Rooney v. Rooney

54 N.J. Eq. 231
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 N.J. Eq. 231 (Rooney v. Rooney) 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
Rooney v. Rooney, 54 N.J. Eq. 231 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The object of this suit is to procure a judicial declaration by this court that a contract and ceremony of marriage entered into between the parties was a nullity by reason of the prior hymeneal contract of the complainant with another woman, who was his living and lawful wife at the time of the later contract.

The bill alleges complainant’s marriage with one Mary Tole, in Richmond, Virginia, May 18th, 1862, and again with the defendant, Helen E. Barry, on July 14th, 1894, at which time Mary Tole was living. The bill was filed December 4th, 1894.

The answer puts complainant upon proof both of the prior marriage and the continued life of the alleged prior wife. In fact, the allegation of continued life is not found in the bill, and must be considered as added by way of amendment.

At the hearing, complainant attempted to sustain the burden thus cast upon him — -first, as to the marriage, by his own evidence and an exemplified copy of a writing on file in the hustings court of Richmond, Virginia; and second, as to the continued life of the first wife, by a witness who saw her shortly before the hearing.

Counsel for defendant attacked each of these pieces of evidence: as to the writing, that it is incompetent and insufficient for that purpose; as to the evidence of the complainant, that it is wholly unworthy of belief; and as to that of the witness to the continued life of the first wife, that the witness is not only unworthy of belief, but did not manifest sufficient acquaintance with the first wife to give reliable evidence.

Counsel for defendant took the further ground that, admitting the first marriage and the continued life of the first wife, yet the complainant procured the defendant to marry him by practicing upon her a fraud so gross as to close against him the door of a court of equity.

[233]*233It is hardly necessary to cite authority for the position that a complainant who comes into court under the circumstances above stated and asks a decree of nullity, the result of which is to declare one whom he has sworn to love and cherish as a wife to be no more than a concubine, and her offspring, the fruit of the unlawful communion (born pending the suit), a bastard, must prove his case with the utmost strictness. The same rule applies in such a case as on an indictment for bigamy. The court in such cases is bound to act as the guardian of the helpless infant) and watch its rights and interests with jealous care.

I will consider, first, the sufficiency of the documentary proof of the first marriage.

The document offered for that purpose is a duly-exemplified copy of — to use the language of the clerk of the hustings court of the city of Richmond — “ a marriage license now on file in the clerk’s office of said court for the marriage of Arthur J. Rooney and Mary Tole, together with the minister’s return thereon.” The certificate of the clerk is dated June 19th, 1895. How long such document had been so on file in his court does not in any wise appear. The license appears to have been issued under the hand of “Ro. Howard, clerk” of the hustings court of Richmond, "Virginia, May 2d, 1862. On the same, paper is a statement of the names, ages and so forth of the husband and wife, also signed by the clerk. Annexed, and on the same paper, is the minister’s return of marriage, as follows:

“I certify, that on the 5th day of May, 1864, at Richmond City, I united in marriage the above-named and described parties, under authority of the annexed license.
“John Teeling.”

The person so signing does not state that he is a minister of the gospel or otherwise ■ authorized to perform the marriage ceremony.

No evidence was offered of the laws of Virginia regulating the issue of marriage licenses or the filing of the certificates thereof, nor as to the value or effect as evidence of such certificates when filedi I am not informed as. to what, if any, safe[234]*234guards are thrown around such certificates by the laws of Virginia in order to secure their genuineness and prevent fraud and imposition. Nor does it áppear that a copy of such certificate would be evidence in any court in Virginia; and if a copy would not be evidénce there, then, of course, it would not be evidence here. Eor all that appears, the local laws may simply provide for a safe depository of such documents for the benefit of the parties, and that the originals only can be used as evidence, upon due proof of their genuineness and of the character of the person certifying to the ceremony. At best, under present circumstances, all that the exemplification can be held to prove is that there is on file in the office .of the clerk of the court in question a document in the words and figures certified to. The requisitions of the federal constitution do not' require us to go further than that. Our own act (P. L. of 1881 p. 210; Rev. Sup. p. 288 § 8), declares that

“ any public records of any foreign state * * * or any copy thereof which is admissible in such state to prove the facts therein contained shall be admitted in evidence in the-courts of this state” &c.

This language shows the necessity of the proof of the laws of the foreign state, and it seems to me there should also be some proof of the character and authority of the person performing the ceremony.

It must be remembered that a mere certificate of marriage, signed by a clergyman or magistrate, unattested by any oath, and not signed by the contracting parties, cannot, upon any recognized principle, and in the absence of any enabling statute, be held to be evidence of the marriage. Hubb. Suc. 247, 248, 257, 259, where the cases to that date are collected; 1 Bish. Mar., D. & S. §§ 993, 998, 1003, 1011 (1891); 1 Whart. Ev. §§ 120, 657. A different rule prevails as to entries on an official register kept in pursuance of law. 1 Whart. Ev. § 647 et seq.; 1 Bish. Mar., D. & S. § 993.

For these reasons I conclude that the paper in question has of itself, for present purposes, no probative force or value.

This brings us to the other questions, which may be conven[235]*235iently' considered together, viz., Is the complainant worthy of sufficient credit as a witness to warrant finding the fact of the first marriage upon his unsupported testimony ? And second, Has he, by his own conduct, debarred himself from the right to relief in this court ?

The proofs present a most painful case. Complainant, sworn on his own behalf, says he was born April 1st, 1844; that he was married in 1862 (not 1864 as the certificate states) to Mary Tole, in Richmond, "Virginia that they lived together, off and on, until 1882 ;■ had one child, a son that they separated in 1882, and have lived separate since 1883, under articles of separation, what purports to be a copy of which was produced; that he is an undertaker and embalmer by profession and gives lessons therein; that he met defendant in Albany, New York, as a pupil in the art of embalming; that he showed her a copy of the articles of separation from his wife, and told her that his wife was living.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 N.J. Eq. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rooney-v-rooney-njch-1896.