47 App. D.C. 80 | D.C. Cir. | 1917
Is1 the'corrected decree such as should have, been entered under the testimony? This presents a question of fact only; questions of law are not involved. Forty-five witnesses were examined. To analyze their testimony and state the result would require pages without serving any useful purpose. It discloses that there was some fault on each side, but the preponderance of fault was on the part of the defendant ;• yet it. seems to us that, if both had shown a little more forbearance,— a desire to give and take in small matters, — they would have averted the disaster which unfortunately has come upon their young marital life. The presence of their little child, if nothing else, should be to them an irresistible plea for harmony and cause them to forgive and forget. The lower court was of this opinion, because it endeavored to bring about a compromise, of their differences, but without success.
We think that, upon a view of all the testimony, the decrete as changed on March 21, 1916, should be affirmed, unless there was error in making the change. The appellee cites as authority for the court’s action the following nrle of the lower court: “Clerical mistakes in decrees or decretal orders, or errors arising from any accidental slip or omission, may at any time be corrected by order of the court or of a justice thereof, upon petition, without the. form or expense of a rehearing.'’ We do not think that the rule applies. The appellant on December 23, 1915, noted his appeal in open court, and on December 24, 3915, filed the required appeal bond. This perfected the appeal (Chisholm v. Cissell, 12 App. D. C. 203; Taylor v. Leesnitzer, 220 U. S. 90, 55 L. ed. 382, 31 Sup. Ct. Rep. 371), and removed