Succhierelli v. Succhierelli

137 A. 839, 101 N.J. Eq. 30, 16 Stock. 30, 1927 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 97
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 10, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 137 A. 839 (Succhierelli v. Succhierelli) 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
Succhierelli v. Succhierelli, 137 A. 839, 101 N.J. Eq. 30, 16 Stock. 30, 1927 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 97 (N.J. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

The petition in this cause alleges the marriage of the parties and residence of the petitioner, and avers that they cohabited after their marriage until on or about the 14th day of November, 1924, "when said defendant deserted her * * * ever since which time and for more than two years last past said defendant has willfully, continuedly and obstinately deserted the petitioner." This averment of desertion is in the statutory language, and charged an actual desertion of the petitioner by the defendant; and which will also hereafter appear. The defendant defaulted in pleading and the cause was referred to a special master, who has reported that he is of opinion that all the material facts charged in the petition are true, as appears by the testimony annexed to his report, and that a decree of divorce should be made, for the cause of desertion, pursuant to the prayer of the petition.

The petitioner testified before the master that "on November 14th, 1924, my husband drove my son and I out of our said house and I went to live with my brother and his wife * * *. I have not lived with nor had sexual intercourse with my husband since November 14th, 1924." She also told of her husband striking her over the smallest matters, having previously struck her in the face, c. The son of the petitioner by a former marriage, Paul Martucci, testified that he was living with the parties when, on November 14th, 1924, petitioner's husband ordered his mother and him out of the home and they went to live with his mother's brother. There was other corroboration.

Now, this was a constructive, and not an actual, desertion. In19 C.J. 57, it is stated that where the offense is described by statute as "willful and obstinate desertion," it is not only essential that the party complained of left voluntarily and against the will of the complainant, but that she remained away when it was her duty to return. Tested by this rule *Page 32 the desertion in this case was not of the character pleaded, but was a constructive, as contradistinguished from an actual, desertion by the defendant.

There are three essentially requisite things in a divorce suit necessary to be properly proved — first, marriage; second, residence, and third, cause of action. Bolmer v. Edsall,90 N.J. Eq. 299, 305. And the third must be pleaded as well as proved in all cases in which the husband is not the actual physical deserter. Metzler v. Metzler, infra.

In Csanyi v. Csanyi, 93 N.J. Eq. 11, I held that a constructive desertion is one where an existing cohabitation of the parties is put an end to by misconduct of one of them, provided such misconduct is itself a ground of divorce a vinculoor a mensa, and it is not a necessary ingredient in constructive desertion that the husband shall entertain, in connection with his acts of cruelty, any settled purpose to drive his wife from him; it is enough if such is the natural consequence of his acts. See, also, Danielly v. Danielly, 93 N.J. Eq. 556, wherein I also defined constructive desertion in the same terms. But in the instant case the husband actually drove the wife away.

In McVickar v. McVickar, 46 N.J. Eq. 490, Vice-Chancellor Pitney says (at p. 492): "That the cruel treatment of a wife by a husband will amount to desertion on his part is well settled in this state, quoting Chancellor Zabriskie in Starkey v.Starkey, 21 N.J. Eq. 136, wherein the latter says that in all cases where a husband `either actually drives his wife from himself and his house, or by his cruel and abusive treatment compels her to leave it for safety or comfort, it is an abandonment and separation by him.'" And he quotes Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet in Skean v. Skean, 33 N.J. Eq. 150,151, as saying: "That the husband may drive his wife away, or he may treat her so brutally as to compel her to flee for safety, or his conduct may be so cruel and malignant as to show that he means to force her away; that if a wife, for either of these causes, separates herself from her husband * * * he, in the eye of the law, is the deserter and she has a right to ask for a dissolution of the marriage tie. *Page 33

Now, judged by these tests this wife has a right to sue for divorce, charging defendant with being the deserter, although she actually left the house — driven away by him, if you please.

And these judges put actually driving the wife out in the same category as conduct constraining her to go. I have no quarrel with the doctrine that in such circumstances the husband is in theory and contemplation of law the deserter, but I say that he is not the actual deserter, that is, leaver, of the matrimonial abode; in other words, he does not "physically" desert. He compels the wife to do that. In such circumstances he is guilty of constructive desertion. Constructive is rather paradoxical to be sure, the statement is apparently not rue, but actually so.

If anything were wanting to prove the soundness of this assertion it was uttered by Chancellor Pitney in Metzler v.Metzler, 69 Atl. Rep. 965, wherein he said: "The petition charges in the simplest form that the defendant deserted the petitioner on the date above mentioned. To the common understanding this averment means that he physically abandoned her. The case made by the proofs and found by the master is that on the date referred to the petitioner left the defendant because of his long-continued cruel treatment of her. A case of constructice desertion on the part of the husband is fairly made out; but in my view it is a different case from that averred in the petition. Section 7 of the act of 1902 (P.L. p. 504), like section 10 of the present act (P.L. 1907 p. 478), required that the petition should `plainly and fully' state the cause or `causes of the application for such divorce.' In my opinion service of a copy of the petition herein upon the defendant did not plainly and fully convey notice to the defendant that he was called upon to answer a case of constructive desertion, and he was justified in supposing that his wife could not support with proofs the case she averred in her petition. The Divorce act admits of simple pleadings, but the petition should, I think, be couched in such phrase as to convey to a person of ordinary comprehension the accusation upon which the prayer for *Page 34 divorce is based. Smithkin v. Smithkin, 62 N.J. Eq. 161, 163;49 Atl. Rep. 815, indicates the proper form of pleading where constructive desertion is to be relied upon. That case was followed by Foote v. Foote (N.J. Ch.), 61 Atl. Rep. 90,93. The reversal of the decree in the latter case (65 Atl. Rep. 205) did not overthrow the decision of this court with respect to the proper mode of pleading a constructive desertion, for it proceeded on the ground that the case was one of actual, not of constructive, desertion."

In Smithkin v. Smithkin

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 839, 101 N.J. Eq. 30, 16 Stock. 30, 1927 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succhierelli-v-succhierelli-njch-1927.