115 P. 25 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for divorce on the ground of desertion. The trial was by the court sitting with a jury. The jury being unable to agree upon answers to special interrogatories submitted to them, the court discharged them and rendered judgment, dismissing the action, after refusing plaintiff’s request for specific findings upon the controverted issues. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The parties were married on June 2, 1886, but have lived separate and apart since January 23, 1898. The complaint was filed on March 10, 1909. It contains two counts. In the first it is alleged that the defendant deserted the plaintiff on March 19, 1906; in the second the desertion is alleged to have occurred on March 15, 1907. At the trial the first count was abandoned. As shown by the allegations of the amended complaint and the evidence introduced, plaintiff’s theory of the case is that from January 23, 1898, until March 15, 1907, he and the defendant had lived apart by mutual consent, and that on the latter date he in good faith sought a reconciliation with defendant and a restoration of the marital relation, but that she rejected his overtures and has ever since continued to reject them, thus rendering her guilty of desertion.
In her second amended answer the defendant denies that she ever deserted the plaintiff, and alleges that he willfully and without cause deserted and abandoned her, and for more than a year prior to March 16, 1907, refused to live with her. She asks for a decree granting her a limited divorce and requiring the plaintiff to pay her attorney’s fee, and to provide for her separate maintenance. In their effort to reach an issue in the district court, the parties amended their pleadings in several particulars, which they deemed material.
Counsel for plaintiff contends that the decree should be reversed and a new trial ordered because of the refusal of the court to make specific findings. At the time the case was submitted, he not only prepared and submitted written findings, but also had his request for findings entered in the minutes. The refusal by the court to grant the request was clearly erroneous. This is an equity action. The office of the jury was
Whether request was made for findings or not, it was the duty
Counsel has assigned many errors upon rulings made in the admission and exclusion of evidence. The evidence admitted over objection was in some instances incompetent or immaterial.
Plaintiff had testified that he and defendant had separated by mutual consent at the beginning of the year 1898; that the defendant had since that time been living in Salt Lake City, Utah, and other places, as it suited her convenience. His statement as to her consent was controverted by the defendant, who testified, in effect, that he had sent her from home in opposition to her wishes, and that the separation had begun without her acquiescence and continued so until he had brought an action against her for divorce in 1899. Counsel for plaintiff then offered in evidence several letters written by her to plaintiff from Salt Lake City during the four months immediately following the separation; the purpose being to impeach her testimony and also to corroborate the plaintiff’s statement that the separation had been by mutual consent. These letters are all incorporated in the record. We shall not enter into an examination of them in detail. Suffice it to say, that they are all expressive of friendly regard, a full understanding on defendant’s part of the cause of the separation, and that it was to be of indefinite duration. There is not in any of them an expression of the least dissatisfaction with anything done by plaintiff looking to a separation, nor of any desire on her part to resume
“A consent need not be expressed in words. It may be implied from the failure of the parties to make overtures after a quarrel; from acquiescence in the separation; from a positive refusal to renew cohabitation after a separation; from a deed of separation; from a desire of plaintiff that her husband should occupy separate apartments; or from other circumstances which show the plaintiff’s consent, or that the separation was not
Having reached the conclusion that the decree must he reversed because of the errors noted, it becomes our duty under the statute (Rev. Codes, sec. 6253) to determine the questions of law and fact presented by the record, upon the whole case, and to make such disposition of it as the circumstances require.
