
    Charles S. Halsted, App’lt, v. Sarah B. Halsted, Resp’t.
    
      (New York Common Pleas, General Term,
    
    
      Filed February 5, 1894)
    
    Pleading—Supplemental complaint.
    Leave to set up, in an action for divorce, an act of adultery committed after the commencement of the action, by way of supplemental complaint, should not be granted.
    Appeal from an order made at special term which denied plaintiff’s motion for leave to serve a supplemental complaint averring defendant’s commission of adultery since the commencement of the action. Action for a divorce on the ground of adultery.
    
      Geo. W. Carr, for app’lt; Edward B. Merrill, for resp’t.
   Bischoff, J.

The office of a supplemental complaint is to aid the cause of action already averred, not to enable the plaintiff to recover upon a cause of action which has accrued since the action was commenced. Bostwick v. Menck, 4 Daly, 68; McCullough v. Colby, 4 Bosw., 603; Cont. Const. & Imp. Co. v. Vinal, 14 Civ. Pro., 293; 15 St. Rep., 968 ; Bull v. Rothschild, 16 Civ. Pro., 356; 22 St. Rep., 536; Muller v. Earle, 37 N. Y. Supr. Ct., 388.

One act of adultery affords a sufficient cause of action for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, and in this respect an action for divorce a vinculo matrimonii is to be distinguished from an action for separation or divorce ct mensa et thoro, on the ground of cruelty and inhuman treatment. A single act of cruelty does not authorize a decree of separation or divorce a mensa et thoro, unless there is also evidence of reasonable ground for apprehension that the cruelty will recur. Perry v. Perry, 1 Barb. Ch., 516; Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, vol. 5, p. 792.

In an action for divorce a vinculo matrimonii, the plaintiff can: not recover upon proof merely that the defendant has committed an act of adultery since the action'was commenced (Ferrier v. Ferrier, 4 Edw. Ch., 296), for the obvious reason that the adultery proved is not the adultery alleged and complained of. Thus the cause of action assigned is improved. The subsequent adultery is ground for a new and independent action, and leave, therefore, to set it up by supplemental complaint should not be granted. Milner v. Milner, 2 Edw. Ch., 114; Morange v. Morange, 2 Month. Law Bull., 30.

Assuming that evidence of the commission of adultery with the alleged co-respondent, subsequent to the commencement of the action, is admissible on the trial as tending to establish the relations between the defendant and the alleged co-respondent before the commencement of the action, and so as tending, in connection with other evidence, to establish the adultery alleged and complained of. Stale v. Bridgman, 24 Am. R., 124, 129. The plaintiff’s motion to leave to assert the subsequent adultery by supplemental complaint was, notwithstanding, properly denied under the rule which requires that only the facts constituting the cause of action, that is to say, the issuable or ultimate facts, and not the evidence of those facts, should be pleaded. Code Civ. Pro., § 481, subd. 2; Bliss on Code Pleading, § 206, etc.; The Nat. Union Bk. of Dover, v. Reed, 35 St. Rep., 572 ; Goodrich, v. Dorman, 38 St. Rep., 198.

. The order should be affirmed, with costs.  