42 A.2d 41 | Conn. | 1945
The plaintiff appeals from a judgment for the defendant on his cross-complaint. The latter was divorced from the plaintiff on the grounds of intolerable cruelty and habitual intemperance. The plaintiff's appeal from the judgment for the defendant on her complaint was abandoned.
A detailed rehearsal of the marital difficulties of these parties would serve no useful purpose. The trial court concluded that the plaintiff was both intolerably cruel and habitually intemperate to the point that the public and personal objects of matrimony have been destroyed beyond rehabilitation, and that the custody of the minor child of the marriage should be awarded to the defendant. The terms habitual intemperance and intolerable cruelty are not subject to exact definition. Dennis v. Dennis,
The real claim of the plaintiff is that the trial court believed the defendant rather than the plaintiff and her witnesses. This is no ground of appeal in this state; Scibek v. O'Connell,
Included in the appeal are assignments of error as to various interlocutory orders made while it was pending. The sustaining of the judgment makes the decision on all of these orders academic with one possible exception. The judgment was rendered December 14, 1943. By that judgment and by a subsequent order effective July 25, 1944, the custody of the child was awarded to the defendant and right of visitation was granted to the plaintiff. The plaintiff claimed that, the child being in Massachusetts, no order awarding her custody to the defendant in Connecticut could be made. The court had a continuing jurisdiction over the custody of the child, whether she was in this state or elsewhere. Morrill v. Morrill,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.