Hofmann v. Hofmann

Merrell, J. (dissenting):

Defendant has appealed from an order overruling his demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint and granting plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.

The parties are husband and wife, and the action is by the wife to procure a judgment separating the parties from bed and board forever by reason of the cruel and inhuman treatment of the plaintiff by the defendant and by reason of such conduct on the part of the defendant toward the plaintiff as renders it unsafe and improper for the defendant to cohabit with the plaintiff. The complaint alleges the marriage of the parties in the State of New York, where they then resided, *601and both still reside; that the issue of such marriage were a son and a daughter, aged twenty-seven and twenty-six years, respectively. The complaint then alleges that the defendant has treated the plaintiff in a cruel and inhuman manner and has been guilty of conduct making it unsafe and improper for her to live and cohabit with him. Specifically, as ground for the relief which she seeks herein, plaintiff alleges that the defendant, without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, and without the personal service of the summons upon her, obtained a decree of divorce in the State of Pennsylvania; that the court granting such decree obtained no jurisdiction of the plaintiff, and that said pretended action was wholly null and void; that plaintiff’s first knowledge or information of said pretended decree of divorce was by the defendant causing her to receive by mail in the city of New York a certified copy thereof, on or about November 12, 1919; that the defendant, without being divorced from plaintiff, has contracted and entered into another marriage with a woman other than plaintiff, and is living in adulterous intercourse with said woman in the city of New York, and that the defendant has caused divers persons, including the children of the parties, to be informed of the pretended decree of divorce, and of the pretended marriage of the defendant to the aforesaid woman and of his living with her, and that the defendant has represented to the children of the parties that they should meet and affiliate with the said woman with whom the defendant is living. The .complaint then states: That the aforesaid acts of the defendant have caused the .plaintiff acute mental suffering and distress and constitute the grounds of cruelty and inhuman treatment and improper conduct above alleged.” But one cause of action is alleged in the complaint, and but one relief demanded, viz., that the plaintiff may forever be separated from the bed and board of the defendant.

The appellant contends that the facts in the complaint would not sustain a finding that the defendant is guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment, or of such conduct as renders it unsafe and improper for plaintiff to live with him. While the complaint does not specifically allege that the acts complained of have caused the plaintiff any ill health or bodily *602suffering, nevertheless, the facts stated in the complaint show a course of conduct on the part of the defendant which would not .only affect the health of a normal woman, but are such as to render it highly improper, if not' impossible, for the defendant longer to cohabit with the plaintiff.

The defendant, appellant, relies upon the cases of Zorn v. Zorn (38 Hun, 67) and Allen v. Allen (125 App. Div. 838) in support of his contention that the complaint does not set forth a good cause of action for separation. In Zorn v. Zorn the ground of the demurrer was a misjoinder of causes of action and the court decided that a cause of action for divorce could not be joined with a cause of action for a separation. In Allen v. Allen the complaint set forth two separate causes of action, one for divorce on the ground of adultery, and the second for a separation on the ground of cruelty. An answer was interposed and a motion was made to strike out such answer as frivolous. Upon plaintiff’s motion, at Special Term, the defendant’s answer was stricken out. An appeal was taken and it was held that the answer was not frivolous. Two opinions were written in the Appellate Division. The prevailing opinion was written by Mr. Justice S cott, and the dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice McLaughlin. In both these opinions the sufficiency of the complaint was considered, although the complaint was in nowise before the court. A majority of the court held that a cause of action for a divorce and a cause of action for a separation could not be joined in one complaint. Mr. Justice McLaughlin, dissenting therefrom, was of the opinion that the two causes of action were not inconsistent, and that under the allegations contained in the complaint, proof would be admissible to establish that the defendant’s conduct constituted “ cruel and inhuman treatment of such a character as to render it unsafe and improper for the plaintiff to longer cohabit with him.” The learned justice then said: “ I cannot conceive of any more cruel and inhuman treatment to a highly sensitive, educated and moral woman than open and notorious acts of adultery on the part of the husband. What act could be more humiliating or likely to affect the health of such a person than that the husband should insist upon keeping his mistress in the home, or that he should frequently be seen in public *603with her? Such acts to many women Would be more cruel and do more to impair their health than threats or physical injury.”

