Pfender v. Pfender

144 A. 333, 104 N.J. Eq. 107, 3 Backes 107, 1929 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 181
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 17, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 144 A. 333 (Pfender v. Pfender) 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
Pfender v. Pfender, 144 A. 333, 104 N.J. Eq. 107, 3 Backes 107, 1929 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 181 (N.J. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

This is an application to set aside a decree nisi advised by me herein on January 10th, 1928 (Docket 63-629) and affirmed in103 N.J. Eq. 367, for reasons expressed in my opinion there reported. The reasons assigned for setting aside the decreenisi are (1) deception of the court by the petitioner in the main case; and (2) adultery by the petitioner since the entry of the decree nisi and before final decree.

I will consider these reasons in the order stated:

I.
The petition for divorce which resulted in the decree nisi was based upon charges of extreme cruelty, one of which charges was of an "unjust accusation of infidelity." Before the parties separated on October 1st, 1926, there had been considerable controversy between them over an alleged undue intimacy between the petitioner and Leona F. Hass, a young woman then in his employ and now twenty-five years of age. The petitioner's age is fifty-three. Mrs. Pfender had become insanely jealous of Miss Hass and had tried to arrange a meeting with her to discuss the affair but it was prevented by Mr. Pfender. At the hearings in the main case which were held during November and December, 1927, I was led to believe that the friendly relations between Mr. Pfender and Miss Hass were of but short duration and had then long since ended; that he then had no interest in this woman and that his wife's suspicions and jealousy were altogether unfounded. It now appears, however, from the admissions of Mr. Pfender and Miss Hass themselves, that shortly after the first trouble between Mr. and Mrs. Pfender over Miss Hass occurred, she, conceiving that she was the cause of the trouble, refused to go out to dinner and to the theatre with Mr. Pfender again, as she had done on several occasions, so long as he lived with his wife. Within about six weeks after this refusal Mr. and Mrs. Pfender separated and Mr. Pfender and Miss Hass then resumed going out together and continued doing so on an *Page 109 average of two or three times a week until the occurrence on June 30th, 1928, resulting in the charge of adultery to be hereinafter considered. During the course of the hearings on the main case, and both before and since, Mr. Pfender frequently remained overnight at the apartment in New York City where Miss Hass and her mother resided. It is plain now that Mr. Pfender's interest in Miss Hass never waned but has increased constantly to this day. The impression which I got at the trial on this point was undoubtedly due to a false atmosphere created by the attitude of injured innocence assumed by Mr. Pfender and supported by his pastor, Dr. Dougherty. Mr. Pfender testified in the main case that he had always told his wife all of his "goings and doings" and that he never concealed anything from her. It is now plain that he did not fully inform her with respect to his relations with Miss Hass, even assuming the truth of his wife's testimony concerning his admissions, which he denied.

At the conclusion of the former hearing I was under the impression that Mr. Pfender was then actually residing, and, since October 1st, 1926, had continuously resided with his pastor, Dr. Dougherty, at Glen Ridge, New Jersey. In paragraph 12 of his petition for divorce he says "he left his home and went to live with friends at Glen Ridge, New Jersey, where he has since then been residing." In paragraph 13 of his petition he says: "Your petitioner has not lived with the defendant since the date last mentioned but has resided with friends at Glen Ridge." The only friends at Glen Ridge with whom he ever lived were Dr. and Mrs. Dougherty. At the hearing on the main case the testimony was to the effect that "he had lived there for some time." At the hearing on this application, both Mr. Pfender and Dr. Dougherty testified that Mr. Pfender had resided at Dr. Dougherty's home constantly from October 1st, 1926, until the latter part of December, 1927. From the statement of residence in the petition and the testimony and attitude of the petitioner and his pastor, I assumed, and I think it was intended by them that I should assume, that this man, a vestryman in his church, whose life had been threatened by his wife, and who posed as having been unjustly accused by that wife of an *Page 110 improper intimacy with a woman employe, had fled for refuge and safety to the home of his spiritual adviser, and had resided there under his protection and guidance ever since. This presented a picture likely to excite the sympathy of the court and was undoubtedly designed to have a controlling influence on its decision. That it did so is quite apparent from the reference to Dr. Dougherty's testimony in my former conclusions; but how different the picture here painted by the petitioner himself with the aid of Miss Hass! Instead of his being the embodiment of virtue and injured innocence which he then appeared, we find him at the very time of the hearings in the main cause, secretly seeking the company of and continuing his association with the woman who was the cause of the insane jealousy of which he complained; and so secret was this association that no hint of it was given during the trial, and even the petitioner's pastor, under whose roof he had taken refuge, knew nothing of it. The admitted facts are that this association had continued from the date of the separation, and, during the summer of 1928, Mr. Pfender's interest in Miss Hass, and his concern for her comfort had become so great that he suggested the renting of a larger apartment by the Hass family where he might also have a room. The testimony was to the effect that when he stayed overnight at the Concourse apartment he was obliged to sleep on a couch or sofa in the living room. Accordingly in September, Mr. Pfender, Miss Hass and her mother rented an apartment at 911 Walton avenue, New York City, into which Miss Hass and her mother moved on October 1st, and for which Mr. Pfender paid a part, at least, of the rent. A room was reserved in this new apartment for him, he moved part of his clothing and personal belongings there, and made the apartment his New York home, eating there as a member of the family and sleeping there two or three nights a week. At the time of the former hearing the situation was that Mr. Pfender was actually maintaining two residences, one at Dr. Dougherty's in Glen Ridge and the other at the Hass apartment at 911 Walton avenue, New York City; the one a technical residence for the purposes of the divorce action — not a legal requirement, but evidently to create atmosphere; the *Page 111 other, his domicillary residence where, according to the elevator operator, he was known as "Mr. Hass." Dr. Dougherty says he did not know of this situation and did not know where Mr. Pfender was spending his nights when he was not in Glen Ridge. During the holidays, in December, after the decree nisi, Mr. Pfender gave up his room at Dr. Dougherty's and removed all of his belongings to the Hass apartment, and thereafter made that his only residence and domicile. After January 1st, 1928, Dr. and Mrs. Dougherty dined in New York and went to the theatre with Mr. Pfender and Miss Hass on at least two or three occasions. Even then the doctor remained in entire ignorance of where Mr. Pfender was living and saw nothing in Mr. Pfender's association with Miss Hass to excite his curiosity or suspicion, although Mrs. Pfender had previously, in a conversation with the doctor, charged this woman with being the cause of all her troubles. If the doctor's ignorance of Mr. Pfender's whereabouts and associations during the period preceding his moving from Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 333, 104 N.J. Eq. 107, 3 Backes 107, 1929 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfender-v-pfender-njch-1929.