56 Neb. 792 | Neb. | 1898
The plaintiff in error commenced this suit in the district court of Seward county to obtain a divorce or dissolution of the marital tie which existed between him and the defendant in error. In his petition it was pleaded that the marriage of the parties occurred of daté July 11,1894, and that he had ever since that event conducted himself toward the defendant in error as a “kind, affectionate, and virtuous husband.” The general averments of such a petition were followed by statements of two causes of action, one of which was to the effect that prior to and subsequent to the marriage, and of continuance to the time of the suit, the defendant in error was physically incapable of a consummation of the marriage; that there could at none of said times be complete sexual intercourse between the parties because of “incurable” personal and physical defects of the organization of defendant in error, and also for the additional reason that she was afflicted with “catarrh of the womb,” which was incurable; that all of these matters were well known to defendant in error prior to and at the time of the marriage, and were unknown to plaintiff in error, and were by the former concealed from the latter. In the second cause of action it was complained that about December 25, 1894, defendant in error in a fit of anger struck the plaintiff in error and thereby caused him much pain and suffering. In the answer there were admissions of the marriage and some others of the matters alleged in the petition, but all the material statements of the two causes of action were denied; and there was further pleading, in the nature of a cross-petition, in which it was charged that the plaintiff in error was of exceedingly strong or unnatural sexual passion or desire, and that he urged and demanded and received of defendant in error extraordinary and excessive indulgence of his said propensity. It was also set forth in this portion of the answer, and as further basis for affirmative
It is insisted that inasmuch as in the statutory provisions relative to actions to obtain divorces there is no provision which authorizes the presentment of a cross-petition or the granting of affirmative relief .to defendants in such actions, none may be filed, and no such relief can be afforded. Section 11 of chapter 25,-Compiled Statutes, subject “Divorce and Alimony,” reads as follows: “Suits to annul or affirm a marriage, or for a divorce, shall be conducted in the same manner as other suits in courts of equity; and the court shall have the power to award issues, to decree costs, and enforce its decrees as in other cases.” In any action a defendant may set forth in the answer.and is entitled to be heard
One complaint of the answer or cross-bill was based on the charges made by plaintiff in error in the petition in this action, and the question argued is, can the defendant in the cross-petition declare, and successfully rely for affirmative relief, upon the charges in the petition in the same action. That such charges had been made might possibly afford material for suit by the defendant subsequent to the determination of the action in which they were made, but not for a cross-bill in the same case. (Simons v. Simons, 13 Tex. 468; Haley v. Haley,
“Seward, Neb., Dec. 27,1894.
“Mr. John Krilheler, City—Dear Sir: Please read the enclosed pages. Mamie is badly afflicted with several diseases, which are ruinous to a man’s health. Therefore I request that Mamie and I be separated to-day, in a peaceful and friendly manner, for the benefit of each other’s future happiness. My advice would be to send her to a specialist of female diseases. I request a meeting—you and myself—at my residence at 7 o’clock this evening,”—
was delivered, and on that day the father, mother, daughter, and son-in-law met at the home of the young people, and after some considerable consultation about
In relation to the complaint of the second cause of action there was testimony to support a conclusion that it was a matter of playful or accidental occurrence, and was so treated and regarded by the immediate parties to it until the inception of this suit, when what may have been the real concurrent thoughts of the plaintiff in error were given in the pleading. The conditions of the evidence are such that the finding of the trial court must, under the prevalent rule, remain undisturbed.
The facts of the present case are different, but the charges made were ugly ones and certainly well calculated to, and did, if we may believe the evidence,—and the trial court apparently believed it,—destroy the defendant in error’s peace of mind; and it would be difficult to imagine any further marital intercourse between these parties which could have been other than distasteful and intolerable to the defendant in error, or indeed to the other party. We think the case considered in the abstract comes within a fair reading of our statute on the subject. This particular case is not by its facts as satisfactorily within such a rule as may be some of a similar nature, but we feel constrained to conclude not to disturb the finding and adjudication on this branch of it made in the district court, although a contrary finding would not have been changed.
The decree of the trial court in regard to alimony was as follows: “The court further finds that the defendant be allowed alimony as follows: The entire household furniture and one Steinway piano, now in the residence lately occupied by the parties, all of the value of $1,000, and the sum of $5,000 in money, to all of which plaintiff excepts.” ' It is strenuously urged that this was excessive, and the reversal of this portion of the decree in whole or in part is asked, if the decree, inasmuch as it awards a divorce, is approved. The allowance of alimony, especially the amount thereof, is within the discretion of the trial court, and unless there has been a clearly wrongful exercise of the discretion, this court will not interfere on the ground that there was an exces
Judgment accordingly.