Dutcher v. Dutcher

39 Wis. 651 | Wis. | 1876

RyaN, O. J.

"We do not understand tbe appellant’s adulterous intercourse with bis paramour to be questioned on this ■appeal. Ve understand bis counsel to rest tbe appeal on two positions: first, that tbe respondent is not a resident, within tbe statute; and second, that she bad discovered tbe adulterous cohabitation of tbe appellant more than three years before •suit brought.

I. "We have no doubt of tbe true construction of sec. 12 of tbe statute of divorce, R. S., ch. 111, a reenactment of ch. 79 of 1849. "Wisely or unwisely, it is tbe policy of tbe statute to rest jurisdiction of divorce here upon tbe residence of tbe plaintiff alone. Manley v. Manley, 3 Pin., 390; Hubbell v. Hubbell, 3 Wis., 662; Gleason v. Gleason, 4 id., 64; Shafer v. Bushnell, 24 id., 372. Sec. 12 requires a residence of tbe plaintiff for one year before suit brought, except in two instances: first, when tbe suit is for adultery committed while tbe plaintiff is a resident.here; and second, when tbe marriage is solemnized here, and tbe plaintiff continues a resident till suit brought.

Tbe policy of tbe statute in requiring a year’s residence is ob*658viously to secure good faith iu the residence of parties coming-from without the state and applying for divorce here. For all grounds of divorce except adultery, whether talcing place before or after the residence of a plaintiff coming here, the-statute exacts a year’s j)atience as test of the bona fides of the residence claimed here. But when so grave an offense as-adultery is committed after the plaintiff has acquired a residence here, although for less than a year, the statute does not require sufferance of the offense for the rest of the year. So-when the marriage takes place here and the plaintiff .remains a resident, though for less than a year, the statute does not require forbearance for the rest of the year. It accepts the-peculiar circumstances of these two cases as test of "bona fides• in lieu of a full year’s residence in other cases.

The rule is familiar that the words reside and residence, in the section, must bear the same sense in the three cases. In each the statute requires the same residence, though for longer or shorter periods. The difference is in the time, not in the kind, of residence. And in each the residence must be actual and °bona fide; animo numendi. No mere pretense of residence, no passing visit, no temporary presence, no assumption of residence here pro hac vice only, nothing short of actual abode here, with intention of permanent residence, will fill the letter or the spirit of the statute. Hall v. Hall, 25 Wis., 600; Williamson v. Parisien, 1 Johns. Ch., 389; Case v. Clarke, 5 Mason, 70. The residence must be such as, continuing for a year, would make a man a qualified elector of the state. Shelton v. Tiffin, 6 How., 163. “ The legislature, was legislating for the citizens of this state, not for others.” Winship v. Winship, 16 N. J. Eq., 107. See Jarvais v. Moe, 38 Wis., 440; Lyon v. Lyon, 2 Gray, 367; Re Miller's Estate, 3 Rawle, 312; Fry’s Case, 71 Pa. St., 302; Brown v. Brown, 14 N. J. Ch., 78; Thompson v. State, 28 Ala., 12; Hinds v. Hinds, 1 Iowa, 36; Smith v. Smith, 4 G. Greene, 266.

*659■ Accepting tbe respondent’s own statement, we cannot bnt told that sbe came to this state for the purpose of prosecuting this suit only, without intention of permanent residence here; and that such residence as she has acquired does not entitle her to sue for divorce here under the statute.

But it is contended by her counsel, and there are cases to support his position, that the domicil of the wife follows the domicil of the husband; that, therefore, during the appellant’s ten years’ abandonment of her and cohabitation with his paramour, his domicil here was hers in construction of law; and that she, abiding all those years at their former domicil in New York, was yet all the while a legal resident of this state within the statute of divorce. We must hold such a theory excluded by the statute, requiring actual residence here of the plaintiff, whether husband or wife. If it had been the intention of the statute that a wife, suing a resident husband for divorce, need not be herself a resident, we take it that the statute would in some way have indicated such intention, now literally excluded by the language used.

