48 N.Y.S. 160 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The action was brought to procure a sejiaration of a husband and wife from bed and board, and to> compel the husband to make suitable provision for the support of the wife. The grounds upon which the action was based were cruel and inhuman treatment,, neglect and refusal to provide for, and abandonment of the wife, ■ The court granted the decree of separation, and adjudged that the husband pay eight dollars per week for the wife’s support during her natural-life. The parties were married December 4, 1894. The husband was then thirty-seven years of age, and the wife was eighteen years
These findings were sufficiently supported by the evidence. The wife weighed only 103 pounds, and her health was not good. She was compelled by her husband to do the work described during her pregnancy, and until within three days of the birth of her child. It caused her a terrible feeling inwardly; lifting the pot caused her sides to feel as if falling in, and she had terrible stitching pains in the side from it. She complained to her husband, but he merely gave her abuse, swore at her, said that he didn’t get her to put in a glass case, and that she couldn’t live with him unless she did this work. Once she left him on this account, about four months after the marriage, but he made her fair promises and she returned, when he treated her the same again. It is no wonder the child, when born, was a feeble, sickly one and soon died. The treatment was cruel in the extreme, and, taken in connection with his swearing at her, his leaving her alone at night, and his refusal to furnish her proper clothing, and his denying her the right to visit her own people who lived nearby, was sufficient ground for granting the separation by reason of cruel and inhuman treatment.
It may be said that afterwards he urged her to return to him, and that may be true, but .it does not appear that he waived the condition already made, that she should abandon her parents.
The evidence offered by the wife was more or less the subject of contradiction on the trial by defendant and the witnesses produced by him, but the witnesses were present before the trial judge, and he had the opportunity to hear their evidence and to observe their bearing, and he could better determine whether they testified truly than we can upon printed papers. We think his conclusions as to the facts should not be disturbed by us.
Judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Barrett and Patterson, JJ., concurred ; Van Brunt, P. J,, and Rumsey, J., dissented.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.