Pollock v. . Pollock

71 N.Y. 137, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 477
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 71 N.Y. 137 (Pollock v. . Pollock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollock v. . Pollock, 71 N.Y. 137, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 477 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Folger, J.

This case comes up.in a peculiar form, and it is first necessary to inquire if it is correctly brought before us on appeal, and what our power is in regard to it.

The action was brought by the plaintiff, the husband, for a divorce from the defendant, his wife, on the ground of her adultery. The defendant answered, denying the allegations of her adultery, and making recriminatory allegations of adultery by the plaintiff. The issue being thus joined, it was sent to a referee to take the testimony, and to report the same to the court, with his opinion thereon. He reported the testimony taken by him,, and that, in his opinion, the defendant was guilty of adultery, as charged in some of the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint; that the plaintiff was not guilty, as averred in the recriminatory allegations of the answer; and that the plaintiff should have judgment dissolving his marriage with the defendant. He gave no judgment. He had no power to give any.

On the report coming up to the Special Term, it was not *140 confirmed. The decision of the learned justice who held that term states that the referee had not found as to the plaintiff’s guilt. This is manifestly an error in the manuscript of the decision. It evidently was meant to be written that the referee has not found correctly as to the plaintiff’s guilt. The decision of the learned justice was further, that from the evidence returned, he found that the plaintiff was guilty of adultery as charged in the answer, and that the complaint be dismissed.. This decision, so brief and concise, doubtless is a sufficient compliance with section 267 of the Code. It does not, literally speaking, contain a statement of the facts found. It refers to the charges of fact in the answer, and finds them to be true, and adopts them as the facts found. The conclusion of law is that the complaint be dismissed. There was an exception to this decision, and the finding in it. The exception is not happily expressed. It may, however, be construed to mean that the exception is to the finding as matter of law, and to the decision that the complaint be dismissed as a conclusion of law from the finding. If the finding of facts (viz., that the plaintiff was guilty of adultery as charged in the answer), is correct, clearly the conclusion of law is also correct. So that the only exception which will need to be considered is that to the finding of fact. That exception, we have seen, may be construed as being that it was an error in law, to find the plaintiff guilty of adultery, inasmuch as it was wholly without evidence to sustain such a finding. It is an error of law to find a material fact, wheji there is a total absence of evidence to sustain it; and that error of law is reviewable in this court, upon due and proper exception. (Murray v. Harway, 56 N. Y., 337, 346; Duffy v. Masterson, 44 id., 557; Mason v. Lord, 40 id., 477.)

The judgment of the General Term, affirming that of the Special Term, is open to the same inquiry.

We are, therefore, obliged to look into all the testimony, and see if it presents any evidence to uphold a charge of adultery against the plaintiff.

We first remark, as prelude to stating what is needed to *141 be in evidence to uphold that charge, that since the close of the proofs, it has not been capable of dispute in the case, that the proof is amply sufficient to convict the defendant of the adultery charged against her by some of the allegations of the complaint. The plaintiff would then be entitled to a decree of divorce a vinculo upon the merits, unless he is also shown to have been guilty of a like act. (2 R. S., p. 145, § 42, sub. 4.) Though it has been said in England, that the general conduct of the husband, when plaintiff in action seeking a divorce, is quite sufficient to support a plea in bar, though insufficient to support an original accusation of adultery ; (Forster v. Forster, 1 Hagg. C. R., 144; this has not received entire acceptation there; Turton v. Turton, 3 Hagg., 338; Goodall v. Goodall, 2 Lee, 384; Sopwith v. Sopwith, 2 Swab. & T., 160.) And the language of the Revised Statutes, above cited, indicates that no less evidence should be required to make -out a bar resting upon recriminatory charges, than would be to establish a like charge in an original action for divorce. It is, as to that, a fundamental rule in such actions, that nothing short of the carnal act will lay the foundation for a divorce. (Hamerton v. Hamerton, 2 Hagg., 8.) And though it is an act of darkness and great secrecy,' and not often provable by direct means, and the evidence must in most cases be circumstantial, yet the circumstances must be sufficient to satisfy the mind that the adulterous intercourse has actually taken place. Though presumptive evidence alone is sufficient to establish the fact, the circumstances must lead to it, not only by fair inference, but as a necessary conclusion. Appearances that are equally capable of two interpretations will not justify the presumption. (Loveden v. Loveden, 2 Hagg. Cons. R., 3, 4.) And see how far this rule has been relied upon and has controlled a court, in Collett v. Collett (1 Curtiss’ Ecc., 678, 686, S. C., reversed on appeal by the judiciary committee of the Privy Council; see Wadd. Dig., 38), where the fact that a wife was tainted with the venereal disease, she being the complainant in the suit, was held to be as well consistent with her own adultery, *142 or a contraction of the disease by accident, as with contagion with the husband. The court is not warranted in a conclusion of criminality, when all that is proved is susceptible of a construction of innocence. (Hamerton v. Hamerton, 2 Hagg., 13.) Still less can it make inferences without actual facts to support them. (Williams v. Williams, 1 Hagg. Cons. R, 299.) We dwell longer on these general principles, for the reason that the evidence brought by the defendant, which is relied upon to sustain her charge, is entirely circumstantial, and can be potent against the plaintiff only by the aid of inferences from the facts it establishes, not in themselves necessarily criminatory.

It is clear that the plaintiff had opportunity for carnal intercourse with the female, who is alleged to have been his paramour, in that he was with her in the same set of apartments, which were Ms, in the day-time and in the night-time. He has, beyond doubt, been alone with her therein in the day-time, and as late as after six o’clock in the evening. It must not, however, be understood that the female was continuously in the apartments of the plaintiff by night. A witness (Erastus H. Winchester), has seen the alleged paramour of the plaintiff go m and out of plaintiff’s rooms as other people did, in the .morning and evening, every day probably; as a matter of opinion, as early as seven o’clock in the forenoon, dressed well, with her hat on, and go away at sundown in the same attire ; and has seen the plaintiff go out with her once or twice ; and has seen her go out of the house in the morning.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.Y. 137, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollock-v-pollock-ny-1877.