26 Mich. 437 | Mich. | 1873
This is a bill for divorce on the ground of adultery. As originally filed and sworn to, the bill charged the defendant with adultery committed at Jackson, in Jackson county, and at Lansing, in Ingham county, in Match, 1868, with a person named. The defendant denied the charge, and the case went before a commissioner for proofs. Instead, however, of taking any testimony in support of. his allegations, the complainant put witnesses upon the stand, who gave evidence tending to prove adultery committed by defendant, at Albion, in Calhoun county. This testimony •was duly objected to, both before the commissioner, and when the cause was brought to a hearing on May 12 th, 1870, and as it was obvious that the complainant could not be entitled to a decree upon it as the case stood, he asked for and obtained from the court the following order:
“ This cause having been brought on to be heard- upon pleadings and proofs, and the complainant at said hearing having asked leave of the court to amend the bill of complaint filed herein, so that the same may conform to the proofs already taken, it is, therefore, on motion of I. H. Corbin, Esq., solicitor for complainant, ordered by the court now here, that the complainant have leave to amend his bill of complaint filed herein, so that the same* may contain allegations which will conform to the proofs of adultery committed at Albion, already taken herein. And that said cause, at the option of defendant herein, be again referred to the circuit court commissioner for said county, to take further proofs in regard to said allegations of adultery at Albion; and that said proofs be taken, closed and returned to this court in time to notice said cause for hearing at the next June term of this court. And it is further ordered, that the proofs already taken herein be
The bill was amended under this order, on the fourth day óf June following, but the amendments were not verified as the original bill was required to be, and as we held in Briggs v. Briggs, 20 Mich,. 34, was necessary. Nothing further appears to have been done in the case until June, 1871, when, upon the proofs before referred to, a decree of divorce was granted.
No ground has been suggested to us upon which it can be plausibly urged that this decree should be sustained. The taking of the Albion testimony under the issue then made up, was wholly unwarranted and without excuse, and the defendant may well have been taken by surprise when' it was offered. It was so wholly irrelevant to the 'issue, that it is extremely doubtful if perjury could be assigned upon it, if false. Defendant had been under no obligation to anticipate, or prepare to meet such proofs, and she had a right to suppose they would be rejected at the hearing. Had her counsel anticipated such a motion to amend as was after-wards made, he would have been justified in advising her that the practice of permitting a case to be made to meet evidence which had been previously taken without authority of law, would be oue neither admissible under the usages of the court, nor consistent with reason or justice. If she had received such advice, and in reliance upon it had given herself no concern about these proofs, and gone to the hearing in full confidence that the case actually charged, and which no attempt had been made to prove, would be dismissed, she could be accused neither of negligence in looking after her rights, nor of over-confidence in relying upon the settled course and practice of the court for her protection. Any counselor of the court of chancery would have 'been likely to give her that advice. And he would have
There is no class of cases in which an adherence-to: settled practice, and to all those forms prescribed for the attainment of justice, should' be more inflexibly required, than -that in which divorces are sought for alleged adultery,. It is so easy to bring the charge, and in many cases to support it by evidence of circumstanco.s perfectly innocent-in themselves when fully .explained,-and yet capable of presenting a suspicious appearance^ and -parties so often resort to it with full knowledge of its unfounded-nature, relying upon being able to present at least a'plausible showing,; which the accused party may be unable fully to disprove by evidence, that it is always better and safer for a court-,-, to err in the direction-of over strictness, in requiring.from, counsel adherence to rules, than by permitting such a disregard of all rules. as was exhibited in this case, to leave -- the defendant without the ordinary protections against a.misuse of the process of the court- for purposes of fraud - and outrage,- . . .
We qannot doubt that the orders complained of in. this, case, were granted through misapprehension of the exact , position of the case; but if a court, in its.discretion, might grant-them, abuses would be certain to.result. Unless a party . thus entrapped by a fictitious issue, can disprove -the, case,. irregularly and unfairly made against him under it, he would-be cut off from- his rights, and, in effect, deprived of a fair , investigation. The only safe course is, to adhere strictly., to the correct practice, which requires the evidence to -be-.con- , fined to an existing issue. There are, undoubtedly,- cases : in which formal defects may be suffered to be corrected * without prejudice to proofs taken, and there are also cases.in which more substantial amendments may.be made with-
The injunction referred to in the order permitting the amendment, was as anomalous as the other proceedings. It restrained the defendant from, selling, or incumbering a lot; of land owned by her, but which the complainant claimed to have bought and improved with his own money, though" intentionally placing the title in her name. No single fact/ or circumstance, was set out or suggested in the bill, which: would entitle him to have any equity in the land enforced in his favor, nor did the bill pray any relief in respect to it, except what the injunction might give. The injunction, consequently, could have had no legitimate object, and the' judge in signing the decree, must have overlooked the provision inserted to make the injunction previously granted-by a commissioner, perpetual.
The decree must be reversed, with costs of both courts, and the bill dismissed, but without prejudice.