5 S.E.2d 912 | Ga. | 1939
Where the husband is granted a total divorce on the ground of wilful desertion, the wife is not entitled to permanent alimony. It is error to charge the jury that if they find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff on his petition for divorce on the ground of wilful desertion and against the wife on her cross-libel praying for divorce on the ground of cruel treatment, the jury is authorized in its discretion to award permanent alimony to the wife. Davis v. Davis,
One ground of the motion for new trial assigns error on the court's charge that if the jury found in favor of the plaintiff on his petition for a total divorce, they would then consider all the facts and circumstances and in the exercise of their discretion grant *411
permanent alimony to the defendant. A decision on the question presented by this assignment requires a consideration of the grounds upon which each party sought a divorce. The petition alleged wilful desertion; and while it attempted to allege cruel treatment, the allegations were insufficient to authorize a divorce on this ground; and the defendant's cross-action alleged cruel treatment as ground for divorce. Therefore the verdict described in the charge would constitute an adjudication that the plaintiff had not mistreated the defendant, and that the defendant had wilfully and without cause abandoned the plaintiff. Such a finding of fact would place full responsibility for the separation on the defendant, and would exonerate the plaintiff of any fault whatsoever. But the charge complained of would mean that despite the faultless conduct of the plaintiff, and the misconduct of the defendant, the law will authorize an award of permanent alimony to her. Such a principle of law would necessarily depend for support upon the theory that the wife is entitled to permanent alimony as a matter of course, and without regard to her misconduct or the exemplary conduct of the husband. Alimony in any form is simply a support for the wife, supplied by the husband, and it rests entirely upon the law requiring the husband to support his wife. It makes no difference what this support is called, whether "temporary alimony" as in the Code, § 30-202, or "permanent alimony" as in § 30-210, or "necessaries" as in § 53-508. It is the same thing, and intended for the same purpose in each instance. Since that purpose is the support of the wife, is it not logical that if the law will withhold it because of her "wilful desertion" in one case, it will withhold it because of her wilful desertion in every case? In Williams
v. Williams,
But the defendant relies upon Davis v. Davis,
For the jury to have returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for divorce and against the defendant on her cross-libel for divorce, and then award permanent alimony to the defendant, they would necessarily have had to make conflicting constructions of the same evidence. Such a verdict would have held that in one instance *414
the evidence showed the plaintiff blameless while in another he was at fault. It would have thus constituted irreconcilable findings on the same facts, and could not be allowed to stand.Anthony v. Anthony,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.