The only evidence offered upon the part of the plaintiff in support of the charge of adultery was the evidence of Katie Green and Margaret Brown, two women who had been for a sei'ies of years servants in a house of ill fame, kept by a Mrs. Chadwick, at 187 Lexington avenue. Their present residence and occupation is not given.
Katie Green says that she has seen the defendant there more than once occasionally, she thinks three or four times a week. She can’t say positively how often. She could not say that she ever saw defendant go into Ella’s room (Ella being the person with whom the adultery is alleged to have been committed). She did not know that the defendant ever spent a night in the house, although she knew of his being there late some nights when she went to bed. Upon the direct examination she testified that she had seen defendant in Ella’s room ; that Miss Ella used to call him up into her room ; she thought it was in the morning, and they were alone in the room when she saw them ; that she was coming up and down stairs when
. , It is, of course, well established that it is not necessary to-prove the direct fact of adulter}^, but such circumstances must be proven that the fact may be fairly inferred from them. As for example, if a married man visits a house of ill fame and shuts himself in a room with a common prostitute, it must be-inferred, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that he does this with the intent of committing adultery, and as the opportunity and the undoubted consent of another party concur with his own intent, the offense must be presumed to be committed (Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, § 626). It will be observed that the foundation of the presumption is the intent and opportunity to gratify that intent, and unless both are combined, no such presumption is to be indulged in. The foundation of this rule is, that when two persons desire to do a thing, and they have the opportunity to gratify their desires, universal experience shows that they will embrace the opportunity. In this case, even if the evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses is to be received as true, it does not come up to this standard. There is not the slightest particle of evidence that the defendant was ever-shut up with Ella in her or any other room. The witness Green says that she never saw defendant in Ella’s room but once, and that was while she was going tip or down stairs, and further
But beyond this, it is the well settled rule that the uncorroborated testimony of loose women is entirely insufficient to establish adultery, and although it was claimed upon the argument that there was no evidence of bad character 'as to these two women, yet the fact that they have lived in a house of prostitution for years as servants, would seem to indicate that they did not occupy any higher position in the social scale than the women whom they served, and it can never be believed that they are better entitled to credit than the other inmates of the house. The testimony of these women is entirely unsupported, except by the admission of the defendant, that he was in that house once, and it is met by the hat denial of the defendant as to any act of adultery. Even without that denial,, it seems to us that the court could not grant a divorce upon such testimony. We do not think that the defendant was bound to call Ella and Mrs. Chadwick; he was not called upon to imperil his case by a resort to such evidence. It was as much the duty of the plaintiffs to call them as the defendants. There is no case to be found where a conviction for adultery has been sustained upon such meagre evidence as this. The judgment must be reversed ; but as it is upon the ground that it is against the evidence, it must be upon payment of costs.
Daly, Ch. J., and Robinson, J., concurred.
Judgment reversed.