158 Ga. 714 | Ga. | 1924
Lead Opinion
C. C. Cocroft instituted an action for divorce against his wife, Nellie Cocroft, in Thomas County, the county in which the parties resided. The petition as amended was solely on the ground of adultery. Adulteries were alleged with several differ
The plaintiff introduced in evidence the following telegrams: (a) “Thomasville, Ga., June 2, 1922. Mr. J. T. Suthers, Hum-bolt Hotel, Humbolt, Tenn. When did you write. Nothing since Sheffield. Wire Saturday Morning. Nell.” (b) “Trenton, Tenn. 84-OA. June 3, 1922. Mrs. C. C. Coeroft, Love St., Thomasville, Ga. Paris and Paducah since Sheffield. Am writing to-day.” (e) “June 8, 1922. Moultrie, Ga. To Mr. John T. Suthers, Hermit- ' age Hotel, Nashville, Tenn. In car. Dempsey tonight. Piedmont Friday night. Wire me Macon. Nell.” (d) “June 8, 1922. Nashville, Tenn. Mrs. C. C. Coeroft, Dempsey Hotel, Macon, Ga. Your wire here will arrive Saturday evening Dixie. Writing Atlanta. John.”
The plaintiff also introduced evidence to the effect that the defendant had a box in the post-office at Thomasville, Georgia, designated as box No. 604; that plaintiff had in his possession at his store a letter written and addressed on the stationery of the
“Paris, Tennessee, Sunday noon.
“Dear: Yours rec’d at Jackson yesterday, and was sure glad to hear from you. Those pictures were real good, and much appreciated. I wonder if that one to have and to hold could be reproduced at some future time? If it could be, it sure would be a most wonderful experience. Well I have been traveling via Ford all week, and expect to continue this method for the next eight days. I expect to reach Nash, about the 10th, and will make out a new route there which will carry me through Ky. into Va. My suggestion was for you to go to N. C. via Atlanta and*717 Chattanooga, if this latter town would not be too much out of your way. Then you could see Lookout mountain for a couple of days. They sell tourist tickets to N. C. via Chattanooga, allowing a stop over in Chattanooga. Now if you plan the trip this route as suggested let me know in time to arrange my route as near to Chattanooga as possible, or if you plan to not come any further than Atlanta I’ll arrange to make it there from Nash. Figure to make either Atlanta or Chattanooga around June 15th, because I will not delay longer than this date in being in Nash. Write me next to Palmer Hotel, Paducah, Ky., and after that Hermitage Hotel, Nash. In the meantime I may give you an address between these two, but hardly think so, as I’ll be in this car and will not have any definite route made till after leaving Nash. I am crazy to see voir, and can hardly wait for the time to roll around. Will write again in the next few days. Best Love, The same.”
The letter was admitted over the objections: (a) “That it did not appear that the said unsigned letter was in the handwriting of John T. Suthers, and that there was no proof that John T. Suthers wrote such letter.” (b) “Because proof showed that the said letter came from the possession, custody, and control of the husband, and that the wife had never received nor seen it, and therefore as to her it was hearsay evidence.” The admission of the letter is made one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial. The letter was admitted as a circumstance tending to prove the charge of adultery with John T. Suthers. No witness testified that the letter was in the handwriting of Suthers, or that he was seen to write it, or that he or the defendant admitted its genuineness. The only writing that was offered as his to prove genuineness of the letter by comparison of handwriting was the registry of names at the hotel, which was not itself proved to be in his handwriting. Callaway, the hotel clerk, who testified about the registry, was not on duty at the time, and did not pretend to testify that he saw Suthers sign the 'registry or that he knew Suthers’ writing and the name was signed in his handwriting. Another clerk, Mr. Billingsly, was on duty at the time of the registry, but he did not testify as a witness in the case. In these circumstances the handwriting of the letter could not be proved by comparison with the signature on the hotel registry. There was no other evidence as
The hotel register was admitted on the question of comparison of handwriting, over the objections “that it was not proven that the said signature was the genuine signature or handwriting of John T. Suthers, or that movant was present at the time said entry was made on said register or had any knowledge thereof, and that therefore as to movant the said entry was hearsay evidence, and that movant was in no way bound thereby.” The admission of this evidence was made another ground of the motion for a new trial. Sufficient has been said in the first division to show that the hotel registry was also inadmissible. It was admitted “for the purpose of comparison of handwriting,” but as it was not shown to be in the handwriting of Suthers it could not serve to prove the handwriting of the letter which it was offered to prove, nor would it be proof that the defendant was registered as the wife of Suthers.
