156 Mass. 485 | Mass. | 1892
This is a complaint under the St. of 1885, c. 176, charging the defendant with unreasonably neglecting to provide for the support of his wife. He set up that his neglect to do so was not unreasonable, in view of her conduct, and charged her with various breaches of her marriage duty, and with having declared that she would not live with him. In rebuttal, the defendant’s charges were contradicted, and two records also were put in, subject to the defendant’s exceptions. The first of these was a decree of the Probate Court upon a petition by the wife
The ground, however, on which both decrees were admitted was a broader one, no doubt. The defendant took the position that less than sufficient to entitle him to a divorce would justify him in refusing to support his wife, and went into evidence of her conduct generally. The decrees were facts bearing on the same subject, and tending to explain her conduct, and therefore were admissible in rebuttal. The alleged declaration of the wife, for instance, that she would not live with the defendant, assumed a different color if made after the two proceedings the records of which were introduced. The evidence was admissible for the purpose explained.
The defendant asked an instruction that, to justify his neglect, his wife’s habits of intoxication need not be so gross or so confirmed as to entitle him to a divorce, and a similar one as to her alleged cruel and abusive treatment. The judge left the question to the jury at large, saying that they had a right to consider such facts as they might find; but that he could not say, as matter of law, that the habits need not be so gross or the cruel treatment of such a degree as to entitle him to a divorce. The plain meaning of the charge was to leave the whole matter to the jury. If they thought, under the circumstances of the case which had been detailed to them, that the defendant would not have been
Exceptions overruled.