102 Iowa 318 | Iowa | 1897
— The plaintiff and defendant were married June 18, 1888. At that time the plaintiff was about twenty-six years old, and the defendant thirty. They lived happily together until May 29, 1889, when plaintiff became sick, and has never recovered. She was under the care of local physicians until the latter part of September, when she was taken to the Woman’s Hospital in Chicago for treatment by a specialist. She returned to her home in April following, and remained there till March 4, 1891, when she left defendant, and has since resided with her sister, in Minnesota.- In February, 1893, she began this action, basing her claim for alimony and separate maintenance on three grounds: (1) Habitual drunkenness, (2) cruel and inhuman treatment, (3) desertion. The first ground has been abandoned, but the others are insisted on. The defendant, in a cross-petition, asks for a divorce on the ground of desertion.
The claim is also made that proper medical aid was not furnished, and that defendant insisted on treatment by Babcock against the plaintiff’s wishes. It was only natural that defendant prefer a relative, who was a next-door neighbor, as his family physician. The weight of the evidence, however, shows that no objection was made to him until her return from Chicago, and then, in deference to her wishes, Dr. Wight was called.