Error is assigned in the cross-bill of exceptions on rulings of the court in rejecting the testimony of three witnesses who, if permitted to answer questions propounded to them, would have testified substantially that on June 13th, at Thomasville, Georgia, while in the presence of the witnesses, such presence being known to both plaintiff and defendant, the defendant on being confronted by the husband with a narration of her movements in Atlanta, freely and voluntarily admitted to her husband that she spent the nights of June 10th and 11th with John T. Suthers in his bedroom at the Winecoff Hotel in the City of Atlanta. The testimony was rejected on the ground that the admission of the wife amounted to a privileged communication between husband and wife, under the provisions of the Civil Code, § 5785. That section provides:
Error was also assigned, in the cross-bill of exceptions, on a ruling of the court rejecting from evidence a certain letter and the envelope in which it was contained, which was postmarked “Thomasville, Georgia, August 25, 1921,” addressed .to “Mrs. C. 0. Cocroft, Madison, Georgia, General Delivery,” and appeared to have been forwarded from Madison back to Thomasville, and there intercepted by a clerk in the store of Mr. Cocroft and retained by him. The letter was offered as the letter of II. L. Kemp, as tending to prove a circumstance to be considered in connection with certain telegrams between the parties, and other testimony relied on by the plaintiff to establish the charge of adultery with H. L. Kemp. The letter was not in response to either of the telegrams) nor did it appear that the defendant had ever received or read the letter. In Wilson v. Mitchell, 48 Colo. 454 (111 Pac. 21, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.) 507), it was held: “A letter written to a party to a suit is not admissible in evidence against him if it was never received by him, and has never been in his possession.” The case of Razor v. Razor, 149 Ill. 621 (36 N. E. 963), was a suit by a wife against the husband for separate maintenance while-the parties were living in -a state of separation. The husband filed a cross-bill praying for a divorce on account of alleged adultery of the wife. One question was as to admissibility of a letter. It was held that the letter- was inadmissible. In the course of the opinion it was said: “It is next insisted that the court erred in excluding from the jury a certain letter alleged to have been' found by appellant in his wife’s trunk, and containing a proposition to meet her in St.
The only remaining assignment of error relates to the charge as complained of in the fourth amended ground of the motion for new trial. In a suit by a husband for divorce on the statutory ground of adultery, the plaintiff introduced a certain incriminatory letter and pages from a hotel register and other correspondence by telegrams between defendant and other men; also testimony of certain witnesses tending to show misconduct ■ on the part of defendant with such other men. The defendant did not introduce any evidence, and there was no evidence tending to show that the men with whom it was contended the correspondence was had
In Anderson v. Southern Railway Co., 107 Ga. 500 (2) (33 S. E. 644), it was held: “Where the petition in an action against a railway company for a homicide alleged that a given person got upon the defendant’s train in company with the decedent, and on the trial such person was sworn and called to the witness-stand by the plaintiff, but withdrawn by him without being examined, and there was nothing to show that he was in any way under the power and control of the plaintiff, it was error to charge” in the language of the section just quoted.
In Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Bernstein, 113 Ga. 175 (5) (38 S. E. 394), it was held: “Where it does not appear that either party has suppressed evidence within his power to produce, it is error to charge the jury as follows: ‘It is the duty of parties bringing cases into court, whether plaintiff or defendant, to furnish the
Upon reason the above-quoted principle also applies to the defense of a divorce case. In such a case the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove the ground of divorce. It is declared: “No verdict or judgment by default shall ever be taken in a suit for divorce, but the allegations in the petition must be established by evidence before the juries.” Civil Code (1910), §§ 2959, 5658. “It shall and may be lawful for the divorced person, or any citizen of said county, to resist the application; and should no person resist the same, then the solicitor-general shall represent the State, with full power to resist the same, as in ordinary divorce cases.” § 2967. Moreover in a divorce case against a wife, on the ground of adultery, the wife is an incompetent witness. § 5861; Anderson v. Anderson, 140 Ga. 802 (2) (79 S. E. 1124); Arnold v. Arnold, 141 Ga. 158 (3) (80 S. E. 652); Whitehead v. Whitehead, 143 Ga. 285 (84 S. E. 580). The charge would be misleading, and incline the jury to treat the omission of the wife to testify in denial of the alleged charges of adultery as an admission of their truth, and to render a verdict on the basis of her silence, rather than upon evidence of the charge of adultery — in effect a verdict for the plaintiff by default. The charge which the court delivered was erroneous first because the law which it purported to apply should not be given in charge in a suit for divorce, and second because there was nothing to show that the defendant withheld from the jury any evidence that was within her power or control.
The ruling announced in the sixth headnote does not require elaboration.
Judgment reversed on the main hill and on the cross-hill of exceptions.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Under the evidence in the case John T. 'Suthers and a woman occupied room 718 in the Winecoff Hotel on the night of June 10th, 1922, and were seen in the hotel the next day. From this evidence the jury would have been authorized, nothing appearing to the contrary, to find that the name “John T. Suthers and wife,” written on the hotel register of'the date mentioned, was written by John T. Suthers. Accordingly the hotel register with the entry was admissible in evidence. This fact being considered, the court did not err, in my opinion, in admitting the