92 N.J. Eq. 669 | N.J. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an appeal from a decree of the court of chancery for the payment to the complainant-respondent of alimony, under
For a wife tó prevail in a1 suit for alimony, it is necessary for her to show, first, that her husband has abandoned her, or separated himself from her without justification, and second, that he has refused or neglected to maintain and provide for her. Anshutz v. Anshutz, 16 N. J. Eq. 162; Weigand v. Weigand, 41 N. J. Eq. 202.
In the present case the evidence is" amply sufficient to find, as the vice-chancellor hearing the cause did, that the defendant had neglected suitabty to maintain and provide for his wife. She was not receiving in his home proper food. The defendant was giving his wife $2 per week, although in receipt of a weekly salary of $75. A wife whose husband is possessed of this income should not be obliged to work as a saleswoman, or be
The testimony of the conrplainant and the defendaait is considerably at variance. The defendant admits that about two years after their marriage he found that they were not happily married. He testified at the hearing that he would neither provide a home for his wife or live with her. These admissions, taken in connection with his admission that a year prior to the separation he had ceased to have intercourse with her1, and the evidence of the relations existing in the household, to which reference has been made, justified, we think, the complainant in separating fronr her husband and constitute an abandonment of the complainant by the defendant, within the meaning of the statute.
The evidence of the cessation of marital relations rests upon the uncorroborated testimony of the parties. In a recent case, decided in this court, Stieglitz v. Stieglitz, at the June term, 1920, and reported in 92 N. J. Eq. 292, this court held that a divorce on 'the ground of desertion would not be granted upon the uncorroborated admission or testimony of a party to -the suit that no sexual intercourse had been had, where the parties bad remained under the same roof and slept in the same bed during the period of the alleged constructive desertion.
In the present case there is no corroboration of the testimony of the parties that prior to the separation they had ceased intercourse. We do not, however, feel that in taking into considera
The decree is affirmed.