Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant below having steadfastly resisted the granting of the divorce as well as the decree depriving her of the custody of the children, the first question necessary to be considered is whether or not there was error occurring at the trial which might have affected the verdict of the jury. Plaintiff’s counsel strenuously insist that this court should not disturb the verdict in a case like this; that the jury, having an opportunity to see and hear the living witnesses, are better able than the appellate court to judge of the truth of matters of fact, especially when there are a large number of witnesses and much conflict in the testimony.
Whether the verdict in divorce cases is to he considered 'as a common-law verdict or advisory merely, as in cases of equitable cognizance, we need not determine at this time. Chapter 32 of the General Statutes provides, among other things, that “the * * * court, sitting as a court of chancery, shall have jurisdiction in all cases of divorce and alimony by this chapter allowed; and the like process, practice and proceedings shall be had as are usually had in other cases in chancery, except as is hereafter provided; * * *” and that, “ where the defendant shall appear and deny the charges in the complainant’s bill alleged, the same shall be tried by a jury.” Whatever may be the precise effect of a verdict in divorce cases, and whatever power the trial judge may possess over the same, we are clearly of the opinion that when
Certain material charges against defendant in plaintiff’s complaint were to the effect that she had entered into a conspiracy whereby plaintiff was called out of his house at night, assaulted, and knocked down by defendant’s son Sidney, and that defendant was present, aiding and abetting her son in that transaction. Plaintiff had testified fully upon this subject. He had sworn that, upon a sign from defendant, Sidney had struck him, and felled him to. his knees, and that defendant had then called out: “Run, Sidney; he is armed, and will kill you.” The defendant, in her answer, had specifically denied these charges; and when she was called as a wit
Again, plaintiff had charged in his complaint that defendant had sought to poison the minds of his children against him, to make them hate, despise and avoid him. In support of this allegation the plaintiff was permitted to give in evidence, against the objection and exception of the defendant, a conversation between the witness Elizabeth Owens, and the child Willie, when the child was about eight or nine years old, on an occasion when defendant was absent from her home, when plaintiff was in another part of the house, and while the witness was putting the child to bed. The witness testified to the effect that the child said his “papa was a thief, and everybody belonging to him, and his mamma could put them in the penitentiary; that his,mamma said so.” The record does not disclose upon what ground this evidence was offered or received, and we are unable to recall any rule, or exception to any rule of evidence, which would allow the admission of such hearsay testimony. In its very nature, such testimony was calculated to be most
Counsel for plaintiff in their printed argument do not attempt to justify or excuse the trial court for the exclusion of the testimony in the one instance, nor for the admission of it in the other, as above set forth. The only defense attempted in this court is that the assignments of error based thereon “ are not entitled to any consideration, because they are not specific.” Without entering into a discussion of the practice of this court in respect to assignments of error, we are satisfied that the rules are liberal enough to enable us to consider and act upon the errors under consideration. In addition to the assignment of errors in the common form, counsel for appellant argued these objections in their first brief, and the printed abstract contains an index to the testimony of each witness, so that neither court nor counsel could have any difficulty in finding or understanding the matters assigned for error.
The laws of the state specify many causes for which divorces are allowed. In the opinion of many good people the family household may be thereby too easily broken up and destroyed. The institution of marriage lies at the foundation of our civilization. It is the safeguard of education and true religion, the promoter of public and private morals, and the conservator of social order. Pub-, lie policy favors the continuance of the marriage relation, and the courts should not lend their influence to dissolve the same except in obedience to strict law. It does not follow because a married person has a legal ground of divorce that he or she is bound to assert the same in the courts, either as plaintiff, or as defendant by way of cross-complaint. The law favors the condo-nation of matrimonial offenses. Acting upon these principles, this court has adopted the equitable doctrine that a destitute wife, though having a statutory ground for
We express no opinion upon the merits of this unfortunate controversy. What we have said has been in maintenance of defendant’s legal right to have the law declared and enforced impartially, to the end that she should not be divorced from her husband, nor deprived of the society of her children, unless the law thus declared, and the evidence thus admitted and considered, should justify such results. We are aware that the ready question of modern public sentiment will be: “ Why does not defendant allow plaintiff- a divorce if his conduct has been as cruel and distasteful to her and her family as she herself alleges? ” It is not necessary for us to answer this question. Still, it is not difficult to surmise reasons satisfactory to her, and perhaps to others. It is no concern of ours whether such reasons please the multitude or not; it is sufficient for the ear of justice that she is entitled to the enforcement of the law for the protection of herself and children in this regard. The fact that so many parties in divorce proceedings contend for nothing except money is no reason why the law should not be administered impartially when invoked by the few who do not regard lightly the sundering of the marriage tie or the loss of the society of thei.r children.
