114 S.W. 408 | Tex. App. | 1908
This is an action by Mrs. Gertie Gamblin against her husband for a divorce, custody of child, and the partition of community property. From a judgment granting the divorce and other relief prayed for, this appeal is prosecuted.
The grounds for divorce made the basis of this suit consist mainly of charges of cruel treatment occurring at different times and in various places. The appellant, defendant in the court below, answered by a general demurrer, special exceptions, and general and special denial. The exceptions he interposed in the court below do not seem to have been called to the attention of the court, as there is no judgment in the record showing any action on them; and they will therefore be here considered as having been waived.
The first group of errors assigned are based upon the failure of the plaintiff to allege and prove that she was an actual bona fide inhabitant of the State. The language of her petition, concerning her residence and inhabitancy, is as follows: "Plaintiff is a resident of Wood County, Texas, and has been a resident of Wood County, Texas, for more than six months, and a resident of the State of Texas for more than twelve months next preceding the filing of this petition; that plaintiff and defendant were legally married in Wood County, Texas, on the 11th day of March, 1900, and lived together as man and wife until about the 1st day of December, 1906." The petition further avers that the parties own 119 acres of land in Wood County, which is their homestead and is the only property which they do own except some personal property which had before that time been appropriated and disposed of by the appellant. Art. 2978 of the Revised Civil Statutes provides, "that no suit for divorce from the bonds of matrimony shall be maintained in the courts unless the petitioner for such divorce shall at the time of exhibiting his or her petition be an actual bona fide inhabitant of the State, and shall have resided in the county where the suit is filed six months next preceding the filing of the suit." There can be no question about this provision being mandatory and that the actual bona fide habitation of the plaintiff must be both alleged and proven before the court will be authorized to grant a divorce. A failure to allege and prove this fact can not be waived by the parties, but constitutes a substantial omission of which the court is bound to take notice, Bruner v. Bruner,
It is also assigned as error that the petition omitted the word "insupportable" from the description of the cruelties recounted and relied upon as grounds for the divorce. Here, again, is an instance in which it is not required that the statutory language be used in describing the character of the ill-treatment complained of. The petition in this case does use the words "unendurable" in that connection. This, we think, is equivalent in its meaning to the word "insupportable;" and if it be required that some such word expressive of intolerable conduct and treatment be alleged, then we think this requirement has been fully met in the use of the word "unendurable." It has practically the same meaning as "insupportable."
The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the judgment is also questioned in various other assignments of error. An inspection of the record shows that it was amply sufficient to justify the inferences drawn from it by the trial court.
The remaining assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed. *482