111 Kan. 786 | Kan. | 1922
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by a husband against his wife, in which he charged her with adultery, and the relief prayed for was a divorce and the custody of their five-year-old daughter.
The trial court found the woman guilty of adultery, but that it was committed “with the knowledge, connivance and consent of the plaintiff,” and denied the divorce. Until the further order of the court, the child was entrusted to the- care of its mother, except that the father should have its custody three months each year in vacation time. Defendant was also allowed alimony in the sum of $100 per month.
The plaintiff appeals, complaining of this judgment in all its parts; and to determine its justice and propriety, the outstanding features of the evidence will have to be narrated at some length.
In 1915, the plaintiff, Laban E. Harmon, then a reputable young man of twenty-four years, married the defendant, Helen Lewis, in Quincy, 111. She was about twenty-one years old, a member of a good family, a church member, and Sunday-school attendant. On their marriage they came to live in Independence, Kan.’, where the plaintiff had a responsible position as accountant for a large corporation. In time a daughter was born. Gradually they enlarged their circle of acquaintances, and acquired the esteem of the community. The plaintiff husband became prominent in lodge circles and the defendant wife attended church, brought her infant daughter to Sunday school regularly, and worked as a substitute teacher. She was a good housekeeper and much attached to her child and saw to its cleanliness, neatness and manners with marked attention. Thus launched and thus conducted the marriage craft of this couple bade fair to achieve life’s voyage with a minimum of rough weather. After a time, however, they met another young couple, Mr. and Mrs.
“. • . Laban, I would be the happiest little gii;l in the world if I only knew I could come back to you. I do love you — you only — and will never look at another man again and raise Hortense just as you want me to. Remember it wasn’t my fault — and I didn’t do anything so indiscreet — honestly I never . . .
“You can never have another child like Hortense and neither can I. I would be willing to devote my entire life to raising a family — and Laban we no doubt could have a wonderful family judging from Hortense.
“Really Laban we kept too late hours— . . .
“Laban won’t you please, please forgive and I’ll put my whole life into you and Hortense.
“Oh, a line from you would help me wonderfully.”
She seems to have been led to believe that if she did not resist a • divorce from her husband, Daugherty would likewise be divorced from Mrs. Daugherty, and that she. could and should marry him. She wrote:
“Laban, don’t you think I should marry Bill tho — because he is the only fellow if I have been untrue to — if you call it being untrue — since I have been married. I presume the safest way in this world to be on the square — is not to even look at another man.”
To Mrs. Daugherty, she wrote:
“Yes Í feel that ‘Bill’-and I should marry — if I were to marry some other fellow — and perhaps some day have Hortense — he never would love H like ‘Bill’ would. ‘Bill’ said he believe he tho’t as much of H. as he would his only child and certainly would be good to her. . . .
“ ‘Bill’ said if I didn’t marry him — he didn’t care what became of him.”
It appears that the grounds on which plaintiff at first intended to base his claim to a divorce did not include the charge- of adultery— merely neglect of duty, etc. But when the defendant had time to realize the extent of her sacrifice in being deprived of her child, she became unmanageable. Daugherty wrote to her:
“I am writing you this once, Helen, to get you to do right. If you expect & want to marry me as soon as we can then you must do as I say in this. I am*790 willing to do as I agreed with you dear, but positively will not if you persist and bring it to court. Why you wont gain a thing & in the end will be worse off. You would have your name and reputation ruined, no alimony, no Hortense & No chance of seeing her at all and no prospect with me. Not that I think you are madly in love with me, because you are not, but I believe we could be happy and have a good home. But not if it comes to court. I am through in that case.”
Plaintiff and Daugherty made one or two trips to Quincy to reason with her and to get the child. In fact, one time they went together and met Mrs. Harmon. The plaintiff testified:
“Q. Now when you got there this seducer of your house was there?’ A. Yes.
“Q. And you all had a conference, didn’t you? A. Yes, sir; we did.
“Q. Now what did you talk about? A. Talked about first about the custody of Hortense.
“Q. Yes, and you told your wife that unless she would give up that child you would publish to all her friends and go out and tell her parents that you caught her and Bill. Daugherty in a compromising position? . . . A. I simply said if she wasn’t satisfied with the agreement we three had made there together, that the only recourse she could have would be into the courts. And if it was carried into the .court I would of course reserve the right to amend my petition and tell the truth.
“Q.. Now was there anything that you people discussed up there with Bill-Daugherty except the possession of that child and that child’s future, and the mother’s position. A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What was it? A. We discussed Mrs. Harmon and Mr. Daugherty’s future. Mrs. Harmon said that her folks would be curious when Hortense was gone. They wouldn’t know the truth. And that I couldn’t expect to leave her without any alimony. That her parents would never understand, not knowing the cause of my divorce, why I didn’t pay her alimony. And she said if I would pay her alimony until such time as she and Mr. Daugherty could get married, that her folks need never know. And I told her I was considerably in debt, and I was going to do all I could for her.
“Q. Why didn’t you throw her a government bond, or something? A. I give her two fifty dollar government bonds. She said she was in need of clothes and out of money, and told her that I would give her fifty dollars a month, and Mr. Daugherty volunteered that he would give her $25.00 a month.
“Q. You didn’t hit him then, did you? A. No, I didn’t hit him.”
