49 Neb. 546 | Neb. | 1896
Tbis action was instituted in tbe district court of York county, by tbe appellee against appellant, tbe objects sought being to obtain a divorce from ber, and other relief in regard to certain property rights. Appellant’s desertion of him was alleged by appellee as tbe ground for tbe claim of divorce. It was pleaded in tbe petition that tbe parties were married at Jobnsonburg, New Jersey, October 13, 1869, and that on or about November 1, 1888, tbe appellant deserted appellee, and for more than two years bad been willfully absent from him without just cause or reason.' Tbe petition also contained a somewhat extended account of tbe beginning and course of their married life, and more particularly tbe business and financial transactions engaged in by tbe appellee, and reverses therein, and tbe consequent changes in location, etc.; and it is of tbe statements that appellee purchased
One of the questions presented is, can alimony be allowed to the husband? Alimony is defined in 2 Bishop, Marriage & Divorce [6th ed.], section 351, as follows: “Alimony, in divorce law, is the allowance which a husband pays, by order of court, to his wife while living separate from him for her maintenance; or, it may be a like provision ordered for the sustenance of a woman divorced from the bond of matrimony, out of her late husband’s estate, — the latter branch of the definition denoting a form of alimony known only to the modern law, not to the ancient. It may be for the wife’s use during the pendency of a suit, called alimony pendente lite, or after its termination, known as permanent alimony.” (See, also, further definition in note 1 on same page.) In section 469, in the same volume, the author observes: “If a husband is obliged to seek a divorce from his wife, and the property of the two is mainly, or entirely, vested for her separate use, it will, under special circumstances, be impossible to do justice without transferring to him some of this property. And perhaps there may be statutes in some of our states under which something approximating this can be done. But it cannot generally. Nor, where the common law rules of property prevail, are the circumstances numerous in which it ought to be; because these rules put what justly belongs to the wife as well as to the husband into his hands, to be used by him for the family’s support as well as his own. Yet legislation in some of the states is setting strongly in a direction ultimately to exhibit the spectacle of rich wives supporting poor husbands; and of husbands defrauding their creditors while wealth embraces them in the arms of their wives. This condition of things is for the legislatures, not the courts; but the courts,, seeing these things, may
It is argued that by virtue of the provisions of section 10, chapter 25, Compiled Statutes of 1895, entitled “Divorce and Alimony,” that the right to recover alimony was conferred upon the husband. The section reads as follows: “A petition or bill of divorce, alimony, and maintenance may be exhibited by a wife in her own name, as well as a husband; and in all cases the respondent may answer such petition or bill without oath; and in all cases of divorce, alimony, and maintenance, when personal service cannot be had, service by publication may be made as is provided by law in other civil cases under the Code of Civil Procedure.” Before the enactment of this section a wife was obliged to commence the action by a representative, by her next friend, and the evident intent of the enactment was to allow her to commence the suit in her own name without- the interposition of a “next friend,” and the addition of the words “as well as a husband” were meant to, and do, convey no other meaning than that the wife may commence an action in the same manner as a husband, and they do not reach back and connect with the words “alimony and maintenance” and confer upon the husband the right to alimony and maintenance in an action of divorce, either of which, unless
In relation to this branch of the case it is asserted by appellant that there is no evidence, or at least not sufficient evidence, to support the findings and decree of the court To this attorneys for appellee answer that there was testimony offered and received at the trial in the district court which was not made a part of the bill of exceptions and is not presented in this court, and that it is the established rule, when such is the existent condition of the record, that the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings and judgment will not be examined. The record in this case discloses that the bill of exceptions was prepared and presented to the attorneys for appellee for examination and amendment and was returned to the attorney for appellant indorsed: “I herewith return this draft of a bill of exceptions in the case of Charles Greene v. Rachel B. Greene, submitted to me on the — day of-, 1893, and propose no amendments thereto.” It was said by this court, in deciding the case of Cattle v. Haddox, 14 Neb., 59: “Where a bill of exceptions purporting to contain all the testimony is submitted to the adverse party for amendment, and such party certifies that he has no amendments to propose to the same, the court will presume that such bill contains all the evidence, notwithstanding the certificate may not
It is urged by counsel for the appellee that the appeal from the branch of the case in respect to the property by the appellant presents the whole decree here and that the action of the trial court, in any and all particulars, is
Affirmed.