The complaint before us does not state two separate causes of action, nor does it ask for an absolute divorce. Therefore, the rule laid down in Zorn v. Zorn is not controlling here, but this complaint wrould seem to fall directly within the language used by Mr. Justice McLaughlin in his dissenting opinion in Allen v. Allen (supra). Neither of the above cases is authority for holding that acts of adultery cannot be set forth in a complaint in an action for a separation, together with other facts which are claimed by the plaintiff to constitute cruelty, or such conduct on the part of the defendant as renders it unsafe and improper for the defendant to cohabit with the plaintiff. Nor do I know of any good reason for holding that an allegation of adultery is inconsistent with an allegation of cruelty. A brief review of the law respecting divorce and separation may be helpful in determining the question here involved.

Prior to the enactment of chapter 69 of the laws of the State of New York passed in 1787, conferring jurisdiction upon the courts of this State to grant a judicial decree of divorcé on the ground of adultery, it had been, for centuries, the common law of England, adopted by our colonies, that acts of adultery and cruelty were the only causes for granting a divorce a mensa et thoro. In England this limited decree of divorce was commonly spoken of as a “ divorce,” although it is now known in our jurisprudence as a separation. Up to 1787 there was no judicial tribunal in the Colony or the State of New York which had any jurisdiction to grant a decree, either of separation or divorce, although by the common law, up to that time, adultery was the main ground for a separation. In England the ecclesiastical courts had exclusive jurisdiction to grant a judicial decree of divorce and such decree was limited by such courts to a judgment a mensa et thoro. For many years eminent authorities had contended that the course pursued in England by the ecclesiastical courts was highly improper in that countless women were turned loose upon society without husbands, and without the right to remarry, thereby indirectly bringing about the birth of illegitimate *604children, where otherwise parties could remarry and thus maintain a proper social status. Our Legislature, by act passed March 30, 1787, first gave to the courts jurisdiction to grant a decree of absolute divorce through An Act directing a mode of trial, and allowing of divorces in cases of adultery.” The statute then enacted established a procedure in case of the commission of adultery by an inhabitant of this State, whereby in case such adultery was established, the chancellor was empowered by sentence or decree ” to pronounce a marriage dissolved, and both parties thereto freed from the obligations of the same, preserving the legitimacy of the children of such union, and providing for the care and maintenance of the children (if any) of said marriage, and also for the maintenance of the wife or for an allowance to her and for the security to be given therefor. The act further prohibited the subsequent marriage of a party convicted of adultery, but permitted the other party to remarry, as though the adulterer were actually dead. Later, by the Revised Laws of 1813 and by the Revised Statutes of 1830, our laws respecting a judicial divorce were amended and our courts were given jurisdiction to grant a separation for cruelty and such other causes as are now embraced within section 1762 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (See R. L. of 1813, chap. 102, § 10 et seq.; 2 R. L. 200, § 10 et seq.; R. S. pt. 2, chap. 8, tit. 1, § 50 et seq.; 2 R. S. 146, § 50 et seq.)