Space forbids further details of this marital shipwreck. It has to be added, however, that Daugherty’s seduction of plaintiff’s wife did not alter in any noticeable degree the bosom-friend comradeship which had theretofore existed between plaintiff and Daugherty. He visited at Daugherty’s, went riding with the Daughertys, and danced with Mrs. Daugherty, though less frequently. The two men co
To the foregoing much abridged narrative, gleaned from the abstract and counter-abstract, what shall we say to the plaintiff’s contention that the trial court’s finding of connivance is not supported by the evidence? His counsel cite cases to the effect that one spouse who suspects the other spouse of adultery may suffer the suspected one, in a single instance, to avail herself of an opportunity to indulge her adulterous disposition with no other motive than to obtain proof of her delinquency which would entitle him to a divorce, and that such conduct on his part is not connivance. Undoubtedly that proposition is good law. (Wilson v. Wilson, 154 Mass. 194, 12 L. R. A. 524, and notes; 19 C. J. 89, 91, and notes; 9 R. C. L. 394.) But it does not appear that the trial court based its finding of plaintiff’s connivance in this case upon the conduct of the plaintiff on the night when he discovered his wife in adultery — the announcement that he and Mrs. Daugherty were going for a ride, their circuit of the block in the automobile, the opportunity thereby given to the delinquents, and its consequences. The connivance as shown by the evidence began long before that incident. The persistent and unusual intimacy of these four young people, the late hours, the night rides, plaintiff with Daugherty’s wife, defendant with Daugherty, the sex-instinct-arousing dances and embraces in the dark, in all of which plaintiff acquiesced, and to which his similar conduct gave passive assent, if not encouragement — these and the other incidents above led to the overthrow of his wife’s marital fidelity. This course of conduct may not inaptly be designated as a form of connivance; at least it is persuasive evidence from which a finding of connivance can be deduced. Plaintiff testified that it never occurred to him that in taking the many night auto rides with Bonnie, leaving defendant and Bill to their own devices, taking his wife every other night to Daugherty’s house to dance with and embrace Bill in the dark and to go riding with Bill while he himself similarly and alternately danced and went night riding with Bonnie, and receiving the Daughertys on alternate nights in plaintiff’s home for similar practices— notwithstanding all these matters it never occurred to him that he
“Must not, however, make opportunities for her, though he may leave her free to follow gpportunities which she has herself made. He is not obliged to throw obstacles in her way, but he must not smo.oth her path to the adulterous bed.” (p. 196.) (See, also, Noyes v. Noyes, 194 Mass. 20; 10 Ann. Cas. 818 and notes, 120 A. S. R. 517 and notes.)
Moreover, the trial court was constrained to take an unfavorable view of plaintiff’s antecedent conduct from his continued association and comradeship with Daugherty after the discovery of the episode which established the guilt of his wife. But even if plaintiff’s course of conduct be not precisely characterized as connivance, it was altogether inconsistent with that freedom from fault which would compel a reversal of the judgment. Without narrowing the effect of the undisputed evidence to the finding of connivance, we cannot hold that a divorce was erroneously denied. There are three parties to every marriage and to every divorce — the man, the woman, and the state itself. As said in Dennis v. Dennis, 68 Conn. 186, 34 L. R. A. 459:
“As the state favors marriages ... so the state does not favor divorces, and only permits a divorce to be granted when those conditions are found to exist, in respect to one or the other of the married parties, which seem to the legislature to make it probable that the interests of society will be better*793 served, and that parties will be happier, and so the better citizens, separate, than if compelled to remain together. The state allows divorces, not as a punishment to the offending party nor as a favor to the innocent party, but because the state believes its own prosperity will thereby be promoted.” (p. 197.)
Whether or not the plaintiff’s course of conduct which the trial court declared to be connivance was properly so defined, this record will not warrant this court in holding that the divorce was erroneously denied; and a debatable reason for a judgment or a debatable finding of fact is not of controlling importance when from the whole record this court is assured that the judment itself is correct. (Civ. Code, §581.). In Fitzgerald v. Realty Co., 106 Kan. 54, 186 Pac. 738, where this court approved a judgment, it was said: “The fact that the [trial court’s] reason given for the ruling does not meet the approval of this court affords no ground for reversal.” (p. 56.)
Another error assigned is urged: A witness had testified without objection that from her observation and acquaintance with defendant, the latter was a fit person to have the custody of her daughter; but the trial court sustained an objection to a question on cross-examination:
“Q. Now Mrs. Lowry, if it should be a fact that Mrs. Harmon has been guilty of intimate or adulterous relations with a married man other than her husband, would you regard her as a proper person to rear her child?”
A similar question put to the Presbyterian minister who. had testified for the defendant was similarly ruled out.
This is of little consequence. We do not find this excluded testimony brought on the record in support of the motion for a new trial, which renders it still less important. (Scott v. King, 96 Kan. 561, 566, 567, 152 Pac. 653; The State v. Ball, 110 Kan. 428, 432, 433, 204 Pac. 701.) What response these witnesses would make' to such a question could be of very little assistance to the court. Mayhap the woman would have answered in the negative; and the preacher with a broader and more tolerant outlook on the frailties of humanity would have answered that if the erring mother had repented of her sin and was sincerely determined to amend, such a lapse from the path of virtue would not disqualify her from faithfully rearing her child in the path of reptitude. But whatever response the witnesses might have made, there were all sorts of evidence that except for defendant’s temporary infatuation for her paramour, she was a good mother; and moreover, while the evidence does not show nor hint—
We note a protest in plaintiff’s reply brief touching the defendant’s unduly extended counter-abstract. At this late day, the proper way to bring that matter before the court is by a motion to retax costs.
The record contains no error, and the judgment is affirmed.