The defendant, as appears from her professed religious views, has conscientious scruples against the granting of divorces on many of the grounds allowed by our statute. She is now over fifty years of age. She is the mother of two families of children. Gov. Gilpin, the plaintiff, now over seventy years of age, is the father of one of these families. He has long enjoyed large official honors, both civil and military. The defendant is also most respectably connected. Fortunately, both parties are possessed of a reasonable competency to meet the ordinary wants
It is said that the principal questions now remaining to be settled in this case relate to alimony and the custody of the children. Counsel have devoted a large share of their arguments to these questions, and it is suggested, that their determination does not necessarily depend upon the result of the divorce issue. Nevertheless, plaintiff’s counsel in their brief claim great advantage for their client in respect to alimony and the custody" of the children on account of the verdict being in his favor; and we cannot ignore the fact that the verdict of the jury has a most important and often a controlling influence in respect to the future custody of children in divorce cases, especially when they have arrived at the ages of twelve and fourteen years, as in this case. The verdict in this case upon the issues as formed and tried tends directly to show the conduct of defendant to have been unmotherly as well as unwifelike, and thus necessarily does affect her claim to the custody of the children; hence she is entitled to insist that it shall be set aside, unless it was fairly obtained. If we were to 'shut our eyes to the errors occurring at the trial, and allow the decree of divorce to stand, to save trouble, expense and delay, we should be conscious of thus placing the defendant at a great disadvantage in respect to her claim to the custody of the children by the maintenance of a verdict obtained under erroneous rulings. As a matter of .law, she is entitled to have her rights passed upon without being thus "unjustly prejudiced. We are constrained, therefore, to say that the issue of divorce must be decided upon a trial free from substantial error, or abandoned altogether, before the future custody and control of the children can be properly provided for with due regard to the legal
As the record before us does not show any exceptions to the instructions given by the trial court to the jury, the errors assigned thereon cannot be made ground of reversal. But as the case may be tried again, we deem it proper to say that the instructions preserved in this record, if excepted to, would not meet the approval of this court. One instruction leaves out of view the provocation which may have been given for the supposed misconduct; another leaves out of consideration the probability of condonation; and still another calls special attention to the conduct and demeanor of defendant, as asserted by plaintiff and his witnesses. We need not notice the instructions further, except to say that if, in a trial for divorce, it is necessary to investigate and expose in detail the events of thirteen years of domestic life, great care must be exercised in declaring the law applicable to such a controversy, else a very unsafe legal standard of matrimonial conduct might be established.
Plaintiff’s objection to considering defendant’s bill of exceptions for the purpose of showing errors occurring at the trial of the divorce issue is not well taken. It is true plaintiff’s bill of exceptions shows that plaintiff objected to the signing and sealing of defendant’s bill because the same was not tendered in time; but it does not
Rehearing
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING.
It is now contended by plaintiff’s counsel that it was not error to refuse to allow defendant to answer the question: “Did you say, ‘Run, Sidney; he is armed?’” The elementary authorities are uniform to the effect that such a question is perfectly legitimate at the stage of the examination at which it was propounded. The defendant was entitled to testify to everything material which was said and done by each and every party to the transaction under consideration as she remembered it. Having done this, she was also entitled to explain or contradict any language of material import, or any part thereof, which had been imputed to her by any adverse witness; and for this purpose her counsel had the right to ask her the question in the precise form he did. Not to have asked the question might have deprived her of the benefit of an explanation or contradiction of the language attributed to her, and so would have left opposing counsel free to insist in argument that she had not denied or explained the same, i Greenl. Ev. §§ 434, 435; 1 Starkie, Ev. *167-170; 1 Whart. Ev. §§ 498-503, and notes; 2 Best, Ev. §§ 641, 642; 2 Phil. Ev. 894, 895.
