35 So. 2d 550 | Ala. | 1948
This is a suit by appellant against appellee for divorce. The trial court denied relief to complainant, hence this appeal by him. The trial court held that the evidence did not show that respondent voluntarily abandoned complainant and continued voluntarily to live separate and apart from him for one year next before the suit was begun or at all.
There was no conflict in the evidence, and complainant himself was the only witness as to the controlling circumstances. The respondent did not testify nor offer evidence though she was in court and represented by counsel.
It is not necessary for us to express an opinion as to whether voluntary abandonment is shown sufficient to support a decree of divorce, for we think complainant was not entitled to such a decree for other reasons.
Complainant's evidence shows that since his marriage to respondent he has had sexual intercourse with at least two different women. He could not give dates nor the number of occasions. But evidently the inference from his testimony is that they were many. An effort was made to fix such dates after his wife had remained away from him for more than a year, and after he had filed this suit for divorce and not before.
The amended answer and crossbill, seeking separate maintenance, alleges by way of defense that since the time of their separation complainant has committed various acts of adultery with one or more persons whose names are unknown to respondent, and for a long time has lived in adultery with a woman whose name is unknown to respondent. The crossbill did not seek a divorce on that ground.
The decree of the court expressed the opinion that complainant is not entitled to relief and also that respondent, who is also a cross-complainant, is not entitled to relief as prayed for in her crossbill, except for a solicitors' fee. It ordered, adjudged and decreed the payment by complainant of $150 as solicitors' fees, and the costs of court. There was no feature of the decree expressly denying relief to complainant or dismissing the suit. Such expression of opinion is not a decree, and will not support an appeal. Thompson v. Maddux,
The only effectual feature of the decree is for the payment of a solicitor's fee. Ordinarily this is treated as a part of an allowance for temporary alimony, and its allowance is then not appealable. Ex parte Apperson,
But the court has the power to award maintenance to the wife without divorce. Our system of chancery practice authorizes such procedure. Jones v. Jones,
We find no authority on the particular subject, but we think it must be a sound principle that when a final decree is rendered and grants relief in part, all other relief is necessarily denied, when it is apparent that the court intended the decree to settle all equities. Of course it could be amended nunc pro tunc so as to be complete and adjudge what is stated to be the opinion of the court. But without such adjudication in express terms, we think, from what is adjudged and decreed, that the decree should be construed as necessarily meaning that. We will therefore treat the decree as final denying all relief, except that which is granted, and therefore it is proper to consider its merits as one denying such relief, as counsel on both sides have done.
So the question is whether the adulterous acts of appellant occurring after their separation (in fact, they never lived together at all) are sufficient to deny relief to complainant whether or not appellee did voluntarily abandon him, and continued to live separate and apart from him to the time of the initiation of the suit.
In our early case of Ribet v. Ribet,
"In view of the provisions of the Code of Alabama, on the subject of divorce, and the general current of authority, we hold the doctrine, that any one of the statutory causes for a divorce may be set up in bar of a bill for a divorce a vinculo predicated on any other of the statutory causes. — Barbour on M. D. § 396, et seq.; Nagel v. Nagel,
But appellant contends that since the only proof of such adulterous acts by him was his own testimony to that effect given on this trial, it would violate the principle of section 26, Title 34, Code, to deny him relief on the basis of his testimony. That statute prohibits a divorce "on the confession of the parties or either of them." This cannot be done even by the admissions or confessions in an answer to the bill. Richardson v. Richardson, 4 Port. 467, 30 Am.Dec. 538. In the case of King v. King,
This statute was never intended to prevent parties to a divorce suit from testifying for or against each other when a statute permits parties to testify in other civil proceedings and suits. 19 Corpus Juris 133, 27 C.J.S., Divorce, § 136c; 17 Am.Jur. 352, 353, section 418. We are not here passing on the question of whether a divorce can be granted on the uncorroborated testimony of a spouse admitting in open court the existence of a statutory ground. It may be true that a recriminatory charge must be proven by the same quantum of evidence as would be required if it were brought as a ground for divorce *638 (17 Am.Jur. 352, section 416), but that does not mean that it must be established by the same sort of evidence, since section 26, Title 34, supra, would not apply. The rule is that admissions of a plaintiff are competent evidence to defeat a divorce, while admissions of defendant are not alone sufficient to grant a divorce. 19 Corpus Juris 127, § 332, 27 C.J.S., Divorce, § 125.
We think the decree should be affirmed for the reason we have stated.
Affirmed.
GARDNER, C. J., and LAWSON and STAKELY, JJ., concur.