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Oertel v. Oertel

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
May 1, 1914
83 N.J. Eq. 39 (Ch. Div. 1914)

Opinion

05-01-1914

OERTEL v. OERTEL.

Petition by Henry B. Oertel against Mary I. Oertel for divorce. Decree for defendant Raymond, Mountain, Van Blarcom & Marsh, of Newark, for complainant. Cecil H. MacMahon, of Newark, for defendant.


Petition by Henry B. Oertel against Mary I. Oertel for divorce. Decree for defendant Raymond, Mountain, Van Blarcom & Marsh, of Newark, for complainant. Cecil H. MacMahon, of Newark, for defendant.

This is a suit for divorce on the ground of desertion. The parties were married April 30, 1901. The desertion is alleged to have taken place in May, 1911. The suit was commenced October 1, 1913. The act of desertion proved is the cessation on the wife's part of sexual intercourse, and Rector v. Rector, 78 N. J. Eq. 404, 79 Atl. 295, is relied upon. Chancellor McGill held that this was not, by itself, sufficient, in Anonymous, 52 N. J. Eq. 349, 28 Atl. 467, and so did Chancellor Zabriskie, in Reid v. Reid, 21 N. J. Eq. 332. Assuming, however, that the Rector Case is authority for the contention that such cessation, without more, is sufficient, it seems to me plain that, if the husband would take advantage of his wife's failure of duty in this regard, he must be able to show that he has fulfilled the equallyimportant marital obligation of furnishing her, according to his means, with sufficient food and clothing. This his wife says he did not do, and this she gave him as her reason for refusing to cohabit with him. She performed, as far as she could, every other marital duty up to a time well within the two-year period.

The complainant is a physician, who for several years past has been earning from $1,500 to $l,800 per annum. According to his statement, as well as to hers, he allowed for their food and for her clothing from $3 to $6 per week, out of which $1.50 was paid for washing. Occasionally he brought home, he says, something for the table. He paid from $168 to $336 per year for rent (the latter sum partly on his mother's account), and he paid not more than $150 a year for an office boy. His income was, as he states it, in the year 1911 $1,723, and in 1912 it was $1,757. Deducting the money paid for rent and office boy, he had left about $1,250, or over $100 a month. It seems to me that a payment of from $1.50 to $4.50 per week (deducting the washing bill) was, considering his means, a very inadequate support, even if he had an old debt to pay and some other professional expenses. Her refusal to cohabit was not, she says, final. It was expressly grounded on his failure of duty in the matter of support. It is true that there are witnesses who swear that she told them she would not cohabit with him any longer. But her expressions, supposing them to have been stated with entire accuracy, casually uttered in moments of resentment, are not entitled to much weight as evidence of a fixed resolve. They may well have been used in reference to the then situation.

If her act was desertion in the first instance, then her husband did not use any proper effort to terminate it by making those advances and concessions which, in the language of the cases, might reasonably have been expected of him with a view to inducing her to return. Hall v. Hall, 65 N. J. Eq. 710, 55 Atl. 300. The appropriate concession in this case was a more adequate support.

I think the petitioner has failed to establish his case.


Summaries of

Oertel v. Oertel

COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY
May 1, 1914
83 N.J. Eq. 39 (Ch. Div. 1914)
Case details for

Oertel v. Oertel

Case Details

Full title:OERTEL v. OERTEL.

Court:COURT OF CHANCERY OF NEW JERSEY

Date published: May 1, 1914

Citations

83 N.J. Eq. 39 (Ch. Div. 1914)
83 N.J. Eq. 39

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