As we have pointed out, the court excluded evidence which we deem substantially material to a determination of the question how the separation of the parties was initiated. If this were in the record merely in the form of an offer to prove by the oral statements of witnesses, we should feel impelled to order a new trial or to remand the case, with direction to the district court to admit the evidence and consider it in making its findings; for it is the exclusive prerogative of that court to determine the credibility of witnesses, and this court may not invade its province. But here the evidence in question is in
The plaintiff and defendant were the only witnesses. As already stated, their testimony was in direct conflict, though neither stated definitely what was said and done at. the time the agreement was reached to separate. The letters themselves, however, point to one conclusion only, viz., that they separated by mutual consent. What the impelling cause was it is not now important to inquire; but it appears that scandalous rumors touching the conduct of defendant in accepting attentions from
In January, 1899, the plaintiff began an action in Silver Bow county against defendant for divorce on the ground of desertion and also adultery. She filed her counterclaim for divorce, alleging cruelty and desertion. The district court found that she had been guilty of the adulteries alleged against her, and entered a decree for the plaintiff. Upon appeal this court reversed the decree on the ground that, assuming that the adulteries were fully established, the plaintiff had condoned them. It ordered the action to be dismissed, because it was of the opinion that neither party was entitled to relief. (Bordeaux v. Bordeaux, 30 Mont. 36, 75 Pac. 524, on rehearing, 32 Mont. 159, 80 Pac. 6.) This- litigation ended in April, 1905. No exchange of communications, either by personal interview or by letter, occurred between the parties after this date, until March 19, 1906. On that date the plaintiff wrote to defendant as follows:
“Dear Ella:
“It has been some time since I have sent you any money to your support, and for all of the difficulties that there have been*113 between us, I have always intended to fulfill my duty which I may be under toward you. You will find inclosed in this letter a draft for one hundred dollars, which I hope you will accept and make use of. I wish further to say that as the past trouble has not resulted in gain to either one of us, should you at any time wish to return to Butte to live I will provide you with a suitable home. Yours truly,
“ Jno. R. Bordeaux.”
The defendant made no reply. On March 13, 1907, she wrote plaintiff as follows:
“Mr. John R. Bordeaux:
“I am here in Butte. I am now, as I have been for the past several years, without any means of support. You have contributed nothing for two years, except the small sum of $100. I desire to remain in Butte. It will be necessary for me to have at least the sum of $500 per month hereafter from you for my support. This will be a meager allowance and one which you can well afford to pay. I expect to be at large expense in obtaining and fitting up living quarters and consequently must require you to pay me at once the sum of $2,500 for this purpose, together with the sum of $500 for the first month’s support. In case you refuse to comply I shall undertake to force compliance by legal proceedings. You have neglected the obligation of support long enough. Kindly notify John J. McHatton, my attorney, and pay the money to him.
‘‘Ella F. Bordeaux.”
To this plaintiff replied:
“Butte, Montana, March 15, 1907.
“Dear Ella:
“I am in receipt of your letter of date March 13, 1907, and in reply to same, I desire to call your attention to my letter of date March 15, 1906, in which I invited you to return to Butte, to live with me, and stating that I would provide you with a suitable home. I have heard nothing from you since that time*114 until to-day, when I received your letter. In view of which silence I have long ago made up my mind that you did not intend to return to Butte to live with me, and that you had evidently found quarters more to your liking. However, if you desire to return to live with me, I will provide you with such living quarters as my means will warrant. I am not willing, however, to accede to the unreasonable demand contained in your letter, but am always willing to perform my duty as a husband, as I understand it, and as required by the laws of this state. I shall do everything which the laws of this state require me to do, and I will discharge every obligation which the laws of this state require of me because of the relation I sustain to you. And in accordance therewith, I am prepared to provide you with a suitable home and to furnish you with maintenance and support. I am now residing at No. 320 West Broadway, in this city, which is a suitable home for us both, and I will welcome you there, if you choose to return and resume our marital relations, and will provide you with all necessary and proper support and maintenance. Otherwise, I shall consider myself under no further obligation to contribute to your support. Trusting that you will see fit to return home,
“I remain your affectionate husband,
“John R. Bordeaux.”
