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Stickle v. Stickle

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jun 16, 1891
48 N.J. Eq. 336 (Ch. Div. 1891)

Opinion

06-16-1891

STICKLE v. STICKLE.

Theodore Little, for complainant. Vredenburgh & Garretson, for defendant.


(Syllabus by the Court.)

Final hearing on bill, answer, and proofs.

Theodore Little, for complainant.

Vredenburgh & Garretson, for defendant.

MCGILL, Ch. The complainant seeks a divorce from his wife, alleging as a cause her adultery with one Charles J. Fox. Both he and the defendant have lived from childhood at Rockaway, in Morris county. They were married there in 1876, and now have two children, daughters; the elder, Helen, about thirteen years of age, and the younger, Mary, two years her junior. For several years the complainant has allowed himself to become so absorbed in his business that he has neglected his wife and children, and failed to participate with them, to any considerable extent, in home life, and social pleasures and duties. He has occupied his time chiefly, in partnership with his brother, in a lumberyard, and, alone, in the management of a farm and a large general merchandise store. The evidence establishes that it has been habitual with him to remain at his store from early morning until late at night, taking barely time enough to go home, a distance of half a mile, to his meals. He is forty years old; about eight years his wife's senior. Charles J. Fox was also reared in Rockaw ay, and was the neighbor, friend, and frequent guest of the complainant and defendant. He is unmarried, and about 30 years old. For several years he was the village postmaster. In July, 1889, because of political changes, he was thrown out of that position, and became the complainant's book-keeper. He remained in the latter position until the following February, when the complainant discharged him, under the circumstances hereafter related.

