157 Ky. 775 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1914
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant, Wade Cans, and appellee, Gertrude Gans, were married in November, 1911, and immediately went to live with the mother of appellant, where he had lived at the time of his marriage, and conducted a small grocery store, in the country near Louisville, the buildings belonging to appellant’s mother. They had lived together but a short time when an unpleasantness arose between the wife and mother-in-law over a trivial matter, as is too often the case, and the wife and her mother-in-law ceased speaking to each other, one being- about as 'much to blame as the other. Matters continued in this way until in April, 1911, when appellee left the home of her husband, and did not return.
In June, 1912, she sued appellant for an allowance for separate maintenance, alleging cruel and inhuman treatment on the part of appellant; and the chancellor upon final hearing adjudged that the defendant “pay to plaintiff permanent alimony in the sum of four dollars each and every week.” From this judgment, the defendant appeals.
The principal witnesses upon the direct issues were the plaintiff’s sister and defendant’s mother, and this evidence is conflicting; the mother testifying that the husband treated his wife kindly at all times, and the sister testifying to such conduct upon the part of the husband as would show, taken in connection with the other circumstances given in evidence, that the plaintiff was justified in leaving the defendant, and that she was not at fault.
The rule is that when the husband treats the wife in such manner as to justify her leaving him, an allowance for separate maintenance may be decreed upon a state of facts insufficient to warrant the granting of a divorce; nor is the chancellor restricted to statutory grounds for divorce, but he may take into account evidence showing that the wife was justified in leaving the home which her husband had provided for her.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for proceedings in conformity to this opinion.