Opinion by
The only defense urged in the court below relates to the sufficiency of the evidence adduced before the master to warrant the decree entered. On this appeal, it is urged in addition, that the court below did not have jurisdiction of the case to enter the final, decree. Both of these questions have been so thoroughly examined and decided in an opinion filed by Head, J., in Crawford v. Crawford,
The maximum amount of alimony to which the libellant may be entitled is settled by the Act of February 26, 1817, 6 Sm. L. 405; 1 Stewart’s Purdon, 13th ed. p. 1247, and the decree entered is wholly within its provisions.
What acts or course of conduct will amount to such indignities as will justify the court in making a decree of divorce, seems to be nowhere defined, and perhaps they are incapable of specification or exact definition, but they must be such as, in the language of the act, render the
The conclusion reached by the master is fully sustained by competent evidence, and the decree entered by the court is affirmed.