Doubtless for certain purposes the domicil of the husband is the domicil of the wife. That rule, however, goes upon the unity of husband and wife; and very generally, if not always, implies continuing, though temporarily interrupted, cohabitation. It excludes, or should exclude, permanent separation. Permanent separation implies separate domicils of husband and wife. If the rule were to be applied to cases of desertion, it would imply something like an absurdity. The weight of authority is against the application of the rule, as applied to cases of divorce, when the parties are actually living in different jurisdictions. Ditson v. Ditson, 4 R. I., 87; Harteau v. Harteau, 14 Pick., 181; Payson v. Payson, 34 N. H., 518; Hopkins v. Hopkwis, 35 id., 474; Harding v. Alden, 9 Greenl., 140; Yates v. Yates, 13 N. J. Ch., 280; Schonwald v. Schonwald, 2 Jones' Eq., 367; Jenness v. Jenness, 24 Ind., 355. The question cannot be considered an *660open one in this court. Hubbell v. Hubbell, supra; Phillips v. Phillips, 22 Wis., 256; Shafer v. Bushnell, 24 id., 372; Craven v. Craven, 27 id., 418; and other cases in this 'court.

We are therefore of opinion that the respondent was in no sense a resident of this state within the meaning of the statute, at the time of the commencement of her suit.

But the question remains, whether the pleadings raise the issue of her residence. Her want of residence under the statute is clearly a personal disability, not affecting the present right of action, but only the present right to prosecute the action; a disability which might be cured: clearly matter of abatement, not of bar. “Whenever the subject matter of the defense is that the plaintiff cannot maintain any action, at any time, whether present or future, in respect of the supposed cause of action, it may and usually must be pleaded in bar: but matter which merely defeats the present proceeding, and does not show that the plaintiff is forever concluded, should in general be pleaded in abatement.” 1 Chitty’s Pl., 446. “All declinatory and dilatory pleas in equity are properly pleas, if not in abatement, at least in the nature of pleas in abatement; and, therefore, in general, the objections founded thereon must be taken ante litem contestatam by plea, and are not available byway of answer, or at the hearing.” Story’s Eq. Pl., § 708. So Lord Bedesdale distinguishes pleas “ that the plaintiff is not entitled to sue by reason of some personal disability,” and that “the plaintiff has no interest in the subject, or no right to institute a suit concerning it,” from pleas in bar, and calls them pleas to the person of the plaintiff. Mitford’s Pl., 220.

And the distinction is not one of form merely, but of substance. For, generally, judgment for the defendant on pleas ■in abatement, abates the action only; on plea in bar, bars the cause of action everywhere and forever. In the present case, judgment against the respondent for want of residence within *661tbe statute, should not operate to bar another action here, if she should have acquired a residence; or elsewhere, at anytime or under any circumstances.

The code does not touch the distinction between defenses in abatement and defenses in bar, or the legal effect of judgments upon them. It does indeed modify the manner, form and time of putting in such defenses, but does not confound them or their consequences. Formerly, pleas- in abatement and pleas in bar must have been separately and successively pleaded in that .order; now, matter of abatement and matter-of bar may be set up as separate defenses in the same answer. Freeman v. Carpenter, 17 Wis., 126. Whether they may be successively pleaded and tried; or, being pleaded together, may be separately tried, are questions not now before us.

If certain matters in abatement are apparent in the complaint, they are ground for demurrer under the code. But if matter in abatement, not apparent in the complaint, be relied on as a defense, it must be specially pleaded in the answer. Ch. 125, secs. 5, 8, R. S.

