Opinion
July Term, 1904.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs, and cause set down for trial for October term.
The plaintiff, suing for an absolute divorce, in his complaint charges the defendant with the commission of no less than seventeen acts of adultery with seven different persons. The defendant in her answer recriminates and charges the plaintiff with having committed adultery with a servant girl. Issues were framed for trial by jury and the cause appeared on the calendar for the first time in February, 1904. It was adjourned for about two weeks at the defendant's request. By arrangement between the parties the case stood over for trial until the March term. At that term application was made for a postponement by the defendant on the ground that she was seriously ill and confined to her bed in a sanitarium, away from New York city, with her leg done up in a plaster cast. On March sixteenth the facts were stated to the court by the defendant's attorney, and a physician's certificate was produced showing the condition of the defendant, and a postponement of the trial was asked. It was opposed and affidavits were submitted, and the case was called again on the twenty-first of March. Another certificate was then presented showing the defendant's condition, to the effect that she was unable to appear in court and would not be able to attend for some time, and that she was suffering from chronic inflammation of the knee and from nervous prostration. The court would not permit a postponement of the case, but thereupon counsel for the plaintiff intimated to the defendant's attorney that if the defendant would personally sign a stipulation either to try the case in April or consent to a reference, it would be allowed to go over to the April term. Such a stipulation was prepared and a letter accompanying it was sent to the defendant, who signed the stipulation and returned it. Notwithstanding this stipulation, the court directed the cause (which was awaiting its turn on the day calendar) to be heard when it was reached. It was reached on the twenty-fourth of March and the default of the defendant was taken. The plaintiff undertook to prove his case by the servant girl named by the defendant as correspondent with the plaintiff in the charge of adultery made against him, and the witness testified only as to confessions made to her by the defendant and to some circumstances slightly sustaining her testimony. The default should be opened. On reading the affidavits, we think the claim of the defendant that she was too ill to attend the trial was meritorious; but further than that, a decree of absolute divorce with all its accompanying disastrous incidents should not be entered in such a case as this upon the testimony of an alleged correspondent of a person seeking the divorce. We do not mean to express any opinion or intimate any view respecting the merits of this case. It is sufficient to say that upon the technical ground of the application we think the motion should have been granted, and, further, that the issues should not be disposed of simply upon the testimony of a person situated as the plaintiff's witness was. She was the informant, as it would appear. It was she who advised the plaintiff of his wife's alleged infidelity, and she gives a most extraordinary account of the sources of her knowledge. She is greatly interested in the result of the trial and should be subjected to a rigid cross-examination. The order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to open the default granted, with ten dollars costs, and the cause set down for trial for the October term. Van Brunt, P.J., O'Brien, McLaughlin and Hatch, JJ., concurred.