The only question of any difficulty or importance in this case arises upon the exception to the ruling of the court permitting Mrs. Parmely, the wife of the defendant, as a witness for the plaintiff, to prove the acts and misconduct of the defendant by which he, without sufficient cause, turned her, the witness, out of doors without provision, and under circumstances to make him liable for necessaries supplied her by the plaintiff. If the wife were not competent to testify in such case, it would often, and probably in a majority of instances, happen that no proof of the facts and circumstances attending her expulsion and showing that she was driven from
The verdict is an anomaly, and such a one as no jury ought have rendered. It stultifies the jury. The plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything, unless the wife had legal cause for leaving her husband; and if she had, the plaintiff should have recovered his entire bill. The jury have found that the wife had good cause for leaving her home, and yet have given the plaintiff but one dollar; but as the plaintiff is not here complaining of that, it is not for us say more upon the subject.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.