On April 29, 1935, upon a petition for separate support between the parties, a decree was entered in these terms: “It appearing to the court that said Carl A. Olsen has been cruel and abusive towards the petitioner but that said petitioner is not actually living apart from the respondent within the meaning of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 209, § 32, it is decreed that said petition be dismissed.” It does not appear whether the form of the petition restricted the inquiry so that relief could not be given unless the petitioner proved that she was “actually fiving apart from her husband,” See Bucknam v. Bucknam, 176 Mass.
Subsequently the petitioner left the house in which the respondent was living, and took up her abode elsewhere. Never having condoned the cruel and abusive treatment upon which was based the petition already mentioned, she filed a new petition for separate support, based on that treatment. At the hearing, no evidence of cruel and abusive treatment was offered, except the decree of April 29, 1935. This the judge admitted. Upon it he found the respondent guilty of cruel and abusive treatment, and entered a decree against him. The respondent appealed.
Ordinarily only a final judgment or decree, as distinguished from a mere finding, amounts to an adjudication or becomes evidence of a fact in another case. Boston Food Products Co. v. Wilson & Co.
A fact merely found becomes adjudicated by a final judgment or decree only when it is shown to have been the basis of the relief, denial of relief or other ultimate right established by the judgment or decree. Knowlton v. Swampscott,
The finding that the respondent was guilty of cruel and abusive treatment cannot be considered the foundation of the decree of April 29, 1935, dismissing the earlier petition. The ground of dismissal was the failure of the petitioner to show that she was “actually living apart from her husband.” Upon that ground the petition would have been dismissed regardless of any finding or absence of finding as to cruel and abusive treatment. Even though the find
Decree reversed.