The complainant testifies that on Sunday, the 16th day of February, 1890, he went home from his store at about 9 o'clock at night, in company with an employe named William Haller, who was accustomed to sleep at his house; that he went to his wife's bedroom, and there, upon a stand, saw her pocket-book, partially opened, so that money and a letter in it were exposed to his view; and that he took out the letter and read it. It was without date, in the handwriting of Fox, and commenced in this wise: "My own Precious and Darling Lib;" and continued in portions of it as follows: "My darling, you ask me if I miss you. Yes, indeed, I do miss seeing your sweet, smiling face, as I told you in my letter of yesterday. I would like to have you with me just now, and have your dear, sweet lips pressed to mine, for—well, just about an hour, without letting up at all. I am sure I could stand it; but my dearest could not, could you, darling? My dear, you speak of it being so warm in Trenton. * * * Well, my darling, I stayed with the boss again last night, and wished for my own true love just the same as usual, all the time thinking of you, dearest, because it does seem as though I wanted you where I could gaze at or hold you in my arms, you precious darling. I wish I was with you when you were feeling so badly yesterday. * * * I am your own darling and true lover, J." Folded with this letter was another writing by Fox, also without date, which commences abruptly at the top of a sheet, as though in the middle of an epistle. It begins, "I hope, my dear;" and continues in places in this language: "I have seated myself (with your dear, loving face before me) to write you a few lines before I retire, and to tell you how glad I was to learn of your condition tonight. Now, dearest one, don't think from this that I am glad of your being unwell, but that you are out of all danger of getting in any trouble from our being together; and when you said tonight that I wouldn't care to be with you tonight you were very much mistaken, because I do not love you for one purpose alone, but I love you for all and forever. ** * Now, my dear girl, I beseech of you not to accuse me of not loving after what has transpired in the past two or three days, because, my darling, I love you just the same, if not more, than ever, if such a thing is possible; and I do wish you had not made arrangements for another bedfellow tonight, because, my dear one, I would have come just as willingly and spent a few hours with you as 1 did the night before, because you have been so good to me, and sacrificed so much to add to my pleasure and enjoyment; and I feelthat I can never pay you for it. * * * Never be afraid to look me straight in the face with the same stern, frank, yet loving, look, because I respect and honor you as much as though we had a right to be together for the two nights that we were in each other's society. * * * Goodnight, sweetheart, and believe me always your own darling, J." The complainant further testifies that he remarked to Haller, who had accompanied him to his wife's room, that the defendant was careless with her pocket-book, and then, after counting his wife's money, commenced to read the letter he had found, and, recognizing the handwriting of Fox, read it aloud to Haller, and that then he and Haller started out to find the defendant, going to her father's house, about a mile distant. On their way, he says, they talked about the letter. When he reached his father-in-law's house he found Fox and Fox's brother there, but not the defendant. He says that he greeted those present generally, but said nothing in particular to Fox. Shortly after, he left his father-in-law's, and Fox and his brother left at the same time. The complainant walked ahead with Haller, and the Fox brothers followed. As they were passing the house of the defendant's sister, Fox suggested that the defendant might be there, and the complainant and Haller stopped. There he found the defendant, and, after a short visit, went home with her. He said nothing to her about the letter he had found. When they reached home Haller went to bis room, and the complainant and his wife retired. The complainant says that he undressed, and laid down a minute, and then, making the excuse that he was not sleepy, and had on inventory to write, he got up and dressed, and, rousing Haller, went with him to the store, and remained there till morning. Early in the morning he consulted his cousin, a lawyer in Rockaway, and later went to Morristown to lay his discovery before his present counsel. Later in the day he returned home, and in the evening talked with Fox in the office of his store. Upon cross-examination he relates his conversation with Fox at this interview as follows: "I asked him if he had been corresponding with my wife,— writing clandestine letters to her. He said, 'Yes,' he had. I asked him if she ever wrote any letters to him? Ha said, 'Yes.' I said, 'Did you ever write her many letters?' He said he had; quite a good many; and also said that Mrs. Stickle had written him a good many letters. I asked him where those letters were that Mrs. Stickle wrote to him. He said he burnt them up. I had quite a long talk with him after that, about ruining my family, and asked him what he thought about it; and he appeared to be very sorry. * * * Well, we had quite a long talk. I asked him if he ever kissed and hugged Mrs. Stickle. He said he had. I said, 'Charley, you have betrayed me, haven't you?' He said, 'Yes,' he had. I says: 'Charley, what would you do if you was in my place? Would you live with such a woman as that?' He said 'I don't know what I would do if I had two children.' I asked him if he would marry such a woman as Mrs. Stickle if he had a right to get married to her? He said, 'No.' I said, 'You wouldn't marry such a woman as that, Charley, would you?' He said, 'No.' I told him to comedown to the store in the morning." The next morning Fox was discharged. The complainant states that he has not seen him or corresponded with him since. This was on Tuesday morning. The same day the defendant went to New York city, and while she was away the complainant, procuring the services of a locksmith, opened her trunk, and there found 90 or more letters in the handwriting of Fox. Many of them were in envelopes which, through the cancellation of postage stamps at various dates, appear to have gone through the post-office at different times. Others do not appear to have been posted. The dates indicate that the first of them was written in December, 1888. They cover 250 printed pages, and without exception abound in expressions of an intense sexual love, so common-place, monotonous, and devoid of piquancy as to make their examination a most burdensome task. They refer to incidents and conversations and express desires which, if founded in fact, prove an unrestrained intimacy between him and the defendant. He speaks, among other things, of his difficulty in keeping away from her "dear, sweet lips;" of his longing to have her near, that he may "love" and "caress" her, and "impress on those darling, warm, and loving lips an occasional kiss;" of their being intimate; of his "starving" for her; of his almost breaking her back by his embraces; of his visits to her at her home, and of her visits to him at the post-office after it had closed for the night; of his "devouring" her with his love; of his desire to keep his lips pressed to hers all the time, and his wonder whether they could "keep it up all night;" of his wish to have her in his "arms once more;" of their narrow escapes from the complainant's detection; of his fear that their love maybe discovered, and that she may suffer in consequence, and the like. The proofs show that upon one occasion Fox was taken sick while at the complainant's house, and that he remained there all night. In one of his letters, without date, he uses this language: "My darling, when you came to my bedside the other night I felt just like pulling you in the bed with me, for I hate to see you leave me, because 1 know if you had been with me I think I would have been the happiest mortal on this earth. But no, two lovers had to be content to sleep with such a wide space between us; and under the same roof in the bargain." In another letter he wrote apologetically: "I am, indeed, very sorry that you took my meaning for bad. * ** Well, my dear. I tell you what I meant when I said, 'I hope in some future day that you may rest in the way you desire.' I did not mean it for anything bad at all,—when you said you would be happy if you could goto bed and fall asleep in my arms." Since you accuse me of meaning bad 1 have come to the conclusion that—well, Iwill not say what I was going to. I will tell you when I see you again." In another letter he stated that she had asked him how he would like to be the bed-fellow of a certain woman whom she mentioned, and added that he would like it for one night. In still another letter he said: "Well, my darling, you have no more wish for me than I have for you when I have been in bed alone; and, my darling, it would be glorious indeed to be allowed the privilege of being in bed with one I love so dearly, and having her rest on my arm all night. Yes, my dear, it would be heavenly; and, my own true love, I agree with you that we might as well have the 'game as the name of being bad." In another letter he referred to the defendant's worry about the early physical development of her elder daughter, and advised her that it was her duty to make explanations to the child, and then added that the intimacy between him and her enabled him to broach this topic.

