11 Ala. 763 | Ala. | 1847
The act authorizing the court of chancery to dissolve the -bonds of matrimony, requires the court pronouncing the decree, “to order and decree a division of the estate of the parties, in such way as to them shall seem just, and right, having due regard to the right of each party, and their children, if any. Provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall be construed, to compel either party to divest him, or herself of the title to real estate.” [Clay’s Dig. 179, § 8.] We are now called on for the first time, to construe this law, and we approach the subject with a thorough conviction of the magnitude of the question, and the difficulties surrounding it.
The counsel for the plaintiff in error, has earnestly insisted, that it is impossible to suppose, the legislature intended that a division of the property of the husband should be made between him and his divorced wife, when she has been the guilty cause of the separation; and he has referred us to the canon law of England, to show, that alimony is never allowed the wife, after a decree a mensa etthoro, when she is the offending party, and that the act must be understood to apply to those cases where the husband, and not the wife is the cause of the divorce.
There are insurmountable difficulties in the way of this interpretation of the law. It declares in plain, and unambiguous language, that “ the court shall decree and order a division of the estate of the parties.” It was not alimony that was to be allowed the wife. Alimony, is an allowance paid by the husband out of his income, pending a suit for divorce, or after a decree of divorce during the period of their separation, upon a decree a mensa et thoro. The divorce contemplated by this statute, is a vinculo matrimonii, and was therefore intended for a permanent provision for the wife.
The law being clear, and unambiguous in its terms, the argument against its expediency is entitled to but little, if any consideration. But is it clear that an enlightened policy would not justify the making a permanent provision for the wife, even where she has been divorced for adultery. It must always in such cases be difficult, if not impossible to trace the causes which, step by step, led to the commission of the crime. Slighted affection, unkindness and neglect on the part of the husband, maybe, and frequently are the remote, if not the proximate causes, which lead to the violation of the marriage vow; and although the wife be guilty, the husband is not entirely guiltless. These causes, where they exist, certainly cbnstitute no justification for the wife, but do they not, in some degree, palliate her offence ? Independent however of all such considerations, the public at large has an interest, that the offender shall not become an outcast upon society, cut off from the common charities of life, without the means of support, and thus tempted to continue in the commission of vice.
The act, it is true, uses the term division of the estate, but it does not, as the argument of counsel supposes, require the court to make an equal division of the property, and thus by giving to the divorced wife, greater rights in the property of her husband, than she would have had had she been faithful to him, offer a premium for the commission of crime. The act directs the division to be made in such way as to the
It can admit of no doubt, that the share assigned to the wife of her husband’s estate, should be greater when the divorce is obtained by her for his misconduct, than when she is herself the delinquent. In the first case supposed, the wife being cut off from the society of her husband, and from all the comforts of wedded life, without any fault on her part, should be placed by the court in as good a condition, as the nature of the case will admit. The English ecclesiastical courts, go so far in some cases, as to allow the wife one-half the income of the joint estates of the husband and wife. [Cooke v. Cooke, 2 Phil. 40.]
We need not consider this aspect of the case further, as the question before us, is the portion of the wife when she is the delinquent. The adjudged English cases afford no aid in this investigation, as alimony is not allowed to the wife by the canon law, after the divorce, when she is the offending party. Our statute, as we have seen, introduced a new rule, and provided, that in such cases a division of the estate should be made. But in our opinion, a proper regard to public morals requires, as well as the manifest design and purpose of the statute, that the division should be graduated by the quality of the offence, and shall purposely omit all consideration of the manner of the division where the wife has a separate estate, as that fact does not exist in this case.
We are clear in the opinion, that no construction can be put upon the statute, which would authorize the court in any
The defendant in this case was not an adulteress. Her offence is the abandonment of her husband. This is doubtless a high offence against the marriage relation, but neither in itself, nor in its consequences, so great as the crime of adultery. The chancellor allowed her one-third part of the husband’s personal estate, deducting a sufficiency for the payment of his debts, and the use of one-third part of his land during her life, securing to him the use of the mansion, and the grounds adjacent.
We cannot say that this was an improper exercise of the discretion of the chancellor. The parties appear to be in the middle rank in life, as his estate, real and personal, is valued at $15,485. They are now in the decline of life, with grown children, who it seems are settled, and we infer from the report of the master, that the estate has been created by the economy and industry of the husband and wife. Considering the age of these parties, the cause of divorce, and the amount of the estate, we are not prepared to say, that the chancellor has not kept within the bounds of legal discretion, in the division of the estate.
It is further contended that the decree, by vesting in the wife a life estate in one-third part of the lands, has divested the husband of his title. In our judgment the law evidently contemplated a division of land. It directs the court to make a division of the estate of the parties. The term estate, is certainly comprehensive enough to include lands, and indeed it might be the only estate the parties possessed. The limitation in the proviso strengthens, instead of impairing this conclusion. The prohibition, that neither party shall be compelled to divest him or herself of the title to real estate, in connection with the section to which it is added, shows that some interest was intended to be made, susceptible of
The mode of proceeding in the ecclesiastical courts to obtain alimony, is by an “ allegation of faculties,” as it is called, on the part of the wife, setting out the estate of the husband, which he is required to answer, and which, as it is the income of the husband, is generally conclusive on the wife, but which she may in some cases, contradict by proof. [Shel-ford on Marriage and Divorce, 586.] This allegation is made whilst the suit is in progress, for alimony pending the suit, or after the decree is pronounced, for a permanent allowance.
The course pursued in this case was merely by motion to the court, upon which the court directed a reference to the master, to ascertain the estate of the husband. The husband appeared before the master, and contested his right. It would certainly have been more regular for the wife, after the decree was passed, to have filed her petition, setting forth the estate of her late husband, and his answer thereto would in all probability have dispensed with the necessity of a reference. But we think it was too late to raise the objection, after the appearance before the master, as every thing was accomplished which would have been if a petition had been filed.
The decree of the chancellor must be affirmed.