Retan v. Mathewson

131 Misc. 106, 226 N.Y.S. 80, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1260
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 131 Misc. 106 (Retan v. Mathewson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Retan v. Mathewson, 131 Misc. 106, 226 N.Y.S. 80, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1260 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

William F. Dowling, J.

The plaintiff is a practicing physician of the city of Syracuse, N. Y. He is a man of both affluence and influence. He and his family enjoy the respect of the community.

Mr. Wilson D. Mathewson, father of the defendant, is a consultant experimental engineer, connected with the Brown-Leipe Company, a large manufacturing concern of Syracuse. He is a man of intelligence and refinement and of some means. He and his family live in good circumstances and enjoy the respect of the community in which they reside. The two families, however, move in different social circles.

The plaintiff is the father of the defendant Geraldine J. Mathewson. She was born May 30, 1910. Defendant Edward Mathewson was born July 20, 1907. Edward and Geraldine Mathewson became acquainted about five years previous to the trial, having met at some church function. About three years ago Edward Mathewson began to pay more than ordinary attention to Geraldine Retan. Their acquaintanceship ripened into friendship, and their friendship into mutual affection of the kind that usually exists between a boy and girl of that age. Edward visited Geraldine at her home quite frequently. In the winter and spring of 1926 he was demanding the exclusive right to her society. On becoming aware of the situation, the plaintiff and Mrs. Retan attempted to reason with their daughter to the effect that she was too young to surrender her attentions to any particular young man; that she should broaden her acquaintance and not commit herself to one gentleman friend until she had reached an age where she could form a valid judgment of men. In the spring of 1926 the plaintiff talked matters over with Edward Mathewson, told him of the discussion he had had with his daughter, and forbade him calling upon her. Geraldine promised her parents that she would follow their advice. Edward Mathewson ceased to call upon her at plaintiff's home, but persisted in watching the Retan home evenings, until his actions attracted the attentions of the neighbors. One evening, as he was walking up and down past plaintiff’s residence, plaintiff warned him that he must discontinue [108]*108the practice as his presence there had aroused the curiosity of the neighborhood; a heated argument ensued, which did not serve to increase Edward’s standing with Dr. Retan. Apparently, after this interview, Edward discontinued reconnoitering the plaintiff’s home.

Geraldine was then a junior in the high school. Edward had left school before completing his high school course. In June, 1923, he entered the employ of the Brown-Leipe Company as time clerk. He continued there until September 1, 1923. On March 27, 1925, he re-entered the employ of the same company and remained there until October 30, 1926, when he left, returning again November 8, 1926, and continuing in the employ of that company until April 2, 1927. When he finally left that company’s employ, he was receiving twenty-five dollars per week. While in the employ of the Brown-Leipe Company Edward made rapid advancement. After leaving the employment of said company, he made a connection in the sales department of the Service Appliance Store in Syracuse, selling washing machines and vacuum cleaners to house holders. He had an income from this work of twenty dollars a week.

At the close of the school year in 1926, the plaintiff sent his wife and daughter Geraldine to the Thousand Islands for the summer, in an attempt to break up whatever intimacy then existed between his daughter and Edward Mathewson. Shortly after Mrs. Retan and Geraldine reached the Islands, Edward Mathewson appeared on the scene. Thereupon, Mrs. Retan and her daughter returned to Syracuse and from Syracuse they went to Atlantic City, where they spent the greater part of that summer. Upon their return from Atlantic City, Dr. and Mrs. Retan decided that they would send Geraldine to Cazenovia Seminary in order that she might widen and broaden her acquaintenance with young men, and to keep her from seeing Edward Mathewson. She remained there one term. Dr. and Mrs. Retan, supposing they had broken up the intimacy that existed between Geraldine and Edward, and supposing that she had been weaned from any further affection for him, allowed her to resume her studies in the Syracuse High School in January, 1927, where she continued until May 31, 1927.

From the spring of 1926 until May 31, 1927, Geraldine led her parents to believe that she was afraid of Edward Mathewson; that she no longer had any affection for him, when as a matter of fact, during that entire period, she had been corresponding with him and meeting him clandestinely at his home and other places. She was guilty of the grossest duplicity with her own parents.

On her sixteenth birthday she broached the question of marriage to Edward Mathewson. Certain of her letters were introduced in [109]*109evidence, wherein she urged him to marry her, writing she could not survive without him. Running through the letters to him is a silly, sentimental love strain, the product of a gushing, immature schoolgirl. True affection for Edward she had not, nor was she mentally capable of comprehending such a lofty and noble passion.

Geraldine was to graduate from the Syracuse High School in June, 1927. In complete ignorance of her mad infatuation, her matrimonial inclinations and designs, her parents had arranged to matriculate her at Syracuse University in the fall of 1927. She was destined to be the fortunate recipient of a collegiate training. Edward Mathewson likewise concealed the true situation from his parents, while giving the impression to Geraldine’s that relations between him and their daughter had ceased.

On the 31st of May, 1927, Edward and Geraldine, without the knowledge, consent or approval of their parents, went to Solvay, Onondaga county, N. Y., where they were married, Geraldine falsely certifying that she was over eighteen years of age, in order to procure the requisite marriage license. They returned home' where they remained for a day or two until Edward could procure sufficient funds for a journey to Toronto. He had saved up $200 with which he had acquired a real estate bond. This he sold for that amount. The $200 acquired from the sale of the bond, and $20, which he had coming from the appliance company, constituted his entire earthly possessions. With this limited bankroll, he and his child-wife, without informing Geraldine’s parents of the marriage, or of their intent to enjoy a honeymoon, secretly left Syracuse for Toronto, Can. Upon their arrival there, they went to the address of a Mrs. DeChere, to rent an apartment. Mrs. DeChere, seeing that they were children of good breeding, took pity upon them and took them into her home where they remained for a period of several days. Upon arriving at Toronto, Edward notified his mother of his whereabouts, but, at the request of Geraldine, he instructed her not to notify her parents, as she feared they would come and bring her home.

After a honeymoon of a few days at Mrs. DeChere’s, Geraldine became restless, nervous and homesick. The young couple quarreled, funds were low, no work in sight for either of them. Edward was pressing his wife to obtain work as a waitress or to become a waitress on a boat on the Great Lakes where he would gain employment as a dancer, and in this way they could make money and maintain themselves. He also requested her to write the maid in her home to forward her fur coat, evidently with the idea of putting it in pawn and acquiring money. Mrs. DeChere, observing the predicament in which they were, finally induced [110]

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Bluebook (online)
131 Misc. 106, 226 N.Y.S. 80, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/retan-v-mathewson-nysupct-1927.