177 So. 2d 254 | Fla. Dist. Ct. App. | 1965
The plaintiff-husband appeals a final decree granting him a divorce for extreme cruelty, denying him a divorce for adultery and awarding the defendant-wife alimony. The chancellor denied a divorce for adultery because he erroneously believed the evidence to be legally insufficient to sustain
The final decree affirmatively indicates that the chancellor denied the plaintiff a divorce for adultery without passing on the merits of that charge because he conceived the evidence of adultery to be legally insufficient.
. The chancellor disposed of the adultery charge as follows in his final decree: “This Court further finds, with respect to the alleged adultery of the defendant set forth in the amended seventh paragraph of the complaint filed August 2, 1963, that, while the defendant was found in a compromising condition with another man, that there is evidence to support her denial of wrongdoing and that there is no creditable evidence in the record showing any incidents of marital misconduct of this nature during the more than twenty years of her marriage; while opportunity was established there is a lack of evidence, from which the Court might infer that a desire existed on the part of the defendant, which is an essential element, either by direct proof or fair inference, where direct proof of adultery is lacking. Engebretsen v. Engebretsen (Ela.1942), 151 Ela. 372, 11 So.2d 322 citing Altha v. Altha, 94 N.J.Eq. 692, 121 A. 301 to the effect that ‘if desire and opportunity were proven, adultery would be presumed.’ Benson v. Benson (Fla.App., Third District, 1958) 102 So. 2d 748. Since there is no creditable evidence in the record from which the Court could infer that desire existed on the part of the defendant, the Court finds that plaintiff has failed to prove adultery as charged in the seventh paragraph of the amended complaint.”
. The defendant did not deny the facts stated by the witnesses except she said that she had on shortie pajamas and that the man did not lay a hand on her. She explained that the man was there to protect her. Her apprehension arose, so she said, from harassing telephone calls, a ransacking of her apartment, prowlers in the neighborhood, and repeated scrutiny of her apartment by investigators. On further examination the record shows that these incidents occurred not before but during or after the night in question. She denied that adultery had occurred. The man did not testify.