A general denial is a plea in bar, not broader at least than the general issue at common law, and cannot raise any defense byway of abatement. Martin v. Pugh, 23 Wis., 184; Sanford v. McCreedy, 28 id., 103; Ewen v. Railway Co., 38 id., 613. Judgment for the defendant .upon a general denial, is a general judgment: a bar to all future actions for the same cause. And it would be a cruel abuse that it should go upon a defense in abatement, concealed m gremio. The code intended no such perversion of justice. And it is well settled in this court, that matter in abatement, not apparent in the complaint, must, like other special defenses, be specially pleaded in the answer. Freeman v. Carpenter, Sanford v. McCreedy, Ewen v. Railway Co., supra; Moir v. Dodson, 14 Wis., 279; Cord v. Hirsch, 17 id., 403; Kimball v. Noyes, id., 695; Harbeck v. Southwell, 18 id., 418; Bevier v. Dillingham, id., 529; Wilson v. Jarvis, 19 id., 597; Robbins v. *662Deverill, 20 id., 142; Supervisors v. Hackett, 21 id., 613; Lefebre v. Utter, 22 id., 189; Quinn v. Quinn, 27 id., 168; Noonan v. Orton, 34 id., 259; Wittman v. Watry, 37 id., 238; Smith v. Peckham, ante, p. 414. This point was overlooked at the bar, and therefore not passed upon by the court, in Hall v. Hall, 25 Wis., 600.

There is a strong analogy between this question and questions of jurisdiction in the federal courts, resting on the citizenship of parties. In those courts, all objections founded on the citizenship of the parties must be specially pleaded in abatement, or they are waived. Conard v. Insurance Co., 1 Pet., 386; D'Wolf v. Rabaud, id., 476; Sheppard v. Graves, 14 How., 505.

The appellant contends that the defense here is in the nature of a plea to the jurisdiction. We do not think so, but need not discuss the point. For by all the authorities the rule equally applies to pleas to the jurisdiction, which, if not strictly pleas in abatement, are in the nature of pleas in abatement. See Chitty, Story, Mitford, ubi supra.

The defense, therefore, that the respondent was not a resident of the state, though well founded in fact, was inadmissible under the pleadings in this case.

II. We might have been disj>osed to hold, under subd. 3 of sec. 13, that whore a continuing adulterous intercourse is maintained for over three years, particular acts of adultery within three years of suit brought might be considered as discovered within the three years, and so found a suit for divorce. But the question does not appear to be an open one.

The section in our statute was copied in 1849 from the revised statutes of New York adopted in 1829; with the mere difference that in subd. 3, three years are substituted for five in New York. In 1815, in Williamson v. Williamson, 1 Johns. Ch., 488, Kent, 0., held, in the absence of any statutory rule but in analogy to the, civil law, that a delay in suing for a divorce for five years after notice of an adulterous inter*663course still continuing wben the'bill was filed, was a bar; on ¿he presumption of condonation. The New York subdivision was expressly intended to incorporate that rule in the statute. See reviser’s notes, 5 Edmunds Stats. at Large, 401. In Valleau v. Valleau, 6 Paige, 207, decided in 1836, the construe-, tion of the subdivision was necessary to the decision of the case. After stating the rule of Williamson v. Williamson, and saying that' the principle of that case was incorporated into the revised statutes, Walworth, C., proceeds to say:

“The revisers, in their report to the legislature, refer to this decision as containing the principles which they had introduced into the revised statutes on this subject. In conformity with that decision, therefore, I must declare the true - construction of the third subdivision of the 42d section of the article of the revised statutes relative to divorces dissolving the marriage contract, to be, that if the complainant knows that his wife has contracted a second marriage and continues openly to cohabit with such second husband, or that she is living in open and continued adultery with another person even without the usual form of a marriage, the right to ' file a bill for a divorce for such adultery will be barred after the expiration of five years, although such cohabitation or adulterous intercourse is continued down to the time of the commencement of the su-it. And where such continued adultery is open and notorious, the complainant must also satisfy the court that, by reason of his absence Rom the country or otherwise, he was not aware of the fact of such continued cohabitation and adultery until within five years Rom the time of the commencement of the suit.”

We cannot find that the decision of Valleau v. Valleau has ever been questioned in New York, before or since we adopted the section here. It is therefore conclusive upon this court. We took the statute with its construction. Draper v. Emerson, 22 Wis., 147.

Again accepting the respondent’s own statement, she ap« *664pears chargeable with notice of the appellant’s adulterous intercourse commenced in New Tort nearly twelve years ago,, and thence continuously maintained to the bringing of this-suit. So chargeable with notice, she could not set up specific-acts in the continuing adulterous intercourse as ground of' divorce.

