. These obscene pictures and books the defendant is proven to have specially delighted in, to have exhibited to others, to have solicited aid in procuring, and to have introduced into the home of his wife.

The alleged adulterous acts in Pottsville are also established by plenary proof. They occurred in January, 1872. The defendant, as partner in a mercantile firm, went to Pottsville to collect debts due the firm. He put up at a public house, and spent the ten or twelve days he was there [141]*141in drunkenness and debauchery. The .evidence upon this point is overwhelming, and leaves no room for hesitation or doubt. It consists of the testimony of William H. Crosby, the register clerk of the hotel; of John Smith, the head porter; of George W. Stockley, a clerk of the firm to which the defendant belonged; of George T. Chamberlain, long an intimate friend and associate of the defendant; and of the admissions of the defendant, himself. Crosby and Smith say that, on the evening of the defendant’s arrival at Pottsville, he inquired for a house of ill-fame, was directed to one, and accompanied by Smith, the colored porter, to show him the house. He was in the same house on several occasions, while in Pottsville, and admits that he was there once with Chamberlain. His condition became such, in a few days after his arrival at the hotel in Pottsville, that the proprietor sent Crosby to Philadelphia to notify the defendant’s friends of his state. Chamberlain went there, and after a few days, brought him home, suffering from the excesses in which lie had indulged, He had with him, while there, obscene pictures and books. It is unnecessary to expose the details of what occurred at the hotel and in the house of ill-fame, as they appear in the evidence.

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24 N.J. Eq. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noel-v-noel-njch-1873.