Tirrell v. Tirrell

190 A.D. 463, 180 N.Y.S. 49, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4178
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 16, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 A.D. 463 (Tirrell v. Tirrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tirrell v. Tirrell, 190 A.D. 463, 180 N.Y.S. 49, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4178 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

Merrell, J.:

The plaintiff and defendant were married at Coaticook, Province of Quebec, Canada, on August 9, 1894. There is no [464]*464issue of their marriage. The defendant is a practicing physician and surgeon in the city of New York. Directly after the marriage of the parties they came to New York to reside, and for a time appear to have lived happily together. At first the defendant had a limited practice and the early married life of the parties was in modest circumstances. As time passed the defendant’s practice increased and the parties were able to live more expensively. With the coming of affluence the domestic felicity of the parties seems to have suffered. During the twenty-four or twenty-five years of their married life since coming to the city of New York only the very first years seem to have been passed harmoniously. The evidence shows that for many years the parties have been in the habit of quarreling almost incessantly, the plaintiff admitting that language of the most abusive and indecent character was constantly used between the parties in their continual bickerings and quarrels. Since 1909 the parties have not cohabited together as husband and wife, although during all the period since their marriage and until August, 1916, they appear to have lived under the same roof and, in a way, to have been members of the same household. During these years the defendant was a busy, practicing physician, devoting himself entirely to his profession, while the plaintiff attended to the management of the household. Plaintiff, for some time prior to the events leading up to the actual separation of the parties, was the president of the Women’s Relief Corps of the Grand Army of the Republic, which organization demanded a part of her time.

After years of marital infelicity and the relations of the parties becoming strained to the breaking point, on July 8, 1916, the defendant commenced an action against the plaintiff to obtain a decree of separation upon the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment of defendant by plaintiff. At the time of the commencement of said action plaintiff and defendant were residing beneath the same roof in the city of New York, sometimes taking their meals together, but otherwise occupying separate rooms. As before stated, since 1909 they had not cohabited as husband and wife. The evidence shows that during recent years they were very little in each other’s society, and while the marital relations have never been dissolved by the decree of any court of competent jurisdiction, still to all [465]*465intents and purposes the plaintiff and defendant, while sheltered by the same roof, were, in fact, estranged and separated.

After the commencement of the action for separation the plaintiff herein (the defendant in the separation action) retained a reputable attorney to represent her in the action, and said attorney duly appeared therein in defendant’s behalf. Thereupon and during the month of July, negotiations were entered upon between the parties, aided and assisted by their respective attorneys, looking toward an adjustment of the rights of the parties, to the end that they at that time having separated, proper provision should be made for the separate support and maintenance of the defendant in said action (the plaintiff herein) out of the property of this defendant, upon consideration of said defendant’s releasing plaintiff from all further liability for her support and releasing and discharging her dower in his real estate. During the pendency of said separation action, and except for such negotiations, the parties saw little of each other. Later in the month of July the defendant left plaintiff and spent his summer vacation away from the city of New York, returning about the 21st of August, 1916. Within two or three days thereafter the plaintiff herein left for a visit among friends at Beacon Hills, N. Y. Prior to leaving, a settlement had been agreed upon between the parties to the effect that the parties should separate and thereafter live separately and apart, and that the household effects of the defendant herein should be divided between them. Written lists were, prepared specifying a division of the household furniture and personal effects of the parties. Adjustment was made through the defendant paying plaintiff for certain of the goods and household effects that he desired to keep which had fallen to plaintiff upon such division. Through negotiation it had been further agreed that the defendant herein should pay the plaintiff the sum of $6,000 in cash upon the execution of proper instruments releasing her dower in any real estate of which the defendant was seized, and that in addition thereto defendant should pay plaintiff the sum of $100 a month for the period of two years following the execution of said release. In the month of August, 1916, before the plaintiff herein left to visit her [466]*466friends, and when apparently the understanding of the parties was that all marriage relations were at an end, the plaintiff’s share of the personal property and household effects of the parties was packed up awaiting transportation from the home. Unquestionably the parties then regarded actual marital relations between them as a closed chapter. There only remained the execution of defendant’s agreement for his wife’s settlement and her agreement releasing him from further responsibility.

On August 31, 1916, the plaintiff returned from her visit to her friends at Beacon Hills, and, stopping merely for a cup of tea at the home of the parties, went to the law offices of her attorney in the city of New York, and there met the defendant and his attorney. Prior to that time papers had been prepared for execution of the parties in accordance with the agreement which they had reached, providing for the payment by the defendant herein to the plaintiff of $8,400, being $6,000 in cash and $100 a month for the period of two years, and which sum the plaintiff herein was to accept from the defendant in full of all claims for support and maintenance or any other claim of any other kind that she had or might have against the defendant, including her dower interest in his real estate. The parties and their respective counsel, on said 31st day of August, 1916, at the office of the attorney for the plaintiff herein, conferred together at great length. During their conferences and negotiations looking to a settlement of the action for separation which had been brought against the plaintiff by the defendant herein, defendant’s financial condition and property were discussed at length by the parties and their respective counsel. In addition to the attorney for the plaintiff herein who represented her at said conference and who was an attorney of unimpeachable character and high standing at the bar, another reputable attorney was called in to aid and counsel with the plaintiff concerning her rights on such settlement. After long negotiations, extending from two o’clock in the afternoon until seven o’clock at night, the parties finally reached an agreement and the paper referred to as a separation agreement was executed and acknowledged by both parties under their hands and seals. This paper, executed August 31, 1916, [467]

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Bluebook (online)
190 A.D. 463, 180 N.Y.S. 49, 1920 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tirrell-v-tirrell-nyappdiv-1920.