9 Watts 336 | Pa. | 1840
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The record of divorce was not necessarily a part of the plaintiff’s title, and it might have been irrelevant when it was offered, had it not been set forth in the declaration which is inconveniently prolix. An action on a recognizance, like an action on a bond, is founded on the penalty which is prima facie a title to the money, subject however to the defeasance stated in the condition; and it was unnecessary, therefore, to set out either the divorce or the proceedings in partition. Had the dissolution of the marriage become a material fact in the progress of the trial, it might have been shown by evidence without being pleaded; but as the divorce was laid as a part of the plaintiff’s case, it was necessary perhaps to prove it: certain it was not so irrevelant as to make the reception of the proof erroneous. Of the validity of the sentence, there can not be a doubt. The court had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and its decision, however erroneous, could not be reversed in a collateral proceeding. The confession of the libel in this instance was pregnant with evidence of collusion; and to withhold its sanction from what may, at bottom, be a voluntary separation, no court ought to decree a divorce on less than proof by witnesses of the facts charged; still, where it has done otherwise, its sentence, though liable to be vacated, is not void; and we cannot say that the record was, in this evidence, improperly admitted.
To admit the auditor’s adjustment of the advancements or to exclude its being offered after .the evidence was closed, was within the discretion of the court; and the decision, in regard to it, is not a subject of error.
Nor are the exceptions to the direction given on the points pro
Judgment affirmed.