The respondent, Daniel R. Guy, appeals the final decree in his divorce from the petitioner, Joni Guy, which a Marital Master {Forrest, M.) recommended and the Superior Court {Groff, J.) approved. The respondent argues that the trial court erred when it granted the petitioner a fault-based divorce. The petitioner filed a cross-aрpeal, asserting that the trial court erred with respect to the division of a particular marital asset. We reverse in part, vacate in part and remand.
*412 The record supports the following facts. The parties married in March 1987. The petitioner filed for divorce in March 2006, seеking a divorce on the grounds of conduct endangering her health and reason, adultery, and habitual drunkenness. See RSA 458:7, II, V, VII (2004). Alternatively, she sought a divorce on the ground of irreconciliable differences. See RSA 458:7-a (Supp. 2008).
The trial court heard the matter in December 2007. The court dismissed the grounds of habitual drunkenness and adultеry, see RSA 458:7, II, VII, but granted the petitioner a divorce on the ground that the respondent had “so treated [her] as seriously to injure [her] health or endanger [hеr] reason.” RSA 458:7, V. With respect to the parties’ property settlement, the court determined that an equal division of their assets was equitable. Thе court specifically considered two factors that might favor an unequal division: (1) the respondent’s fault in causing the breakdown of the parties’ marriage; and (2) the value of his inheritance. Because these two factors “effectively cancelled] each other out,” the сourt concluded that dividing the parties’ assets equally was equitable.
We first address the respondent’s contention that the trial court erred by granting thе petitioner a divorce on the ground of conduct that seriously injured her health or endangered her reason. RSA 458:7 provides, in pertinent part, that the trial court shall grant a divorce “in favor of the innocent party... [w]hen either party has so treated the other as seriously to injure health or endanger reason.” RSA 458:7, V. This provision was first enacted in 1840.
See
Laws 1840, 573:1;
see also Robinson v. Robinson,
The language of the current statute is nearly identical to that which was first enacted in 1840. Laws 1840,573:1. In 1867, the language was amended slightly to clarify that the adverb “seriously” was intended to modify both “injure health” and “endanger reason.” The 1867 version of the statute *413 allowed a divorce to bе decreed: “V. When either party has so treated the other as seriously to injure health. VI. When either party has so treated the other as sеriously to endanger reason.” GS 163:3 (1867). Sections V and VI of the 1867 version of the law were later merged. See PL 287:6 (1926). They have remained so ever since. See RL 339:6 (1942); RSA 458:7 (1955).
The gravamen of a cause of action fоr divorce on this ground “is the injury to health and the danger to reason” suffered by the innocent spouse.
Robinson,
“Any behavior of one party which affеcts the other physically or mentally is treatment within the meaning of the statute.” Id. It does not matter whether the conduct was directed towards the innocent spouse or whether the guilty spouse engaged in the conduct with malevolent intent. Id. at 609-10.
While the statute does not require proof of cоnduct that would have affected an average or reasonable person, it does require proof that the health or reason of the complaining spouse was
actually
affected.
In the Matter of Gronvaldt & Gronvaldt,
In its narrative order, the trial court found that the following conduct seriously injured the petitioner’s health or endangered her reason. In December 2005, the petitioner surreptitiously discovered the respondent’s email password and accessed his e-mail account. She discovered that the respondent was exchanging e-mails with other women, including a former girlfriend. In their e-mails the respondent and his former girlfriend professed their love for one another, and, at times, their e-mails were sexually suggestive. When the petitioner discovered the e-mails, she felt “angry, upset, and distraught.”
This kind of effect upon the petitioner’s physical and mental health is insufficient, as a matter of law, to sustain a divorce under RSA 458:7, V. In cases involving a divorce granted upon these grounds, the effect upon the “innocent” spouse has been much more severe than mere anger and upset and the conduct in which the “guilty” spouse engaged was more brutal than merely e-mailing a former girlfriend.
See id.
at 553-54 (husband drank alcohol on a daily basis, was verbally abusive to wife, threatened to punch wife, exhibitеd uncontrolled anger and used scare tactics to intimidate wife, causing wife to suffer emotional distress and undergo counseling during
*414
parties’ marriage);
Routhier v. Routhier,
We hold that the respondent’s conduct was insufficient, as а matter of law, to constitute treatment that seriously injured the petitioner’s health or endangered her reason. RSA 458:7, V. Feeling “angry, upset and distraught” dоes not constitute either a serious injury to one’s health or a serious endangerment to one’s reason within the meaning of the statute. The cоnduct at issue did not do any harm to the petitioner’s physical well-being. Nor did it cause her to suffer the type of “mental anguish” that the statute was intended to encompass.
Robinson,
Becausе the trial court specifically considered the respondent’s fault in causing the breakdown of the parties’ marriage when dividing the parties’ аssets, we vacate the court’s property division. In light of this vacatur, we need not address the petitioner’s issue in her cross-appeal. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed in part; vacated in part; remanded.
