25 S.E.2d 466 | N.C. | 1943
Civil action for absolute divorce on the ground of two years separation.
The complaint, filed 7 March, 1942, alleges:
1. That plaintiff and defendant were married in March, 1936, and lived together as husband and wife until February, 1940, when they separated.
2. That plaintiff and defendant have lived separate and apart continuously for the past two years, and the plaintiff has resided in this State for a period of one year.
Wherefore, plaintiff prays that the bonds of matrimony be dissolved as provided by ch. 100, Public Laws, 1937.
Defendant filed answer 10 April, 1942, admitted the marriage and alleged that plaintiff and defendant lived together as husband and wife *87 from March, 1936, until the plaintiff wrongfully abandoned her in September, 1940. She also admitted the plaintiff's residence in the State for a period of one year, but denied that they had lived separate and apart within the meaning of the divorce laws.
In a further defense and cross action the defendant asked for alimony without divorce or subsistence and counsel fees under C. S., 1667, as amended.
The plaintiff filed motion to strike the further answer and cross action under authority of Silver v. Silver,
In the meantime a trial of the present action resulted in verdict and judgment for defendant, from which the plaintiff appealed, and a new trial was awarded for error in the charge.
Over objection of plaintiff, the defendant then applied to the court for leave to amend her answer and to set up in bar of the plaintiff's action the record in the case by the defendant for alimony without divorce.
The motion being allowed, the plaintiff interposed a demurrer to the plea in bar, which was overruled. From the two rulings, the plaintiff appeals, assigning errors. The broad question for decision is whether an action for divorce may be maintained on the ground that "the husband and wife have lived separate and apart for two years" (ch. 100, Public Laws 1937), when it is shown and pleaded in bar that such separation was the result of the plaintiff's wrongful abandonment of the defendant and their two children, and his offering such indignities to the person of the defendant as to render her condition intolerable and life burdensome. Specifically, the question posed is whether the amended answer states a good plea in bar, admitting for the purpose the truth of the facts alleged. 17 Am. Jur., 267; 27 C. J. S., 625.
The history of the "separation" statute was given in part on the former appeal, reported in
Briefly, it may be recalled that the first separation statute in this State was a ten-year statute, enacted in 1907, ch. 89, Laws 1907.
In Cooke v. Cooke,
Thereafter, the Cooke case, supra, was rendered apocryphal by the recodification of the laws in 1919 — Consolidated Statutes — when the provisions of the separation statute were brought forward as subsection 4 of the general divorce section, C. S., 1659, which provides that "marriages may be dissolved and the parties thereto divorced from the bonds of matrimony, on application of the party injured, in the following cases," naming them. (Italics added.) This was so declared in the cases ofSanderson v. Sanderson,
The law remained in this condition, in respect of the "party injured," until the enactment of ch. 72, Public Laws 1931, in which it was provided: "Marriages may be dissolved and the parties thereto divorced from the bonds of matrimony, on application of either party, if and when there has been a separation of husband and wife, either under deed of separation or otherwise, and they have lived separate and apart for five years," etc. (reduced to two years by ch. 163, Public Laws 1933). And further: "That this act shall be in addition to other acts and not construed as repealing other laws on the subject of divorces."
In two cases arising under the 1931 Act, as amended in 1933, it was held that the applicant for divorce need not be "the injured party." Long v.Long,
Then came the case of Parker v. Parker,
Following this decision, the General Assembly of 1937 again amended the law so as to read: "Marriages may be dissolved and the parties thereto divorced from the bonds of matrimony on application of either party, if and when the husband and wife have lived separate and apart for two years, and the plaintiff in the suit for divorce has resided in the State for a period of one year." And further: "That this act shall be in addition to other acts and not construed as repealing other laws on the subject of divorce." Ch. 100, Public Laws 1937. The section will appear in the General Statutes of 1943 as G.S.
The plaintiff brings his action under the 1937 law. We have held in at least three cases that, notwithstanding the broad language of the separation statute, a husband may not ground an action for divorce on his own criminal conduct toward his wife. Reynolds v. Reynolds,
We have also held that when the misconduct of the complaining party in an action for divorce a mensa et thoro is calculated to and does reasonably induce the conduct of the defendant, relied upon in the action, he or she, as the case may be, will not be permitted to take advantage of his or her own wrong, and the decree of divorcement will be denied. Page v.Page,
The cases holding that in an action for divorce a vinculo matrimonii, a plea in bar will not be sustained where the misconduct of the plaintiff falls short of such as would also constitute cause for absolute divorce are not in point. 17 Am. Jur., 269; 27 C. J. S., 625; Anno. 39 L.R.A. (N.S.), 1135. The defendant's plea is not technically one of recrimination, though it may be in genere, of kindred nature, or of like kind. Pharr v.Pharr, post, 115. Here, the very act of living separate and apart for two years, upon which the plaintiff bases his cause of action, was of his own wrongdoing. In other words, the plaintiff seeks to profit by his own tort. One in flagrante delicto is not permitted to recover in the courts. The courts are open for the determination of rights and the redress of grievances, but not for the rewarding of wrongs. To "do justly" and to "render to each one his due," suum cuique tribuere, are the first commands of the law.
It is an accepted principle in the law of domestic relations that an applicant will not be granted a divorce because of a condition — which within itself may be a statutory cause for divorce — when it affirmatively appears that such condition was brought about by the applicant's own wrong. Pierce v. Pierce,
It is true, the statute under review provides that either party may sue for a divorce or for a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony, "if and when the husband and wife have lived separate and apart for two years," etc. However, it is not to be supposed the General Assembly intended to authorize one spouse willfully or wrongfully to abandon the other for *91
a period of two years and then reward the faithless spouse a divorce for the wrong committed, in the face of a plea in bar based on such wrong.Woodruff v. Woodruff,
So much for the factual averments of the plea in bar as contained in the complaint filed in the maintenance suit and here set up in defense, which are deemed to be true for purposes of the demurrer.
When we come to the defendant's position in respect of estoppel by record or res judicata, however, quite a different question is presented.Medlin v. Medlin,
What effect this circumstance of placing the character of the separation in issue in that suit, without immediate disposition, may have upon the future course of the litigation cannot now be determined. See Ellis v.Ellis,
The demurrer was properly overruled, and the discretionary ruling on defendant's motion to amend her pleading is not reviewable on appeal. C. S., 547. The result is an affirmance of the judgment.
Affirmed.