40 Ind. App. 471 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
Appellee sued, appellant for divorce. Appellant’s demurrer to the complaint was overruled, answer filed, trial, finding and decree in favor of appellee for a divorce.
The record here properly presents the question as to the sufficiency of the complaint to withstand a demurrer. The complaint avers that the parties were married on June 11, 1875, and continued to live together as husband and wife until November 17, 1904, “when the defendant, by a continuous and systematic course of abuse, which had been kept up for more than five years, drove this plaintiff from home; that she was cruel and inhuman in her treatment of plaintiff in this, that she, on September —, 1904, and on divers other occasions, struck and slapped him in the face and on the head, and kicked him, and on said occasion, as well as many other times, scolded and abused him, quarreled with him, and called him all kinds of hard names, and on September —, 1904, unjustly and cruelly accused him of adultery with-, and many other women, without cause, and on said occasion, and divers others, defendant threatened to kill this plaintiff, and threatened to poison him, and called him all kinds of vile names, and made life miserable.”
A majority of the members of this court hold that the allegations contained in the complaint are not a sufficient showing of the separation; that, at most, the fact is but inferentially stated, and the allegations contained in the complaint leave room for the inference that the parties were still living together as husband and wife at the time the complaint was filed; that the averment, that “the plaintiff was driven from home on November 17, 1904, by the systematic course of abuse which had been continued by the defendant for more than five years,” is not tantamount to the averment that they were separated, and that the matrimonial relation between them had been permanently discontinued, and for this reason the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained. It is the view of the writer that the complaint affirmatively shows eondonement; that the only matrimonial offenses charged against the defendant are charged to have been committed in September. It is true that the complaint does charge that these same offenses were committed at divers other times, but.it will not be presumed that they were committed after the specific date named in the complaint. Whatever doubt the plaintiff has permitted to come into the complaint on account of its allegations as to the time when the matrimonial offenses were committed by the defendant, such doubts must be resolved against the plaintiff, and therefore it will be presumed that the date fixed by him as September —, 1904, was the date of the last act of cruelty charged, and the complaint, without question, affirmatively shows that the parties continued to live together as husband and wife until November 17. In deciding the case of Burns v. Burns, supra, the court say: “As a general legal proposition, it may be asserted, that, condonation of the offense, or wrong, which might be a cause of divorce, will bar a suit by the condoning party for a divorce, on account of such offense. Condonation may be inferred, from the facts of living and
And the complaint in this case, showing affirmatively that the parties lived together as husband and wife for two months subsequently to the date of the wrongful acts charged against appellant as grounds for divorce, shows condonement upon the face of the complaint. The logic of the case of Burns v. Burns, supra, applies with full force to the facts set up in this complaint. It was held in that case that a complaint for divorce must .allege a separation of the parties, for the reason that their living together as husband and wife would constitute a condonement, and it was because of the fact that condonement would be presumed from their living together that it is necessary that the complaint should aver a separation. And where the complaint, as it does in this case, shows that the parties continued to live together as husband and wife subsequently to the commission of the alleged matrimonial wrongs complained of, and shows no subsequent matrimonial offense, it is the writer’s opinion that the complaint is bad, and that the demurrer should be sustained, for the reason that it affirmatively shows a condonement. It has been held by the Supreme Court of this State in the ease of Lewis v. Lewis (1857), 9 Ind. 105, and followed by this
Cause 'reversed, with instructions to the court below to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.