The complaint, which is for a divorce, alleged adultery on the part of the defendant at the city of Havana, in the island of Cuba, at divers times between the 1st of January, 1887, and the commencement of the action, with a woman whose name is unknown to the plaintiff. And it wras principally as to this averment that the motion was made for a bill of particulars; and ordinarily, where the motion is sustained by the affidavit of the party, stating his inability to meet the charge, without a more particular description or statement of the facts attending it, a bill of particulars may be ordered, (Cardwell v. Cardwell, 12 Hun, 92;) or, when the motion is made in time, the complaint may be directed to be made more definite and certain. But the defendant is not necessarily, and as a matter of course, entitled to such a bill of particulars. Mitchell v. Mitchell, 61 N. Y. 398. To entitle his' application for the bill to success, his probable inability to meet the allegation as it is set forth in the complaint should be shown; for, notwithstanding the very general nature of the allegation, he may be fully aware of the individual intended to be referred to in making it; and, if he has that knowledge or information, then he cannot be misled or prejudiced in his defense by the omission to state the name or give the description of the person in the complaint, or to designate the place where the misconduct may have occurred.
In this case no affidavit whatever has been made by the defendant, and no information appears to have proceeded from him in any form, indicating his inability to meet this charge, by proof upon the trial, in the form in which it
The issues in the action have been directed to be tried by a jury on the application of the defendant. For that trial special issues are required to be framed, and in framing those issues care will be taken, on the objection of the defendant, to add such certainty to the charges of misconduct on the part of the defendant as will afford him a complete opportunity to meet, by proof, such charges upon the trial. "Where the complaint is too general and indefinite, it has been the practice in settling the final issues to express them with such a degree of particularity as will avoid all ground for surprise on the part of the defendant. Wood v. Wood, 2 Paige, 108-113. That course is still available for the defendant, and will entitle him to such a statement of the facts as will enable him understandingly and carefuBy to prepare for the trial. The order from which the appeal has been taken should be affirmed, together with $10 costs, and also the disbursements.