243 A.2d 85 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1968
This is an action for divorce brought by the plaintiff wife against the defendant husband on the alleged ground of intolerable cruelty. General Statutes §
After the pleadings were closed, the defendant moved for permission to file a special defense which the court (Grillo, J.) granted. This defense reads: "If there were acts of cruelty as alleged by the plaintiff herein, then the defendant, presently under conservatorship, was not responsible for the acts of cruelty complained of by said plaintiff." The plaintiff demurs to this interposed special defense on the ground that the allegations therein, "even if proven, *461 would not constitute a legally sufficient defense to the allegations contained in the plaintiff's complaint."
Briefs of counsel appear to take the position that the subject of the interposed special defense gives rise to a consideration of insanity as a defense to a charge of intolerable cruelty in an action for divorce. Both briefs cite Dochelli v. Dochelli,
Clearly, the subject of the interposed special defense by the defendant, alleging in effect exoneration for acts of cruelty complained of by the plaintiff in her complaint because he presently is under conservatorship, does not invoke on its face the defense of insanity. The appointment of a conservator is regulated by statute (§
That a person having property is incapable of managing his affairs and has a conservator appointed to do so on his behalf does not warrant a finding or interpretation in and of itself that such person is insane. What was said in the Dochelli case, supra, 470, applies with even greater force: "This does not connote insanity in the narrower sense and will not avail as a defense."
The within memorandum is perhaps longer than the exigencies of the immediate problem require. To go no further, the plaintiff's demurrer to the interposed special defense of the defendant is required to be, and is, sustained. The form and subject of the special defense as drafted do not withstand the thrust of the demurrer.