But the question remains, whether the appellant could avail himself of this defense under his general denial. We are quite clear that he could not.

The continuous relation between the appellant and his par-amom does not appear in the complaint. It is therefore new matter in defense to be pleaded by the defendant. Generally, a general denial only traverses matters pleaded in the complaint.

As has been seen, sec. 13 goes upon condonation, expressed, or implied; the statutory limitation of subd. 3 going upon condonation implied by lapse of time. And where the bar-of the statute does not appear in the complaint, it must always be pleaded. Orton v. Noonan, 25 Wis., 672; Heath v. Heath, 31 id., 223; Barden v. Supervisors, 33 id., 445; Tarbox v. Supervisors, 34 id., 558. And so express condonation cannot be shown under a mere denial, but must be expressly set up as a defense. Wood v. Wood, 2 Paige, 108; Smith v. Smith, 4 id., 432.

The defense, therefore, that the respondent had discovered the appellant’s adultery more than three years before she-brought this suit, and is therefore barred, though apparently well founded in fact, was inadmissible under the pleadings in. this case.

It is perhaps not inappropriate to remark here that, as a. rule, a general denial under the code is a mere traverse, in bar, of the facts pleaded in the complaint; and that the uses-often claimed for it, as admitting special defenses in abatement or in bar, are contrary to the letter and spirit of the-code; hiding, rather than disclosing, the grounds and facts-relied on in defense.

*665III. These views would, in ordinary cases, dispose of this appeal by affirmance of the judgment of the court below. But in cases of this nature, we cannot consider our duty ended, by determining the strict rights of the parties, between themselves, under their pleadings and proofs, when these support a divorce apparently unwarranted by the statute. Questions of public policy are involved in divorce, which, after grave consideration, we think that we are not at liberty to disregard.

In Campbell v. Campbell, 37 Wis., 206, it is said that the jurisdiction of divorce is a peculiar jurisdiction, because the marriage relation is a peculiar relation. It might have been added, with equal truth, and for the same reason, that the statute of divorce is a peculiar statute.

We regret that we have no't access to the statute under which Williamson v. Williamson was decided by Kent, C. That great master of equity held that statute to be permissive* subjéct to a sound judicial discretion. He says:

“ I cannot think the statute intended that the party injured should be entitled to come, at amy time, and m every case* and to put the cause on the single diy question, Has an act of adultery, in judgment of law, been committed ? Nothing could operate more unjustly than such a construction. The statute says, that, after the truth of the adultery charged shall have been ascertained, ‘it shall be lawful for the court’ to decree a dissolution of the marriage. This language may and ought to be understood as leaving to the court the exercise of that sound discretion which the nature of the casé, and the principles of equity, might require. The general rule of the English, jurisprudence, on this subject, must be considered as applicable, under the regulations of the statute, to this newly-created branch of equity jurisdiction. It is not to be supposed that the statute intended, in all cases of adultery charged and proved, that the court should be absolutely bound (no matter under what circumstances) to grant to the prose*666cutor the effect of a suit carried on for Ms own benefit. It is to be recollected that a bill for a divorce is not a'public bnt a private prosecution, brought at the instance of the party aggrieved, and subject to Ms control.” And again: “I think enough has been said to show that a decree for a divorce is not to be taken as of cotorse, though the fact of adultery may have existed; and I cannot but j>ersuade myself that when the statute created a jurisdiction in this court, for the cautious and limited exercise of the power of divorce, it intended that those settled principles of law and equity on this subject, which may be considei’ed as a branch of the common law, should be here adopted and applied.”

It has been seen that this case -was in the minds of the revisers in New York, and influenced them in framing the statute of divorce from which sec. 13 in our statute is copied, and on which our whole statute is largely modeled. And, accordingly, we find the New York statute in terms permissive both as to judgments of nullity and judgments of divorce. In our statute, the provisions for judgments of nullity or affirmance of marriage are in terms obligatory, and for judgments of divorce in terms permissive throughout; a distinction of language, in- kindred sections, in the same statute, pregnant with meaning.

