13 Iowa 266 | Iowa | 1862
Petition for divorce. Cause alleged— such inhuman treatment as to endanger the life of the com
The question is, whether the facts stated in the petition show that the defendant has been guilty of such inhuman treatment as to endanger the life of the petitioner. The petitioner first alleges that the defendant has been guilty of various acts of inhumanity toward her, and that she believes the defendant has committed such outrages with a design of destroying her peace of mind, and undermining her health, and thus endangering her life. As specifications under this averment, various acts of unkindness are charged, such as petty annoyances, groundless complaints, requiring her to do the labor of a man upon the farm, maltreatment toward her children, &c., neither of which are alone sufficient upon which to predicate a charge of such inhuman treatment to as endanger the life.
The petitioner, however, charges that defendant went away to Kansas and left her to provide for the family, to raise the crop, &c., and that, upon his return, defendant’s “ conduct and intercourse with petitioner were especially tyrannical, exacting, and over-bearing, often brutal; that he has frequently threatened to whip petitioner, that he did not intend to live with her, as his wife any longer, that if she did not conduct herself differently, he did not know what he might be provoked to do, and other and numerous wrongs and injuries committed against the rights of petitioner, destroying her peace and quietude, and producing such fear, and anguish, and sorrow, as she verily believes is endangering her life,” &c. A construction of the language of the statute, upon which this complaint is made, has already been given, and the proper rules to guide the courts of our state in determining whether the conduct of a husband or wife is of such inhuman character as to endanger the life of the other, are so fully and clearly pointed out by Wright, C. J., in the case of Beebee
The party complaining has a right to be relieved from apprehended danger, and need not wait until there is an attempt made to carry the threat into execution. The complainant charges that there is a systematic attempt upon the part of defendant to destroy her peace of mind and health. The threatening to whip, to drive her from home, the exacting of labor amounting to cruelty, abuse of children, &c., &c., are the specifications tending to show the defendant’s inhumanity. If it should appear that such
Affirmed.