124 Cal. 57 | Cal. | 1899
Action for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. The action was tried' before Hon. D. J. Murphy, late judge of the superior court, who found from the evidence that the defendant was not guilty of extreme cruelty toward the plaintiff, and did not inflict upon him grievous mental suffering, and, as no affirmative relief was sought by defendant, judgment of dismissal was entered. Plaintiff moved for a new trial upon the ground that the evidence was not sufficient to justify the findings, and that the decision was against law. A bill of exceptions was settled by Judge Murphy, and the motion was afterward heard before Judge Bahrs, who made an order granting a new trial, and from that order the defendant appeals.
The complaint alleged that the parties intermarried July 23, 1895; that on divers occasions the defendant was guilty of extreme cruelty toward the plaintiff, and particularly as follows: “In the month of April, 1896, she had angrily upbraided the plaintiff, and said to him, Hod curse your soul/ and on many occasions in or about said month of April, 1896, she called him a ‘damned Dutchman’ and a ‘loafer.’ In the month of May, 1896, the defendant falsely and maliciously accused plaintiff to sundry of his business acquaintances and friends of having stolen diamonds and a sealskin sacque”; that said acts and conduct inflicted upon plaintiff grievous mental suffering.
The answer put in issue all these allegations. The plaintiff testified that defendant used toward him the epithets alleged in the complaint, and the defendant testified as explicitly that she did not, and that she did not use toward the colored servant girl any such language as plaintiff testified to. As to these matters the plaintiff was not corroborated in the slightest degree, and hence, as to them, there was no evidence upon which the court could base a finding for the plaintiff. “Ho divorce can be granted upon the default of the defendant, or upon the uncorroborated statement, admission, or testimony of the parties.” (Civ. Code, sec. 130.)
As to the allegation in the complaint that “in the month of May 1, 1896, the defendant falsely and maliciously accused plaintiff to sundry of his business acquaintances and friends of
These parties were married in July, 1895. The epithets of which the plaintiff complained he testified were used in the following March, and on May 13, 1896, he left the defendant, and did not afterward return, and informed two of defendant’s friends, whom she had sent to ascertain the cause of his absence, that he would never return or live with her again. While living together they occupied defendant’s house. At the time plaintiff left her defendant was sick in bed and had been for about ten days. She missed her diamonds and sacque soon after the plaintiff left, and about the last of May she called on Mr. Hadley, a personal and intimate friend of the plaintiff, and, in the language testified to by him, told him “that her husband had left the house where they were living, and had taken her diamonds and also her sealskin sacque. She asked me if he had pledged them to me or whether he had tried to get a loan upon them'from me. I told her no; that I did not believe he had taken them; that I did not believe Kuhl capable of doing such a thing.”
Mr. McKenzie, the other friend of plaintiff, on whom defendant called, put the matter in a somewhat different light. He testified: “She told me that her husband had left her home and had stolen her diamonds and also her sealskin sacque.”
In relation to this matter, the defendant testified that at the time plaintiff left her she was sick in bed, and had been for ten days; that he did not tell her he was going to quit; that they had no quarrel; that she observed him going to a drawer where she kept her diamonds, and that her diamonds and sacque disappeared when he left; that about the 5th of May he said there was a good market for stocks and that “if he had some money he could malee a barrel of money”; that he wanted her to mortgage the furniture to go into the speculation, but she declined to do so. Taking these facts in connection with her inquiry addressed to the witness Hadley, whether the plaintiff had pledged her property to secure a loan, or whether he had applied to him for a loan, they tend strongly to show that she believed he had taken them for the purpose of raising money with which to speculate in stocks, and that her statement and
The rule determining what conduct constitutes extreme cruelty as a cause of divorce is matter of haw; but whether the evidence shows such conduct is a question of fact to be decided upon the trial. (Janvrin v. Janvrin, 58 N. H. 144.) Ordinarily, what constitutes extreme cruelty is a mixed question of law and fact, and where the evidence, assuming it to be true, is not legally sufficient, the -court may so decide as a question of law. As to the language alleged to have been used by the defendant to the plaintiff, prior to the separation, the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove it. He testified that it was used; she, that it was not. Ho corroboration was attempted by the plaintiff, while the testimony of Mr. Ward, a boarder in the house during all the time these parties lived together, tended strongly to corroborate the defendant. Those acts of alleged cruelty, and the other relating to the taking of the diamonds and sacque, were wholly distinct in character, and were separate in point of time by about two months. If, therefore, there was any extreme cruelty inflicted by the defendant upon the plaintiff, it must be predicated wholly upon the last of these alleged acts. Hnder the facts in this case, was that “extreme cruelty”? That it hurt the plaintiff’s feelings may be conceded. That it inflicted upon the plaintiff “grievous mental suffering”—that which the statute makes a ground of divorce—is a conclusion
Appellant also contends that the court erred in not entering a final judgment that the plaintiff take nothing by his action, instead of a simple judgment of dismissal, which he seems to think is not a bar to a relitigation of the issues. If that be true, the judgment is more favorable to the plaintiff than it should have been, and he is not injured. But the judgment is upon the merits, and in the usual form in equitable actions, in which, if it is intended to permit the plaintiff to relitigate the issues, or any of them, the right is preserved by adding “without prejudice to a new action.”
I advise that the order appealed from be reversed.
Gray, C., and Britt, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order appealed from is reversed.
Temple, J., McFarland, J., Henshaw, J.