It is also insisted that it was not error to admit the conversation between the witness, Elizabeth Owens, and the child, Willie, about his father. It is urged that the testimony was competent to show the state of the child’s mind towards his father; but no attempt is made to
It is further urged that the rulings of the trial court upon these matters of evidence should not be adjudged erroneous because counsel did not state the reasons for the objections at the time of making them. General objections, or objections without specific grounds therefor being stated, may, as a general rule, be safely overruled, unless the testimony sought to be introduced is of such a character as to be inadmissible for any purpose; and the grounds of its inadmissibility must unmistakably appear or in some manner be brought to the attention of the court at the time of the ruling, and not be left to conjecture or inference, or its reception will not constitute cause for reversal. Thomp. Trials, §§ 693, 694-697, 2786; Camden v. Doremus, 3 How. 515; Brown v. Weightman, 62 Mich. 557. It will he observed by reference to our former opinion that the objection to the question, “Did you say ‘ Run, Sidney; he is armed? ’ ” came from plaintiff’s counsel, that no ground of objection was stated or suggested, and that the objection was sustained. This ruling was clearly erroneous under any condition of the foregoing rule; since, as we have seen, the evidence sought to be introduced was both competent and material, and the
As to the testimony of the witness Owens, it is difficult to conceive that any further reason was necessary to be stated against the admission of the child’s remark about his father, when by the course of the examination it had already been expressly disclosed that it was but a mere repetition of his mother’s declaration. The reason seems obvious, without being stated, that the servant of the family, in a divorce suit, should not be permitted to testify what a mere child said the mother said about the father in the absence of both parties tq the record.
The claim is renewed on this application that the assignments of error are not sufficiently specific, as required by the rules of this court, to entitle defendant to relief from any errors, committed by the admission of improper testimony against her or the exclusion of proper evidence in her behalf. The opinions of this court to which counsel have called our attention have not been overlooked. The original records, briefs and arguments, so far as the same have been preserved, as well as the opinions themselves in these cases, fail to show that the rules under consideration have ever before been invoked by counsel as a protection against errors appearing in the record relating to the exclusion or admission of testimony; while some of them show affirmatively that the court has sometimes availed itself of that part of the rule which provides that “the court may, in its discretion, notice any other errors appearing in the record.” The only opinion which seems to declare that the court has no discretion to consider errors imperfectly assigned, because of the rules, is in the case of Railroad Co. v. Smith, 5 Colo. 160. In that case there was no discussion of the rules in the briefs or arguments of counsel; the rules were not invoked by appellee, but were taken advantage of by the court ex mero motu. So it may be that the language of the opinion which we consider in conflict with the rules was inadvertently used.
If it were necessary to give reasons for the exercise of such discretion in cases of this kind, it would not be difficult so to do. The dissolution of the marriage bond is against public policy. A decree of divorce will only be granted in pursuance of strict law. It cannot be granted by consent of the parties, nor upon a default, without the same strict proof required in case of a bona fide contest. Evidence cannot be waived, nor facts bearing upon the issue of divorce stipulated. It is the duty of all courts having jurisdiction of divorce proceedings to be vigilant to prevent the obtaining of decrees of divorce by fraud, collusion, the admission of improper testimony, or the exclusion of competent evidence. Some of the reasons for this strictness may be found in the former opinion in this case. Society, the public, the commonwealth, have an interest in the preservation of the marriage relation. In an important sense it may well be said there are three parties to every divorce proceeding— the husband, the wife, and the state; and in some instances a fourth —the children. In some jurisdictions counsel are provided to appear in behalf of the people to protect the interests of the state in divorce proceedings. In Colorado, and perhaps in most of the states, this responsibility is intrusted solely to the courts having jurisdiction of divorce causes. 2 Bish. Mar. & Div. ch. 16; 2 Rev. St. Ky. (1867) 19; Gen. St. Ky. (1873) 524; Green v. Green, 7 Ind. 113; 2 McCord, St. at Large, S. C. 733; St. 24 and 25 Vict. ch. 86, sec. 8.
The suggestion that the court may notice errors not specifically assigned, but that it may not notice them ■effectively by making them a ground of reversal in any
Rehearing denied.