Sachs v. Sachs

155 F. Supp. 860, 3 V.I. 264, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3025
CourtDistrict Court, Virgin Islands
DecidedOctober 31, 1957
DocketCiv. No. 93-1957
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 155 F. Supp. 860 (Sachs v. Sachs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sachs v. Sachs, 155 F. Supp. 860, 3 V.I. 264, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3025 (vid 1957).

Opinion

MOORE, Judge

Let the record show that this matter came on for hearing; that the plaintiff is present in person and is represented by his attorney William H. Bailey, Esquire, and that the defendant is present in person and is represented by her attorney George H. T. Dudley, Esquire.

I have heard the evidence in the case and have listened to the arguments of both attorneys. Counsel for the plaintiff contends that the defendant’s answer and such evidence as was presented by the defendant is that of recrimination, and that submits to the Court the question of comparative rectitude, and that for that reason the evidence which was introduced by the defendant, to which plaintiff’s counsel objected, was inadmissible. According to this argument, where a plaintiff claims incompatibility of temperament, the defendant is limited to denying such facts, as the plaintiff has claimed, and the defendant is precluded from setting up any other facts or presenting any other in evidence. This argument does not take into consideration that the plaintiff’s evidence, as in this case, might not be believed, and that the facts set up by the defendant may be supported by competent evidence, and believed. This Court is of the opinion that the defendant’s *266 answer and the defendant’s testimony were not presented as a recrimination, but is presented in answer to the plaintiff’s charge of incompatibility and tends to show that the incompatibility claimed by the plaintiff is due solely and entirely to his fault and not to the fault of the defendant. It is intended to show that the only marital difficulty in fact is the plaintiff’s desire to have another woman, to which the defendant objects, and that it is not due to any incompatibility as claimed by the plaintiff.

This Court, therefore, is of the opinion that the evidence admitted in behalf of the defendant is proper.

First, this Court has gone into the question of plaintiff’s residence and has heard the plaintiff’s entire story. This Court has considered the testimony that the separate maintenance suit of the defendant herein in Worcester, Massachusetts, was finished and a decree'entered in her behalf in February of 1957, and thereafter on April 1st, thirty days later, the plaintiff came to the Virgin Islands; that after having come to the Virgin Islands, now seven months later, he is still paying rent on his office and maintains his furniture in Worcester, Massachusetts. He has not brought his furniture, office fixtures and medical instruments to the Virgin Islands. He claims to have given up his practice in Worcester, Massachusetts, and at the same time states that he has no money now within the Virgin Islands, and that he is on charity being supported by his brother whom he owes a total of Twenty-Six Thousand Dollars. Further, he states that he is awaiting a position in the Municipal Hospital of St. Thomas, despite the fact that the testimony of the Commissioner of Health of the Virgin Islands shows that there is no opening in the hospital here; that the defendant would be required to pass the medical board in St. Thomas, and that he is a graduate of a school which is not accredited in the Virgin Islands, which would make it impossible for him to pass the board here.

*267 The Court has also considered that the plaintiff’s income would be almost negligible from private practice of medicine in the Virgin Islands, where medicine is so considerably socialized that he would hardly be able to make a living for himself or support his family; and, also, to pay this same office girl whom he has with him in the Virgin Islands and who has been here during his entire period, as he states, waiting to work for him in his medical office in the Virgin Islands. Despite these facts, the plaintiff maintains that he came here to establish residence and to practice medicine here. That story in itself is most unplausible, and in view of the plaintiff’s demeanor upon the witness stand in many other instances leaves this Court little faith in any of his testimony. In addition to his testimony that he is unable to pay his wife and two daughters any support whatsoever, he admits that since he has separated from his wife in 1953 he has received, over and above all monies earned from his practice in Worcester during the years of 1954, 1955 and 1956, the following sums: Twenty Thousand Dollars worth of bonds which he owned in 1953 and has since sold; Thirteen Thousand Dollars which he borrowed from the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and Eleven Thousand Dollars which he borrowed from his brother in notes, or a total of Forty-Pour Thousand Dollars over and above all of the money earned in the aforesaid years, and over and above another Fifteen Thousand Dollar mortgage which he gave his brother on his optical business. This testimony is also not plausible or reasonable.

However, assuming the plaintiff’s allegations of residence to be true, we must go on to the merits of the case in question. The defendant wife has testified that they lived a perfectly happy and normal life up until November, 1953, when the plaintiff confessed to her that he was having sexual relations with his office girl, Vivienne Francis Monopoli, and that he stated to her that all men in *268 professional life had their mistresses, and that his wife should accept it as such. He denies that he made such a confession, but it is not denied by the evidence that it was from that time that all of the quarrels between husband and wife arose, nor that all of the quarrels were about this same girl. It is admitted and shown in evidence that from November, 1953, up to today he has kept constant company with this same girl, and even brought her to the Virgin Islands with him when he came seven months ago and that they are both still here in the Virgin Islands living in adjoining rooms at the Caribbean Hotel.

The evidence shows that in 1956 the plaintiff had a woman at the Concord Hotel and was registered with her as Mr. and Mrs. Sachs. He admitted that he was registered at the Concord Hotel as Mr. and Mrs. Sachs, but says that it was his wife who was with him. His wife says that it was not she who was with him. I have observed the demeanor of both witnesses on the stand and I believe the wife. In addition to the demeanor of these witnesses, it is shown by the testimony of another witness in the case, to wit: Henry L. Hickel, that he and the defendant wife went to the hotel to investigate the signature, saw the signature, and states that it is her husband’s signature. The defendant wife would have had no occasion to make that investigation if she had been the person registered in the hotel with him. In addition to that, at that time, he had already filed a divorce suit against her in Worcester, Massachusetts, which was dismissed and she filed a separate maintenance suit against him, which was later allowed. Under those circumstances, the wife would not have gone to the hotel'with this detective to make the investigation if she had been the one in the hotel with him.

While the evidence does not show that the person registered with him was Vivienne Francis Monopoli, inter *269 rogatories of another witness, Mrs. Evelyn L. Willoughby, Manager of Cedar Arms Apartment House where Mrs. Monopoli lived, showed that at the same time he was keeping company with Mrs. Monopoli; that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
155 F. Supp. 860, 3 V.I. 264, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sachs-v-sachs-vid-1957.