1 Blackf. 360 | Ind. | 1825
D. Fischli filed her bill in chancery in the Clark Circuit Court, showing that in the year 1817 she intermarried with J. Fischli, to whom she performed the duties of an obedient, affectionate wife; but that he deserted her a few days after the marriage, with the intention of abandonment for more than two years. That he neglected and refused to provide for her support, treated her with severity, and unjustly aspersed her character. That she applied to the Jefferson Circuit Court, in the state of Kentucky, and, by the decree of the said Court, obtained a divorce from her said husband, and a decree against him for the sum of 3,800 dollars, and one-third of the real estate he possessed in the state of Kentucky during her life; but that the avails of said decree, after paying the expenses of litigation, are insufficient for her comfortable support. She further states in her bill, that he is possessed of valuable lands and tenements in Clark county in this state, and prays for a decree of one-third part thereof during her life, and for general relief. To this bill the defendant demurred, his demurrer was sustained, and the bill dismissed.
This divorce having been granted in Kentucky, and a part of
The record of the proceedings in Kentucky are before us, being made a part of the bill; from which it appears, that there was an appeal from the first decree of the Circuit Court, and that the case was finally determined by the Court of Appeals, under whose direction the final decree in the Circuit Court was made. And it is urged, from the decision of the Court of Appeals, that the decree for the wife’s maintenance was predicated on, and • limited to, the property which the husband owned in Kentucky} for that Court expressly decided that the division of the reales-tate should be confined to the defendant’s lands in that state. From which the complainant would have us to understand, that that Court determined that the defendant’s property without the limits of that state, being beyond their direct control', must of necessity be excluded from their consideration in the division ■ they have directed; and that that Court did not consider the rights of the parties as settled, or that they considered them settled on premises where complete equity could not be done for want of authority co-extensive with the defendant’s property. This view of their decision receives some support from the construction they have given to their act of assembly on this subject. That act is the same in this respect with ours— that the Court pronouncing the decree of divorce, shall regulate and order the division of the estate, real and persona], in such way as to them shall seem just and right, having due regard to each party and the children if any. The opinion of that Court was, that the division of the property should be made in specie, and not by the decree of a gross sum tó be paid by the husband to the wife. This construction, we have no doubt, as a general rule is correct, and most conducive to the interest qfboth parties. But there are cases where the property may
If we look further into this case, and consider it independently of the provision made for the wife by the decree in Kentucky* we shall find nothing in it to authorize the interference of a Court of chancery. We draw this conclusion, not from the practice in England of never allowing alimony on the dissolution of the bonds of matrimony, but from the practice in chancery where there has been a divorce a mensa et thoro, to which this divorce is in some respects assimilated. Divorces from the bonds of matrimony in England* are predicated on the nub lity of the marriage, and all things are thereby left in the same condition in which they would have been if no such connexion had been contemplated. Divorces a mensa et thoro in England* and statutory divorces here, and the consequent allowance of alimony,are predicated on the relationship between husbandand wife, and the obligation of the husband to provide for the suitable maintenance of the wife, i Taking the matter then as i< stood in England, we find no precedent, except in a few extreme
The decree is affirmed with costs.
In that case, the decree of the Circuit Court, besides the divorce, was— that the plaintiff recover against the defendant the sum of 75 dollars every three months from the day of the decree during four years for her alimony, and for raising her daughter. The Sup. Court affirmed the decree. This was under the Stat. 1813, p. 79. Vide also Frakes v. Brown, May term, 1830, post. Stat. 1823, p. 156.
A bill was filed in the Court of chancery, New-York, by the wife against her husband for a divorce for adultery. The answer confidied the charge. The defendant’s real estate was estimate^Bt 3,750 dollars, and his personal at 800 dollars: the whole annual value thereof was 325 dollars. The Court-