It will thus be seen that from time immemorial adultery has been considered the greatest offense against the marriage relation (1 Bishop Marr., Div. & Sep. § 1495), and such offense has been the main and practically the only ground for granting a decree of divorce or separation. Such being the case, I can see no inconsistency nor impropriety in pleading such an act along with other facts which are claimed to constitute cruel and inhuman treatment, or such treatment or course of conduct on the part of the defendant as renders a continuance of the marital relation intolerable. Moreover, section 1762 of the Code of Civil Procedure has been most liberally interpreted by the courts. It has been held that bringing loose women into the home is an act of cruelty, that accusations on the part of either party to the marriage that the other is guilty of adultery, especially when made in public, render a *605continuance of the marital relation impossible and warrant the court granting a decree of separation. (Tower v. Tower, 134 App. Div. 670; Kinsey v. Kinsey, 124 N. Y. Supp. 30.) It was formerly the law that either violence or threats of physical injury must be alleged. The rule has now, however, been extended to include such conduct as would reasonably be expected to cause such mental agony as would affect the health. As is said in Bishop on Marriage, Divorce and Separation (Vol. 1, § 1551), quoting from a case there cited: “ We are possessed of social, moral and intellectual natures, with wants to be supplied, with susceptibilities of pain and pleasure; if they can be wounded and healed, as well as the physical part, with accompanying suffering and delight,— then we think that conduct which produces perpetual social sorrow, although physical food be not withheld, may well be classed as cruel, and entitle the sufferer to relief.”

And, further (in § 1559) the learned author says: “As already seen, it was an old idea that mental suffering had nothing to do with bodily ills; at least, that it did not so directly create them as to render the infliction of it cruelty. * * *

“ § 1563. Under more enlightened psysiological views, the legal doctrine has become settled, it is believed everywhere, that conduct which produces pain of mind is legal cruelty; so that whenever, operating either alone or in combination with something else, it creates a danger to the physical health, a divorce for it or the combination will be justifiable.”

There are many cases in which the rule above stated has been applied. (Lutz v. Lutz, 9 N. Y. Supp. 858; Atherton v. Atherton, 82 Hun, 179; affd., 155 N. Y. 129; Bihin v. Bihin, 17 Abb. Pr. 19; Straus v. Straus, 67 Hun, 492; Waltermire v, Waltermire, 110 N. Y. 183.) Such being the rule, it seems inconsistent that threats and accusations of infidelity should be held to constitute a good cause for a separation, while open and continuous acts of adultery may not properly be alleged with other facts in a complaint in an action for like relief. In the complaint in the case at bar it is alleged that the defendant caused plaintiff to be served with a certified copy of a spurious decree of divorce; that said defendant is living in open adultery; is representing to the public that he *606has divorced the plaintiff, when he has not; and has endeavored to induce the children of the marriage to affiliate with the woman with whom he is now living. It is difficult to see how any act on the part of the defendant could be more cruel than those mentioned. Certainly, such acts, if true, and, on demurrer, we must assume them to be true, render it impossible for the defendant to live or cohabit with the plaintiff. It has been held in several cases that where the husband is accustomed to consort with lewd women, such fact constitutes such improper conduct as to warrant the wife leaving him, and makes the continuance of the marital relation intolerable. (Bennett v. Smith, 21 Barb. 439.) In that case the learned justice who wrote the opinion says, in referring to the conduct of the husband respecting the charge of illicit intercourse: Her husband, if what was offered to be proved in regard to his habits and conduct was true, was entirely unworthy of, and unfit for, the society of a virtuous woman.” In Sykes v. Halstead (1 Sand. 483) the chief judge said: “ The defendant in this case had given just cause to his wife for.a separation. He had been guilty of adultery of a gross character.”

In the case of Horwood v. Heffer (3 Taunt. 421) it was held that although the acts of the husband created no apprehension for the personal safety of the wife, still the husband had treated her “ with great cruelty ” for the reason that he had brought a profligate woman into the house. The case of Horwood v. Heffer is quoted with approval by Chief Justice Bronson in Blowers v. Sturtevant (4 Den. 46).