The rule that may means shall in statutes where the public or individuals have a claim de ¡jwre to the exercise of the power conferred, is not overlooked. Cutler v. Howard, 9 Wis., 309. Put we have the great authority of Chancellor Kent for holding permissive words in the grant of this peculiar jurisdiction, to imply a sound judicial discretion in its exercise; strongly fortified here by the abrupt transition of the statute from uniformly obligatory words in one branch of the jurisdiction conferred, to uniformly permissive words in the other; an antithesis precluding oversight and implying design. This view is the stronger, that there was no right of divorce before the statute; that the statute gives divorce, as a *667right, only so far as the right is to be implied from the grant of jurisdiction to the courts, in terms permissive only; the public interest being concerned that the exercise of the jurisdiction should be subject to a sound judicial discretion. See Winship v. Winship, Williamson v. Williamson, supra; Barrere v. Barrere, 4 Johns. Ch., 187; Van Veghten v. Van Veghten, id., 501; Smith v. Smith, 13 Gray, 209; Smith v. Smith, 4 Paige, 432; People v. Dawell, 25 Mich., 247; Bennett v. Bennett, 28 Cal., 599.

We do not mean to put the policy of the courts above the policy of the legislature; or to hold that the courts should exercise any discretion to refuse divorces authorized by the statute. But we do hold that, whatever apparent claim there may be to divorce, resting on mistake or collusion of the parties or other accident, the courts of this state are vested by the statute with judicial discretion to withhold judgment of divorce, in cases not within the statute upon their merits. We understand just such a discretion to have been claimed by the chancellor in New York in Smith v. Smith, supra, under the statute on which ours is modeled, and before it was adopted here.

So, too, Shaw, O. J., speaking of an action for divorce, says: “ If this were a mere private action or suit, in which the personal rights of the parties alone were concerned, there would be a strong reason for applying the doctrine of estoppel to the act of the husband in resisting the present motion of the wife. But a suit for divorce is of a very different character; it is one in which the public have an interest, and in the conduct and result of which the best interests of society are concerned.” And the court therefore refused to apply the doctrine of estoppel, as in ordinary cases. Smith v. Smith, 13 Gray, 209.

It concerns the public welfare that the state should not be made a free mart of divorce for strangers; and that, amongst her own people, divorce should not become matter of free will as much as marriage; a personal right independent of public *668right and inconsistent with public welfare. Divorces without the letter and spirit of the statute in fact, but made to look within it by design or mistake or accident, are frauds upon the statute and offenses against public policy. And it is the duty of the courts, ex oficio, as "Walworth, 0., has it, to look closely into actions for divorce, and to direct inquiries into the facts, when necessary, and finally to deny all divorces which would be abuses of the statute.

This case evidently proceeded in good faith upon a misconstruction of the statute; but the judgment, if affirmed, would be none less in legal sense a fraud upon the statute.

"We regret that it is our duty to reverse it; but we are not sorry that the occasion of enforcing this rule places it above all possibility of bias, because all sympathy must be with the respondent.

It appears quite conclusively that the respondent had not such residence here as would support her right to bring the suit in the court below. It appears also that she had notice of the adulterous cohabitation of the appellant more than three years ago; but this does not appear so conclusively, and she may be able to make a better case in another suit. "We therefore think it right that the judgment against her should be in abatement, and not in bar. The judgment will therefore be reversed, with directions to the court below to permit the answer to be amended, or to consider it as amended on the trial, so as to raise the defense in abatement; and to dismiss the complaint upon the sole ground of the respondent’s non-residence at the commencement o’f the suit; the costs in this court and the court below to be of ■ course paid by the appellant.

"We trust that this judgment will not be received as license for loose pleading or practice in actions for divorce. It is only when the public interest is involved, that the rules governing other cases will be relaxed in cases of divorce. As between the parties, the rules of pleading and practice will be *669enforced as in other cases. Barker v. Dayton, 28 Wis., 367.

By the Cov/rt.— Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for judgment in the court below in accordance with this opinion.

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