31 S.C. Eq. 163 | S.C. Ct. App. | 1858
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff charges in her bill that her husband, the defendant, while paying his addresses to her and making overtures of marriage, and before the solemnization of their nuptials, entered into a solemn engagement, that if she would marry him, he would never remove her, without hen-consent, from the neighborhood of her mother, or to a
The defendant, on learning that his wife had filed a bill against him for alimony, immediately returned to South Carolina, filed his answer, and has submitted himself to the judgment of the Court. On his return the defendant visited his wife, and made earnest overtures to her to accompany him to his new home in the Parish of Bienville, in Louisiana, promising to treat her with the kindness and affection due to her as his wife. These overtures were rejected by her with firmness and with passionate disdain; in such a manner, in fact, as to preclude all expectation or hope that a reconciliation could be 'effected between them on the terms proposed. She intimated that she would live with him if he would come back to the place which he had left. She said she would not go with him to the west. to save his life, and that she intended to live and die where she was. The defendant, in his answer, iterates his proposals to take his wife and child with him to his home in the west, and to provide for them to the best of his ability.
These are the undisputed facts of the case, and the question for the court to decide is, whether under these circumstances, the plaintiff is entitled to a decree for alimony. The circuit decree allowed her claim for alimony, and ordered a reference. But we are of opinion, that' the decree cannot be sustained upon the principles which prevail in this Court on the subject.
In the country from which we have derived the most of our
In South Carolina, at a very early period after the -revolution, the Court of Equity, without any Legislative act, or other authority, began to exercise jurisdiction in cases for alimony, Brown vs. Brown, 1 Eq. R. 196. A. D. 1785, not as in England, as incident to suits for divorce, (for no divorce has ever been allowed in this State,) but as a separate and distinct ground for equitable relief. Julineau vs. Julineau, 2 Des. 45 A. D. 1787.
In Rhame vs. Rhame, 1 McC. Ch. 205, Judge Nott, in delivering the opinion of the Court, uses the following language: “In England, it appears that alimony is allowed only where a separation is decreed. And though our Courts of Equity have not the power to grant divorces, yet as the two subjects, 4 divorce and alimony,’ are inseparable companions in England, we must look to the causes of divorce, to ascertain the grounds on which alimony will be allowed.” I apprehend that the learned Judge meant to say, that alimony would be allowed by our Court of Equity,"only in cases where a divorce would be decreed by the Ecclesiastical Court of England; but not in all cases where that court would grant a divorce.
When a bill is filed here for alimony on grounds which have been held in this State, to be sufficient to entitle the wife to a decree for such relief, it is proper, and pertinent to enquire, whether in Doctors Commons, the case made would authorize a decree for divorce, Avith its concomitant remedy, alimony* Accordingly, Avhen a suit is instituted in this State for alimony -propter ssevitiam, we look to the decisions of the Ecclesiastical Court, to ascertain what kind and degrep of cruelty entitles the wife in that tribunal to a decree for divorce, and an allowance. FolloAving this guidance, (see D'Aquilar vs. D’Aquilar, 1 Hag. 329,) our Court of Equity, in the case of Rhame vs. Rhame, cited above, held, that no words of reproach and insult amount to legal cruelty; no affront and indignity, no torture of the feelings and sensibilities, however severe, and grievous to be borne, unaccompanied by bodily injury, or a well grounded apprehension of such, will authorize the wife to leave the bed and board of her husband, and to claim thereupon from this Court a decree for alimony. But Avords of menace, intimating a malignant intention to inflict personal injury, that might affect the security of life or health, constitute such legal cruelty, as would justify the wife in with, drawing from the presence of the husband, and claiming against him a decree for alimony. The Court must not wait till the threats are carried into execution, but must interpose where they raise a reasonable apprehension of personal violence, and excite such terror as to make life intolerable.
In pursuance of the decisions and the practice of the Ecclesiastical and Consistorial Courts of England, in South Carolina, alimony is granted for bodily injury inflicted or threatened and impending, amounting to the ssevitia of the civil law, which may be defined to be personal violence actually inflicted, or menaced, and affecting life or health.
Except in cases embraced within the three classes above commented on, I am not aware that a suit for alimony has been sustained in South Carolina. The plaintiff has sought to bring her case within the principles of the second class. She charges desertion, as I have already shewn. The corresponding proceeding in the Ecclesiastical Court, is a suit for the restitution of conjugal rights. Our judicial records furnish no instance of a similar proceeding. In most of the States of this Union, the remedy for desertion is divorce, provided for by statute. The utter inefficacy of a judicial decree to restore harmonious relations to, and enforce the obligations of the married state, is the reason, I apprehend, why none of the States of this Union have adopted the proceeding of a suit for the restitution of conjugal rights, and why the most of the States have, by statutory enactments, allowed divorce as a remedy for desertion. The policy of this State has ever been against divorces. It is one of her boasts that no divorce has ever been granted in South Carolina. As no jurisdiction in
The question is, whether the plaintiff has made out a case of desertion. That the defendant left her and removed to another State, is beyond controversy, and not denied. But did he leave her in an unjustifiable manner? Her own declarations in her bill shew that he most earnestly solicited her for years, to accompany him. His solicitations amounted to importunity. At length, upon her persistent, I may well say, obstinate refusal, he went alone — without his wife and child. Certainly the husband, by our laws, is lord of his own houseA hold, and sole arbiter on the question as to where himself and^ family shall reside. But she complains that before the marriage he entered into a solemn engagement, without which, the marriage would never have been solemnized, that he ■would not take her away from the immediate neighborhood of her mother without her consent. This promise, she says, was also made to her mother, without which, her assent would have been withheld. The defendant, in his answer, denies these allegations. But the evidence brings the charges home to him. My opinion is that he made the promises in the manner charged in the bill. But they created a moral'y obligation only. It may be conceded to be very dishonorable in him to commit a breach of the promises he made, in order to obtain the hand of his wife in marriage, and the consent of her friends to that union, and probably by those promises
Stripped of all extraneous matters, the simple question is, did the defendant desert his wife, the plaintiff? It must be a legal desertion. It is not every withdrawal of himself by the husband from the society of the wife that constitutes desertion in legal contemplation. The. conduct of the wife must be blameless. If she elopes, or commits adultery, or violates or omits to discharge any of the important hymeneal obligations which she has assumed upon herself, the husband may abandon her without providing for her support; and this Court would sustain him in such a course of conduct.
The husband has the right, without the consent of the wife, to establish his domicil in any part of the world, and it is the legal duty of the wife to follow his fortunes, wheresoever he may go. The defendant, in the exercise of his undoubted prerogative, had determined to make his domicil in the Parish of Bienville, in the State of Louisiana, and wished his wife to accompany him. She, preferring the society of hér mother and her relatives, refused to go — in opposition to his wishes, his importunate solicitations, his earnest entreaties. Considering the relative duties and obligations of husband and wife, as defined by the law, who, under these circumstances, is guilty of desertion? The wife, assuredly.
What I have said would' constitute a sufficient ground f6r
In considering this case, 1 have confined myself to the issues presented in the pleadings, to which I think the investigation should be restricted. On the trial, there was evidence introduced (some of which was of a very indelicate nature,) that was not pertinent to the allegations of the bill. This evidence has not been commented on in this opinion, but it has been considered. And I will say, that if there had been allegations and charges in the bill, to which this evidence would have been pertinent, it would not have varied the result of the case. Adultery, of itself, though it is a ground for divorce in the ecclesiastical courts, is no ground for alimony in this State.
It is ordered and decreed, that the Circuit decree be reversed, and that the bill be dismissed.
Decree reversed.