Moreover, the Code of Civil Procedure (§ 1770) now permits such acts of adultery to be set up as a counterclaim in either form of action, and adultery is also a defense to an action for a separation. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1765; Hawkins v. Hawkins, 193 N. Y. 409.) It, therefore, seems illogical that a charge of adultery cannot be alleged in a complaint for a separation, along with other facts and items of misconduct, in order to show cruelty or such conduct as renders a continuance of the marital relation improper. The true rule, it seems to me, is as above indicated, that the plaintiff may set up all of various acts of defendant’s misconduct that the court may determine from all of the surrounding facts and circumstances whether the conduct of the defendant constitutes cruelty, or *607is, at least, so offensive and improper as to practically destroy the marital relation. As was said by Mr. Justice Betts in Murdock v. Murdock (148 App. Div. 564) in his opinion (at p. 569): “ ‘ It may be laid down as a general rule in such actions that a picture of the previous married life of the. parties is essential to an intelligent and fair conclusion as to the effect which ought to be given to proof of a particular act of cruelty on the part of the husband.’ So I think in this case everything pertaining to the married life of the parties was essential to be brought out so that the court might be put in possession of the fullest information in order to frame -the decree which ultimately would be granted.”

As this question comes to this court on a demurrer to the complaint, I do not think that the court can hold as a matter of law that the complaint does not set forth a good cause of action. It is to be assumed that the plaintiff is a normal person, ordinarily sensitive, and of good character, and that the acts on the part of the husband, as alleged in the complaint, have caused her great mental suffering and anguish, as she has alleged. It is clear that, if the acts complained of are true, it is no longer possible for the plaintiff to cohabit with the defendant, nor does it appear that either party is desirous so to do. The defendant is living in open adulterous intercourse with another woman, and is apparently endeavoring to bring the children of the marriage into his present place of abode, and to create a friendship between them and the. woman who has taken their mother’s place. Such acts, I think, within the cases, can well be said to constitute a good cause of action for a separation. Certainly it cannot be said as a matter of law that they do not.

It is true that this court has held that a cause of action for a divorce on the ground of adultery and a cause of action for a separation on the ground of cruelty cannot be joined in the same complaint in two counts which ask for relief upon both grounds. (Conrad v. Conrad, 124 App. Div. 780.) But as above shown, it does not necessarily follow that when allegations of adultery are contained in a complaint in an action for a separation, along with other facts which are claimed to constitute cruelty, the complaint does not state a good cause of action for a separation.

*608In the case at bar only one remedy is sought, to wit, a separation, and the plaintiff has simply alleged the fact that the defendant is living in open adultery as one of the facts which, on her theory, constitutes cruelty or such conduct as renders it unsafe and improper for her to cohabit longer with the defendant. I find nothing in the Code of Civil Procedure or in any of the adjudicated cases which prevents the plaintiff in an action for a separation from setting forth all of the defendant’s acts which .are an offense against the marriage, including his adultery.

Aside from the allegations of defendant’s infidelity, the complaint states facts amply sufficient to constitute a cause of action for a limited divorce. Coupled with the allegation of defendant’s procurance of the spurious Pennsylvania divorce, his causing plaintiff to be served with a certified copy of the bogus decree which he had obtained, his subsequent pretended marriage to and adulterous intercourse with another woman, and his advertisement that he was divorced and had remarried, is the no less important allegation of the complaint that defendant had represented to plaintiff’s and his own son and daughter that they should meet and affiliate with the woman with whom he was having illicit relations. It is difficult to conceive of a form of cruelty more fiendish or more apt to bring acute mental anguish to a sensitive mother than to have her husband — the father of their children — seek to establish in their affections another woman in the mother’s place. The fact that the son and daughter of the parties have arrived at years of maturity does not lessen, but, rather, increases, the gravity of the offense. At no time is the mother more entitled to the affection and respect of her offspring than when, her long vigil ended, they have come to years of understanding. The husband who seeks to divert from a mother that meed of recompense for long years of unselfish care and devotion is guilty of a cruelty in comparison to which the physical tortures of the rack or the thumbscrew of medieval days were insignificant. Nothing could tend more to destroy the health and happiness of plaintiff or render it more unsafe and improper for the defendant to longer cohabit with her than the conduct of the former as alleged in the complaint, and admitted by the demurrer to be true.

*609The demurrer was properly overruled, and plaintiff’s motion for judgment upon the pleadings was properly granted.

The order appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the respondent.

Order reversed and motion denied.