In reply to this letter defendant wrote a long communication in which she stated that in his letter of March, 1906, plaintiff had failed to ask her to return to Butte to live with him, and charged him with bad faith in writing the one of March 15, 1907, saying that he did it merely for the purpose of protecting himself against his obligation to discharge the duty he owed her under the law to furnish her with support. She also charged him with malignant cruelty toward her, and with desertion, because he had failed to ■furnish her any support subsequent to March 26, 1898. She stated that the place designated by him as the home to which he invited her was neither desirable nor suitable. She refused to accept his judgment as to what would be a discharge of his legal duties as her husband, saying that,
It was admitted by plaintiff that he had contributed nothing toward the support of defendant after the institution of his action in 1899, except the sum of $100 sent to her on March 19, 1906. It appears that he has during the time since the separation been receiving a gross income of about $500 per month. There is no direct evidence on the subject; but that the defendant has never been in want is a just inference from the fact that she has been living in Salt Lake City, Utah, Seattle, Washington, Portland, Oregon, or at Butte, as it has suited her convenience, with funds sufficient to meet her personal expenses. The source of these funds is not definitely disclosed, but circumstances appearing in the evidence indicate that she has obtained them, either from her parents or from the income from property inherited by her from them since the date of the separation. It was not controverted that out of the income received by plaintiff he has been required to pay his taxes and bear the expense of insurance and necessary repairs upon the property from which it is derived, besides his current personal expenses, and that he was required to meet the expenses of the litigation attendant upon the action for divorce instituted in 1899, including counsel fees for both himself and the defendant. It appears that he contracted on this account a considerable indebtedness, and that for that purpose he put an encumbrance upon some of his property, which still remains. Nor is it controverted that the place designated in his letter of March 15, 1907, as his home, is in a very desirable part of the city of Butte and is such as he can reasonably afford: As a reason why he did not in his
There is nothing in any of this evidence upon which a conclusion can be based that either of the parties did anything to change the agreement to separate, in 1898, prior to March 15,; 1907. It does not appear that the plaintiff agreed in 1898 to' support defendant. Though it be conceded that he did, when his remittances ceased she made no complaint; nor did she upon the cessation of them, or at any time afterward, revoke her consent to remain away or express any desire to return home. Nor did the bringing of the action for divorce, in 1899, work a change in the status quo. His effort to dissolve the marriage, met by a counter-effort on her part to do the same, only emphasized the willingness of both to remain apart permanently. The original separation by consent was, therefore, not converted into a desertion by either one by any act of revocation by the other, under the provisions of the statute (Bev. Codes, sec. 3650), until the letter of March 15, 1907, was written by the plaintiff.
It is insisted that this was not in good faith, but was induced
There is nothing in the evidence reflecting upon the real motive, other than plaintiff’s declaration that he extended the invitation with the intention that defendant should accept it, and her declaration that she did not accept it, because she did not regard it as made in got;d faith. It contains no apology for his conduct in charging her with adultery in his former action for divorce; nor is there in it any express plea for forgiveness. But he expressed a willingness for a reconciliation, offered to furnish her a home, to resume cohabitation, and to discharge his duties under the law. If it were necessary that he ask condonation for the past, this was clearly implied. She could easily have tested his sincerity by accepting his overtures, and had he then refused to receive her or thereafter proved derelict, her rights as his lawful wife would not have been prejudiced. But she could not capriciously refuse to accept his offer, because it was not couched in the terms which she would have dictated or preferred. As regrettable as may be the fact, the marriage status is in many cases preserved for no higher motive than that of convenience, and where the parties, alienated by friction in the home due to incompatibility of temper or other cause, have been living apart, it is not to be expected in all eases that, when reconciliation is sought, the overtures will be couched in the most affectionate and apologetic terms. Plaintiff did not seek a personal interview with defendant, but certainly no inducement was held out to him to do so in defendant’s letter. This letter not only was a distinct rejection of his overtures, but was tantamount to a declaration of hostility. He was not bound to go further and seek a personal interview or concede the extravagant demand made by her that he should put at her disposal his entire income, besides paying over in cash a large sum of money to furnish a home other than the one which he, as the head of the family, had a right to choose, and which, so far as the evidence shows, was reasonably suitable and within the compass
Upon the whole case the district court should have found that the original separation was by consent; that the offer of
Counsel in their briefs discussed many questions not at all pertinent to the issues involved in this case. We shall not notice any of them.
The order denying a new trial is affirmed. The cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to set aside the decree, to find in accordance with the conclusions stated above, and to enter a decree in favor of the plaintiff.