39 Mo. App. 473 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
This is an action ior divorce wherein the plaintiff in his petition alleges as a ground therefor, that the defendant has absented herself from the plaintiff without reasonable cause for more than a year. The defendant was notified of the commencement of the action by publication. There was no appearance by defendant and the plaintiff had judgment by default, and thereupon the cause was submitted to the court upon the evidence adduced by the plaintiff, which showed that plaintiff, while residing in the city of Philadelphia in 1877, was there married to the defendant and continued his residence there until 1880, when for the purpose of bettering his pecuniary condition, he removed to the West, leaving his wife with her parents; that plaintiff first went to Denver, Colorado, where he remained for four years, during which time a number of letters passed between the plaintiff and his wife, but none of which were shown in evidence; that plaintiff several times sent his wife sums of money varying from twenty-five to seventy-five dollars.
. Plaintiff testified that in his letters to his wife he urged her to come to him, but that she expressed an' unwillingness to do so; that later on he removed to Kansas City where he engaged in business, making a very good living; that from the last-named place of residence he repeatedly wrote his wife letters requesting her to come to him and that she had refused to do so; that all communication by letter had ceased and that he had not heard directly from her for more than a year. It was shown that the plaintiff had conducted himself in his business and social relations, since he came West, with entire propriety; that he had been an industrious, -sober and trustworthy citizen.
After the conclusion of the evidence and the submission of the cause, the court announced that the plaintiff was not entitled to a decree and, thereupon, the plaintiff asked leave to dismiss his petition without
I. The statute is that in all cases where the proceeding shall be ex parte the court shall, before it grants the divorce, require proof of the good conduct of the petitioner, and be satisfied that he or she is the innocent and injured party. R. S., sec. 2182.
The words “good conduct” as employed in the statute have always been construed, and as we think, correctly, by the profession and the nisi prius courts, to have reference to the conduct of the husband or the wife in his or her marital or home relations as distinguished from the conduct of either of them to society in general.
As an illustrative proof that the husband was a thrifty and successful professional or business man, or that his general reputation was good, or that he was generally popular and well thought of, or that in his general social relations he was an affable and agreeable person, would be but very slight proof, if any, of that “good conduct” mentioned in the statute for the very reason that such proof does not show that in his demeanor to his wife, or if there be children, to his wife and children, was at all times and under all conditions characterized by kindness, love and affection, nor that he properly provides for his family, nor that in the sacred precincts of his home he was not a morose, fault-finding, quarrelsome and unreasonable tyrant, nor that he endeavored to make the married life one of happiness and contentment.
We have carefully and attentively read the evidence preserved in the bill of exceptions and find therein a total lack of proof of that kind of good conduct which the statute requires. The plaintiff has utterly failed to bring his case within the statutory requirement, and for that reason we can find no fault with the ruling of the circuit court upon the evidence.