It is claimed that these letters prove desire and opportunity, from which I should infer adultery. Before I consider their probative force it will be well to state the other proofs with which I have to deal. It has been shown beyond contradiction that Fox frequently visited the complainant's house, not only when the complainant was at home, but also when he was away; and that upon occasions he would remain with the defendant alone in the parlor or her bed-room for more than an hour at a time. One servant testifies that she has seen the defendant watching for Fox, and that, after one of his visits, the defendant instructed her not to mention the fact of the visit to Mr. Stickle; and another servant testifies that once, from the yard, she saw the defendant close the shutters of her bedroom, while Fox was in the bedroom with her, and other witnesses speak of seeing the defendant and Fox walking together frequently in the night. A young man gives evidence of having twice seen the defendant come from the post-office after it had been closed for the night, once alone and once with Fox. The defendant admits that Fox visited her, and was in her bedroom, but she insists that the room was a sitting-room as well as bedroom, frequented by the inmates of the house; that it contained her sewing-machine and a sofa, and that the bed was a wardrobe bedstead, shut up during the day. She also admits that she visited the post-office, but denies that she was ever in it after it had been closed for the night. She denies that she ever closed the shutters of her bedroom so that Fox might not be seen there, and she denies that she was ever guilty of "improper" conduct with Fox, and that she ever committed adultery with him She fails to define what she means by the word "improper." She does not once, in the course of her testimony, allude to the letters of Fox. She does not deny their receipt by her; that they were in her trunk; that one was taken from her pocket-book; that she corresponded with Fox; or that she was kissed and embraced by him. She contents herself with the uncertain denial of "improprieties," and her declaration that she did not commit adultery. She was not cross-examined. Aside from the letters, I fail to find full proof of adultery. Opportunity is sufficiently shown, and as well a censurable and imprudent friendship with Fox, and plain desire to be in his company. But, without the letters, I would not be convinced that adulterous desire existed. The proximate acts proved would leave me in that state of doubt which should be resolved in the defendant's favor. Taken with the letters, however, the proofs present a very different case. If the letters are parcel of a correspondence between the defendant and Fox, and are to be regarded as admissions of conduct and desires, adultery is established beyond peradventure. How do they stand? They are put in the case, in the first instance, by the testimony of the complainant alone. It is a noteworthy fact that neither William Haller, nor the locksmith who opened the defendant's trunk, were called as witnesses. Their absence has not been explained, and, had the defendant denied knowledge of the letters, I think it would have been fatal to the complainant's case, for he alone should not be permitted to establish this very material part of the proof. But here the defendant goes upon the stand, and, being advised by competent counsel, undertakes to meet the case against her, yet is strangely silent upon the vitally important subject of these letters. Her silence, under the circumstances, comes as a tacit admission of the truth of her husband's testimony, and of her receipt and concealment of those papers. In face of this silence, the suggestion of her counsel that the correspondence may have been the product of conspiracy between the husband and Fox comes without force. Indeed, a bare perusal of the great volume of letters, full of reference to a passing and trivial events, written upon divers papers, inclosed in a variety of envelopes, stamped with different post-marks, filling a multitude of pages, reiterating a hundred times the same expression, and covering a period of 14 months, exhibits so great an absence of studied design as to commend them as bona fide productions. To accept them as parcel of the execution of a conspiracy would require me to accord to the complainant and Fox a patient, vicious perseverauce, deep cunning, and consummate skill, which is plainly beyond their ability, and unwarranted by proofs. Indeed, the mere superabundance of letters negatives the idea that they were the product of a corrupt agreement, for in one-fiftieth part of the mass presented all the matter that would be necessary to give it effect could, and naturally would, have been written. Now, accepting the letters as those of a lover, which were secretly received, retained, and concealed, and contemplating the further circumstance that while they were being received the defendant constantly accepted and sought the society of that lover, I feel constrained to give them the full force of implied admissions by the defendant against her interest, in proof not only of the adulterous desire which is necessary to inferential proof of her guilt, but alsoof the very crime of adultery itself, for I can read the language of the papers found in her pocket-book in no other light than as an admission of adultery. That such force is due to them, under the circumstances stated, is established. Hobby v. Hobby, 64 Barb. 277; 2 Phil. Ev. 449; Loveden v. Loveden, 2 Hagg. Const. 1.

