74 Neb. 388 | Neb. | 1905
This is an action by a wife against her husband, not for a divorce from the bonds of matrimony nor from bed and board, but to obtain a decree for maintenance only, which she alleges that the defendant, being a man of large means and ability, has for a term of years failed to provide, he having utterly deserted her. The answer in effect admits the desertion and failure to support, but justifies by averring that some ten years previous to the beginning of this
To maintain the issues on his part' the defendant offered in evidence a copy of the judgment roll in the proceeding in the North Dakota court, which was objected to on the ground that it was not authenticated in the manner provided by law. The defect of which the plaintiff complains is the absence of a certificate by the presiding judge of the. court that the attestation to the record by the clerk is “in due form” or “in due form of law,” as is required by an act of congress and a statute of this state. Authorities that the absence of such certificate is a fatal defect are too numerous and too familiar to permit a contrary contention, which, indeed, counsel for plaintiff do not in this court attempt to make, but he does argue that the
Tbe conclusion thus reached dispenses with a consideration of much of tbe briefs and arguments of counsel for plaintiff in error, but tbe foremost and principal of bis remaining complaints is tbe assignment tha,t there is no evidence that tbe plaintiff below is a person of good character and free from fault in her marital relations with tbe defendant. As showing tbe validity of this objection counsel cites Stewart, Marriage and Divorce, sec. 179, and several judicial decisions by courts of other states to tbe effect that a wife who is living, apart from her husband must, in order to sustain an action of this kind, aver and prove that she herself is free from fault, and that tbe separation was not due to her own wrong. But we do not think that this rule is intended to impose an unequal burden on tbe wife or to deprive her of tbe benefit of tbe ordinary presumptions of innocence that obtain in favor of one regularly indicted by a grand jury for an alleged offense. ' There is enough in tbe record to show, and indeed it is not disputed, that tbe defendant deserted bis wife within a short time after bis marriage, and about ten years before tbe beginning of this action. If be bad valid
There was a judgment for the wife for the sitm of $10,000, which the defendant, who prosecutes error, complains of as excessive and as being supported by insufficient evidence. The evidence, in brief, is that he was worth in excess of $100,000 at the date of desertion; the wife being ignorant of and being unable to procure witnesses having knowledge of the state of his affairs since that time. The defendant offered no evidence on the subject, but complains that that of the plaintiff is so remote as to be incompetent. We do not think so. It was the best obtainable by her concerning a matter within the peculiar, if not exclusive, knowledge of the defendant, and it suffices to raise a presumption, which he had abundant opportunity to rebut if he could do so; the fact that he made no such attempt serves to strengthen the presumntion.
We think, however, that the court erred in awarding so large a sum, or, indeed, any sum at all, in gross, for the future support and maintenance of the plaintiff. That practice was sanctioned and the contrary course disapproved by this court in Cochrah v. Cochran, 42 Neb. 612,
It is therefore recommended that the judgment be re
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court he reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to proceed, in compliance with this opinion.
Reversed.