102 Minn. 344 | Minn. | 1907
This was an action for absolute divorce on the ground of desertion. The answer of the defendant, besides containing a general denial, set forth that the plaintiff had in his possession certain personal property belonging to the defendant, which came into the plaintiff’s control through the defendant by reason of the marriage. It is also alleged that defendant became the owner of certain personal property by gift from her father, which the plaintiff appropriated to his own use. The relief sought included judgment of the court that-the wife be restored to the possession of the personal property, and that the husband pay to her the value of the property which came to her by gift and of which he had disposed. Subsequently plaintiff notified defendant that the
We are of the opinion that the trial court ruled properly, for á number of reasons. The plaintiff had no right to dismiss the action before trial, because affirmative relief was demanded in the answer. Without considering whether the wife can sue her husband in tort, and whether the attempt here to obtain judgment for the wife’s property disposed of by the husband was an action in conversion, it is entirely clear that she had a right to have her own personal property restored to her. Defendant might have maintained an action entirely independent of plaintiff’s claim for such relief. She might have sued to recover such property, even if he had abandoned his cause of action or failed to establish it. Koerper v. St. Paul & Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 40 Minn. 132, 41 N. W. 656; Day v. Mountin, 89 Minn. 297, 94 N. W. 887. The case on this point is essentially controlled by Schmitt v. Schmitt, 32 Minn. 130, 19 N. W. 649. The dismissal of the action, moreover, was never in fact completed; but, on the contrary, it was treated as abandoned by counsel, whose act was not attacked for fraud. Section 4160, R. L. 1905, left the court no discretion as to the final judgment in an action for divorce.
Affirmed.