Resnick v. Resnick

126 Ill. App. 132, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 465
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 10, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,336
StatusPublished

This text of 126 Ill. App. 132 (Resnick v. Resnick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Resnick v. Resnick, 126 Ill. App. 132, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 465 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is contended in appellant’s behalf that there is no evidence in the record which tends to show that appellant ever agreed to take appellee as his wife or that he ever by word or act agreed to marry her; that since it is conceded appellant in 1891 married Mary Meyer, with whom he is now and has ever since been living as his wife and by whom he has four children, it became incumbent upon appellee to establish her alleged prior marriage by proof of the fact and that such proof is wanting. It is further contended that certain testimony in appellee’s behalf is untrustworthy and should be disregarded.

The material question is whether there is evidence tending to support appellee’s claim that she and appellant were actually married, as she contends and as the Circuit Courc finds. The evidence in appellee’s behalf tends to show a remarkable state of facts. According to her own testimony appellee was a working girl eighteen or nineteen years of age when in December, 1886, she first met appellant in Kiev, Russia. She was then visiting or stopping with an aunt of his. A cousin of appellant, son of this aunt, living near by, called her into his house one day when she was passing and introduced her to appellant, telling her that appellant was or had been a soldier. A few days later, the cousin called on her and said to her, “My cousin (appellant) is a good man. Ton had better marry him. He is a carpenter, and he would make you a good living.” Appellee states that being a poor girl, working hard for her money and having saved $150 (which she says appellant afterward took from her), being urged by appellant’s cousin, who told her that she had known him (the cousin) a long time and could “believe me if I tell you he is a good man,” and thinking she would have a home, finally agreed to marry appellant. The marriage took place a few days thereafter at the house of appellant’s cousin, Abraham Jacobofsky. Appellee states they were married by a rabbi, whose name she believes was Waukof, in the presence of Abraham Jacobofsky, his wife and mother, people “ from up-stairs,” and others living, as she says, “ in the yard,” whom she did not know. She says that after appellant and she were married according to the Jewish law, the .rabbi gave her a paper, The couple spent that night together at the cousin’s house where the marriage took place, and the next night at a hotel, occupying the same room and bed. The next day, apparently, they left for Erode, on the way to America. They remained in Erode two weeks. Appellee says that about the time of or before the marriage appellant told her he had two brothers in America, Ashur Resnick and Joe Resnick. She states that on the way to Erode appellant introduced her to a travelling companion, telling the latter, “This is my wife.” They stopped in Erode at the house of a Mrs. Salz. Appellant remained there with her about two weeks. Then he told her he had not money enough to take her with him to America and would leave her there with Mrs. Salz and send for her Aom America. He said to Mrs. Salz, “1 will leave her, and I will send for her. Lots of people lives this way, and I couldn’t pay for her. I don’t have enough money, and I will go to America and send for her.” He showed Mrs. Salz “ my marriage paper ” and said, “ This is my wife and 1 will send for her so soon as I come to America. I will send for her.” Appellant left, taking with him her §150. Meanwhile she went to work doing housework or anything she could get to do, and finding it difficult to get emplo\rment, went to a place called Kadvill and worked there. After waiting about six months and hearing nothing from appellant she bought a ticket and came to America, going to Philadelphia where appellant’s brother Ashur Eesnick lived, whose address she had obtained. Meanwhile it appears, Abraham Jacobofsky, at whose home in Kiev she had been married, had gone to Philadelphia, and appellee was taken into his home. Here, shortly after, she met appellant. She said to him, “ Is that right what you have done for me? Pou left me and you think I not come here.” She states that he did not want to talk to her, “so his cousin made him talk to me.”

It is unnecessary to detail subsequent events as shown by the evidence. The couple lived together at Wilmington as husband and wife over' two months. Then she says she was compelled to leave him in consequence of his ill treatment and they separated, unwillingly on her part, he telling her they would live together when they had more money, when “ we will live together and maybe I will like you better, and so we will separate.” Appellee says she was a strong girl, and she went to work in Philadelphia. It appears that subsequently, when told appellant was going to Chicago, she had him arrested. She met him afterward in New York and subsequently followed him to Chicago, where she found him living with the woman whom appellant now claims to be his lawful wife. It suffices to say without going into particulars that appellee has persistently insisted all these years that she is appellant’s lawful wife and has tried to compel him to ackowledge and treat her as such.

There is confirmatory evidence amply supporting appellee’s story. The deposition of one Morris Ostrow, of Philadelphia, was taken, who states that appellant pointed out his wife to him, that they met on the train to Hamburg before coming to America; that he asked appellant “who that girl is, and he said that is my wife;” that when they reached Hamburg appellant found he did not have money enough to pay the passage of both over, and told Mrs. Besnick to stay at Hamburg and he would send for her in two or three months. The witness describes the Mrs. Besnick whom he then saw and has not seen since for fourteen years. He states that the two afterward lived together as man and wife in Philadelphia. There are discrepancies between this witness’ testimony and that of appellee, who says it was at Erode and not at Hamburg that appellant left her, and in another respect. But upon careful examination these do not seem to us to throw serious doubt on the substantial truthfulness of his testimony in material matters. The witness testified according to the abstract, “Mr. Besnick told me he was married, and coming over on the ship, pointed out his wife to me. He said they were married in Kiev, Bussia.” This is said to be inconsistent with the rest of his testimony and with appellee’s statement, since it is conceded the two did not come to America together on the ship. If, however, the punctuation is changed, the statement would read that appellant told the witness he was married and that he was coming over on the ship, and that appellant pointed out his wife, not necessarily on the ship, but as the witness elsewhere expressly says, “on the train.”

Appellee is further corroborated in more important matters by the testimony of Abraham Jacobson, who in America seems to have exchanged the last two syllables of Jaoobofsky, his Bussian name, for the termination “son,” making it Jacobson. He testifies that he has known appellant, who is his first cousin, from boyhood in Russia, that appellant and appellee were married at the witness’ house in Russia and lived there as man and wife for the two days following, that there were present at the wedding the mother of the witness, his wife and others whom he don’t recall, that the wedding took place in the evening and the parties were married by a Jewish rabbi. The wife of this witness also testifies to the marriage of the parties at her house in Kiev, Russia, and that they were married by a Jewish rabbi.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Ill. App. 132, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/resnick-v-resnick-illappct-1906.