160 Ga. 497 | Ga. | 1925
Lead Opinion
Mrs. Harriet Evitt brought her suit against A. L. Evitt for temporary and permanent alimony. The petitioner and defendant had been married since the year 1886, and lived together as husband and wife until recently. They had eight children; all had attained their majority except one. It is alleged in the petition that the husband and wife are now living in a bona fide state of separation. The petitioner left the defendant, and alleges as grounds for leaving him acts of cruel treatment upon his part and existing adulterous relations between him and another woman. In his answer the husband denied the alleged cruel treatment and the acts of adultery. Hpon the trial of the case the jury returned a verdict in favor of the petitioner,, allowing her $60 per month alimony. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
Exception is taken to the following charge of the court: “The defendant comes into court and files his plea in the case, his answer, in which he denies substantially the allegations of the plaintiff. He denies that his association with the other woman referred to was of any incriminating character, or otherwise than merely friendly intercourse and association; he says that there was nothing improper whatever in their relations, and avers that he has at all times supported his wife to the best of his ability, and that her separation from him at this time is not through any fault whatsoever on his part. Wherefore he prays that no alimony whatever be granted to the plaintiff.” It is not denied that this charge correctly states the contentions of the defendant as far as it goes; it is excepted to upon the ground that it “is erroneous because it left out the contention by the defendant that his property was encumbered for as much as it was worth, and that he was unable to pay alimony.” This is not a meritorious criticism upon the portion of the charge excepted to. An exception to a charge which is correct and proper in itself, on the ground that it does not charge some other principle of law or some other pertinent matter to be considered, can not be regarded as showing ground for reversal of the judgment refusing a new trial. If the charge as given was a correct statement of the contentions of the
This part of the court’s charge is excepted to: ' “Now, we first consider the status of married parties. Marriage is an holy relation. It is not only a civil contract, but is a social relation, ordered of God, sanctified by the covenant of Isaac and Eebecca, esteemed and revered by all upright men.” The grounds of exception are: “(a) because it stressed too much the relation; (b) because it dealt with the marriage as a contract, not only as a civil but as a divine contract; (c) because it instructed the jury that marriage was not only a civil contract but a holy contract; and (d) because said charge impressed upon the minds of the jury that the marriage contract' was something more than a civil contract, to wit, a divine and religious contract, and -impressed upon the jury that it was entered into by an order of God, and would tend to impress upon the jury that the contract entered into with so much solemnity could not be disregarded by the parties, since it was more than a civil contract.” We will not enter here upon the discussion of the nature of the marriage contract or the marriage relation. The views of many eminent jurists and text-writers on the nature of the contract of marriage and various “definitions of marriage” are collected in the opinion of Judge Lumpkin, in the case of Askew v. Dupree, 30 Ga. 173. The definition of marriage found in Bishop on Marriage and Divorce is there quoted approvingly, and is in the following language: “The word marriage is used to signify either the act of entering into the marital condition, or the condition itself. In the latter and more frequent legal 'sense, it is a civil status, existing in one man and one woman, legally united for life for those civil and social purposes which are based in the distinction of sex. Its source is the law of nature, whence it has flowed into the municipal laws of every civilized country, and into the general law of nations. And since it can exist only in pairs, and since no persons are compelled, but all who are capable are permitted to assume it, marriage may be said to proceed from a civil contract between
From the definitions and views collected in the opinion in the Aslcew ease, supra, it would seem to be the consensus of opinion of the writers and jurists there referred to that while marriage may be denominated a contract, yet it is more than a contract; and even considered as a contract, we know that it differs from other contracts in many and material respects. It creates a status, it imposes duties upon both parties to the contract or both parties affected by the status; it imposes duties and rights having their origin in the laws of nature. And from that standpoint, since a Divine Being is the author and creator, not only of everything and every person in the universe, but of the law affecting and to some extent controlling everything and every person in the universe, marriage, which is founded in the law of nature and in obedience to its dictates,, is of a divine origin. And this is emphasized by the teachings of Holy Writ. But we will be carried far afield if we attempt to point out how far our laws recognize those teachings or to what extent the marriage status is affected by them. But our legislators, we know, have not ignored those teachings in framing laws that relate to marriage and divorce and the status of the parties to the marriage contract. As an example, we have a statute expressly declaring that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is subject to him; that her legal civil existence is merged in the husband’s, except so far as the law recognizes her separately. But in a proceeding like the present, to enforce the rights of a wife to alimony, the wife must come into a court of law upon a petition to that court, and the allegations of her petition must show a right to maintain the suit and to recover alimony under the statutes of the State of Georgia, under the Civil Code; otherwise her petition will be fruitless. In that view of the case, possibly