It has been insisted for the defendant that she is addicted to the continuous and excessive use of morphine; that that fact was known to the complainant; that the complainant for several years has been anxious to be divorced from her, going so far as to declare that he would give $500 for proof of her adultery; and it is argued from this and his invitations to Fox to visit his house, his neglect of his wife, and his spiritless accounting with the man who had dishonored him, that, if it is not proved that he conspired with Fox to falsely convict the defendant of adultery, it is at least shown that he connived at her seduction. It is proved that to some extent she was accustomed to take morphine, but to what extent is not shown. It is impossible to determine from the evidence that the habit in any degree affected her moral stamina. She makes no mention of the habit in her testimony. That her husband knew of the habit is a mooted question. He denies all knowledge of it. That the complainant once before suspected her of infidelity, and that their relations have been most unhappy, is abundantly shown by the bill and answer in divorce proceedings between them in 1885. It was upon that occasion that he fretfully declared that he would pay $500 for proof of her adultery. These conditions may in a great measure account for the complainant's absorption in his business pursuits and neglect of his wife, but they do not show affirmative connivance. They give room for nothing more than conjecture. His lack of spirit in dealing with J. Fox was evidently due to his mercantile habit of weighing his actions by profit and loss. Indeed, the fact that the defense of connivance is resorted to, in light of the failure to deny the receipt of Fox's letters, itself strengthens the conviction that the defendant was guilty of the adultery charged. But it is insisted that, in view of the complainant's pastsuspicions of his wife, he was bound to watch her, and that his careless neglect to do so, and to discover and prevent her relations with Fox, amount to a passive connivance, which should preclude him from obtaining a decree of divorce. And here the doctrine enunciated in this state by Chancellor Zabriskie in Hedden v. Hedden, 21 N. J. Eq. 61, 74, and followed by Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet in Cane v. Cane, 39 N. J. Eq. 148, that if a husband sees what a reasonable man could not see without alarm, or if he knows that his wife has been guilty of incontinence, whereby he is put upon his guard respecting her weakness, he is called upon to exercise a peculiar vigilance and care over her; and, if he sees what a reasonable man could not permit, and makes no effort to avert the danger, he must be supposed to see and mean the result,—is invoked. It is observed that in this case the complainant did not know that his wife had ever been guilty of incontinence. He merely suspected it, and eventually so far abandoned his suspicions as to live for years with her as her husband, and the complainant most solemnly avers that he never, previous to finding the letter in her pocket-book, had suspected unlawful or improper relations between her and Fox. There is nothing to indicate that Fox had not previously been of good repute for morality. He had been a life-long friend of both the complainant and defendant. I think it would establish a dangerous precedent to put this case within the doctrine applied in the two cases last cited. To require a suspicious vigilance upon the part of a husband who once who may have entertained a groundless suspicion of his wife's fidelity, in itself would be apt to engender doubt and mistrust that would continually threaten conjugal happiness. The essential elements of the doctrine referred to are lacking here. There was neither knowledge of previous incontinency, nor knowledge of questionable relations between the defendant and Fox. It is, of course, to be deplored that the complainant did not devote more time to the supervision of his wife and family, but that he failed to do so will not disentitle him to the decree he now asks. I will grant the divorce.


Summaries of

Stickle v. Stickle

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
Jun 16, 1891
48 N.J. Eq. 336 (Ch. Div. 1891)
Case details for

Stickle v. Stickle

Case Details

Full title:STICKLE v. STICKLE.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: Jun 16, 1891

Citations

48 N.J. Eq. 336 (Ch. Div. 1891)
48 N.J. Eq. 336

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