The plaintiffs had recovery below for the value of legal services rendered by them on behalf of the defendant’s wife in an action for separation instituted by him against her. The question presented on this appeal is whether the action will lie.
It is undisputed that services were rendered to the wife, and we do not think the amount sued for and recovered unreasonable. There was a conflict of testimony whether the wife was possessed of independent means, the plaintiffs offering proof to show that she was penniless and in necessitous circumstances, while the defendant claimed that she had jewelry and money in bank. We accept the finding of the justice in favor of the plaintiffs’ contention. This action was instituted after a reconciliation had been effected between the defendant and his wife and after entry of an order discontinuing the separation suit. We find but two cases in
Applying this rule to the facts before us, we hold that the judgment must be sustained. This case is stronger than Naumer v. Gray. There the separation suit was instituted by the wife, and the plaintiff, therefore, had the additional burden of proving the reasonableness and necessity of the suit. Here the wife was forced into the litigation as defendant, and, obviously, her attorneys, to recover, need prove no justification for her endeavors to maintain unimpaired the marital relation. Public policy furnishes the warrant for the defense of the suit even as it requires the wife, when she, as plaintiff, brings the husband into court, to show reasonable cause for her action.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Freedman, P. J., concurs.