In the fourth ground of the amendment to the motion for a new trial the following is set forth as a part of the court’s charge to the jury: “The support and maintenance from the husband to the wife until the day when death separates them, or until the marriage contract has been dissolved by some decree of divorce issued out of a court of competent jurisdiction, and, on the other hand, the obligation -on the part of the wife of service, and obedience and wifely association.” Movant contends that this was erroneous, “because it is not a correct statement of the obligation of the husband; and because the court thereby instructed the jury
The court further charged the jury -as follows: “So that, where the wife sues the husband for alimony, the first consideration of the jury in approaching the case is to examine the evidence and ascertain therefrom if the separation exists as alleged by the wife, and that is, are the husband and the wife living in a bona fide state of separation ? If so, then inquire secondly what was the cause of the separation; and if the jury find that the case as alleged in the plaintiff’s petition is supported by the testimony, and that the separation was brought about, not by the fault of the wife, but by the fault of the husband, as may be alleged in the grounds filed by the plaintiff 'in her petition, then the jury would be authorized to find alimony in favor of the wife as against the husband.” This charge substantially stated the law applicable to the issues involved here.
Thejcourt also, in the course of his instructions to the jury, charged the following: “Now, in fixing the amount of alimony to be awarded in the case, if any be awarded, the jury will take into consideration all the facts and surrounding circumstances of the case as shown by the evidénce in the case. Among other things
The charge is also excepted to upon the ground that it failed
The ruling made in the 6th headnote requires no elaboration.
The court was duly requested in writing to give the following charge to the jury: “If the jury should find from the evidence that at the time the defendant moved from the State of South Carolina to Georgia the plaintiff in this case refused to move to Georgia and to reside in Georgia with the defendant, without cause or reason, then the plaintiff would not be entitled to alimony; and if you find that the plaintiff continued to reside apart from her husband since his removal from South Carolina, without cause or reason, then the plaintiff should not be entitled to recover.” We do not think the refusal to give this in charge was error, although the proposition of law there stated is correct and is pertinent to the issues involved in the ease; for the subject treated in the request was sufficiently covered in the charge as given by the following instructions to the jury: “I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that under Georgia law the husband has the right to fix the abode and residence of himself and wife; and if the husband fixes an abode, and the wife voluntarily, without just cause, refuses to live with the husband at the abode fixed by him, then that would be separation in law on the part of the wife, and would be a bar to alimony, unless such separation was condoned on the part of the husband afterwards.”
In the 9 th ground of the motion for a new trial a long
The ruling made in the 9th headnote requires no elaboration.
The wife was permitted to testify as follows: “Some of the children said something about that woman, said if he-didn’t quit worrying me about that woman they were going over there and pour kerosene on her and set her afire, just to be talking, you know; and he told them if they went over there and bothered her he would put them back in South Carolina, d — n them, all of them, and he stamped his foot and raised a rucus around there with the whole business.” She was permitted to testify also that “He didn’t give me any money. I knew he wouldn’t give me none, and I didn’t think I could stay in the w^ay he was doing. I just left him because I knowed I couldn’t stay there in the way he was going on. I don’t think I need to tell you how he was going on, don’t have to speak everything out like that. I lived with him a
All - of this testimony was objected to upon the ground that the plaintiff was incompetent to testify to the facts recited by her, on the ground that it was evidence tending to establish the ground of adultery as alleged in the petition. The court overruled the objection. It seems to us that the exception to this ruling of the court is well taken. The wife was permitted not only to testify
Other exceptions to the rulings of the court not specially mentioned show no ground for the grant of a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially. I concur in the result and in what is said in the 10th headnote and the accompanying division. My views do not precisely coincide with what is said in some of the other divisions of the opinion.