Oberstein v. Oberstein

228 S.W.2d 615, 217 Ark. 80, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 10, 1950
Docket4-9137
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 228 S.W.2d 615 (Oberstein v. Oberstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oberstein v. Oberstein, 228 S.W.2d 615, 217 Ark. 80, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 378 (Ark. 1950).

Opinions

Ed. F. McFaddin, Justice.

The facts in this case present a sordid story, involving not only the litigants, but also two attorneys, W. R. Berkson of Few York City, and Morris Hecht of Hot Springs, Arkansas.

Mr. and Mrs. Oberstein lived in a Fifth Avenue apartment in New York. They had been married for many years, and had a daughter, Patricia, 17 years of age, when, in January, 1947, Mr. Oberstein announced to his wife that he wanted a divorce. He had become infatuated with another woman. When Mrs. Oberstein refused to consider a divorce, Mr. Oberstein moved from the apartment, ceased paying a $150 weekly allowance to his wife, and used the daughter, Patricia, to convey his threats to the effect that if Mrs. Oberstein did not obtain a divorce, he would give her no money.

At first Mrs. Oberstein consulted a New York attorney of lier own ekosing and was well advised that she conld force Mr. Oberstein to contribute to ber support. But she discontinued the services of her attorney and went to W. R. Berkson, her husband’s attorney,1 and made a “trade” with that attorney and her husband that she would obtain a divorce, in return for a contract of financial support. On July 22, 1947, Berkson gave Mrs. Oberstein a memorandum:

“Bus leaves 42nd Street Air Terminal Wednesday, July 23,1947, 7 A. M. our time, for Newark. Plane leaves Newark 6:50 A. M. Eastern Standard Time (7:50 A. M. daylight saving time), flight 207 American Airlines. Arrives Little Rock, Arkansas 12:40 noon.
“Upon arrival in Little Rock, you are to make arrangements at the field for a flight to Hot Springs, and are to telephone Mr. Morris Hecht, the attorney, whose offices are in the Arkansas Trust Building, Hot Springs, Arkansas, and whose telephone number is HOT SPRINGS 2657. He will make all arrangements for you there, and will call for you on your arrival at Hot Springs.
“You are to return on Thursday, July 24th, leaving from Little Rock, Arkansas at 5:30 P. M., flight 210 American Airlines. You are to make arrangements to arrive in Little Rock before 5:00 P. M. Mr. Hecht undoubtedly will assist you in making such arrangements.
W. R. B.”

At the same time he gave Mrs. Oberstein this memorandum, Berkson delivered to her the air line tickets and two of his own personal checks payable to Morris Hecht, one for $75 and the other for $90. Also Berkson gave Mrs. Oberstein a letter to Hecht which introduced Mrs. Oberstein, discussed her grounds for divorce, and told Hecht what Berkson desired the decree to contain. There was this significant sentence:

“I feel confident that yon will handle this matter to the satisfaction of all parties concerned. ’ ’2

Iu keeping witli the Berkson memorandum, Mrs. Oberstein flew to Little Book on July 23, 1947, and proceeded to Hot Springs, where she contacted Morris Hecht. He took her to the Arlington Hotel, and she gave him the Berkson letter and the two checks. He returned to her room in an hour and she signed a paper which now appears as a deposition. Hecht advised her that the divorce decree would be granted on October 28, 1947. She had dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Hecht, spent the night at the Arlington Hotel, and returned to New York by plane the next day. That was the sole extent of her stay in Arkansas and her only visit to this State until some time in 1949, subsequently to be mentioned.

When Mrs. Oberstein returned to New York, she reported her Arkansas trip to Mr. Oberstein, remained in New York a short time, and at Oberstein’s expense took a cruise to California via the Panama Canal. When she returned to New York, she went to Berkson’s office with her sister so that the latter might furnish a deposition to be used in the pending Arkansas divorce case. Oberstein executed a waiver of service and an entry of appearance, in which appears this language:

“. . . And the defendant, Eli E. Oberstein, further agrees to pay to the plaintiff, Mary M. Oberstein, as and for her. support, and the support and maintenance of the infant issue of the marriage, Patricia Louise Ober-stein, as follows: $150 per week until such time as the plaintiff shall remarry or die, whichever shall occur the sooner. . .

The instrument was acknowledged in New York City by “William B. Berkson” as notary public.

Morris Hecht, the Hot Springs attorney, signed his name to a complaint, filed September 24, 1947, in the Grarland Chancery Court, alleging Mrs. Oberstein to be a resident of Arkansas, seeking a divorce from Mr. Ober-stein on the ground of indignities, and praying for support and maintenance of $150 per week. At the time he did this, Iieeht, of course, knew that Mrs. Oberstein was not a resident of Arkansas. Also, Hecht obtained and filed in the divorce suit the purported deposition of Anna Cook, 194 Ramble Street, Hot Springs, Arkansas, to tbe effect that Mrs. Oberstein bad lived in tbe borne of Anna Cook continuously from July 23, 1947, to October 22, 1947. Hecbt’s wife, Kathryn Hecbt, as notary public, certified that Mrs. Oberstein appeared before said notary in Hot Springs, Arkansas, on October 22, 1947, and gave ber deposition; whereas in fact Mrs. Oberstein had been in Hot Springs only tbe one time in July, 1947, when there was no suit pending. Morris Hecbt also obtained a decree of divorce, on tbe ground of indignities, for Mrs. Oberstein against Mr. Oberstein on October 28, 1947, in tbe G-arland Chancery Court on what Morris Hecbt knew was false evidence of residence.

On October 25, 1947, Mr. and Mrs. Oberstein signed, in New York City, a property settlement agreement, which provided that if tbe divorce decree should be granted, then Mr. Oberstein, in addition to the $150 weekly support money, would pay Mrs. Oberstein $25,000 in cash, pay rent on the apartment, surrender all tbe furniture in it, and also give Mrs. Oberstein an automobile.3 Both parties acknowledged the instrument before William R. Berkson, notary public. On November 5, 1947, Mrs. Oberstein signed a receipt to Berkson reading as follows :

“Received from William R. Berkson the respective sums of $25,000 and $850, the former representing the cash payment of Eli E. Oberstein to me on securing the final decree of divorce; the latter household allowances and arrears owed me by Eli E. Oberstein. This acknowledges receipt of all other papers referred to in the stipulation in the suit for divorce. . . . ”

Oberstein married “the other woman” a few days after October 28, 1947. Mrs. Oberstein continued to receive the $150 weekly payments; but in May, 1948, she filed proceedings in New York to have the Arkansas divorce declared void. Then, on December 20, 1948, she filed, in the original divorce suit in the Garland Chancery Court, a petition to have that Court vacate the divorce decree of October 28, 1947. As grounds for vacating the divorce decree, she alleged that it was void for want of jurisdiction of the Court over .the parties, and she sought to excuse herself from her part of the fraud and collusion by the claim that she was under “duress” of her husband when she came to Arkansas in July, 1947; and she claimed that this duress was continuous until November 6, 1947. Mr. Oberstein resisted the motion to vacate. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W.2d 615, 217 Ark. 80, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oberstein-v-oberstein-ark-1950.