13 N.H. 222 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1842
The statute of June 19, 1840, provides that if any husband or wife has, before the passage of the act, unnecessarily, without sufficient cause, and against the consent of the other, abandoned the other, and refused for any space of time to cohabit, &c., and shall, after the passage of the act, continue so to abandon and refuse to cohabit with the other, for such space of time, not less than three months, as that said abandonment and refusal shall have continued for the space of three years together, such abandonment and refusal shall be deemed and taken to be a sufficient cause of divorce from the bonds of matrimony. Provided, however, that no divorce shall be decreed for the cause aforesaid, unless such cause shall continue to exist at the time of filing the petition for such divorce.
In all applications for divorce it is necessary that the cause upon which the party relies should be sufficiently set forth in the libel; and, under this statute, we have repeatedly held that a libel for a divorce, on account of abandonment and refusal to cohabit, should contain an allegation, in some form, that the refusal continues up to the filing of the libel. There is no particular form for this. An allegation that the libellee
As the libel may be amended by striking out the date, and a new order of notice issued, we have examined the evidence furnished.
The affidavit of the libellant states that the libellee left him on or about the 22d of March, 1839, without his knowledge or consent, and has refused from that time to the time when it was taken, to live' or cohabit with him. This is not sufficient.
The statute devolves upon the court the duty of finding that the desertion was not only against the consent of the other party, but that it was unnecessary, and without sufficient cause. There may be very few cases in which desertion by a wife or husband, and refusal to cohabit, are upon a sufficient cause. But the legislature, by the terms of the act, evidently contemplated that there may be cases of desertion where the cause is of such a character that no divorce is to be granted. We have already decided that where a husband horse-whipped his wife two or three times, her leaving him furnished him no cause for a divorce under this statute, notwithstanding her conduct could not be justified. Poor vs. Poor, Rockinghan, Dec. term, 1841.
We must have evidence of the particulars which preceded and accompanied the desertion, in order that we may judge whether the case comes within the statute. A detail of the circumstances which led to it must appear in the affidavit of the libellant, or there must be a statement of a want of
But there is another difficulty in this case. It appears from the evidence, that after the marriage the parties lived in Massachusetts, and, for aught which appears, the libellant was a citizen of that state at the time of the marriage. They resided there at the time of the desertion, and the wife is still a resident of that state. At what time, or under what circumstances, the libellant removed to this state does not appear.
We have decided that a woman who belonged to this state, and who, after marriage, removed to another state, and was there deserted by her husband, might well return to her friends here, having no home elsewhere ; and that if the desertion continued for three years after a return under such circumstances, a cause of divorce accrued here, of which we have jurisdiction the same as if the original desertion had taken place while the parties were residing here. 10 N. H. Rep. 61, Frary vs. Frary.
But the case of this libellant is not of that character, and we have already settled that citizens of other states cannot come here, bringing with them causes of divorce over which this court has jurisdiction. (12 N. H. Rep. 202, Greenlaw vs. Greenlaw; Ditto 80, Smith vs. Smith;) 8 N. H. Rep. 21, Clark vs. Clark.
heave to amend.