33 App. D.C. 398 | D.C. Cir. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an action for divorce, brought in the supreme court of the District of Columbia by appellant, Oían G. Eoote, complainant below, against his wife, Charlotte E. Eoote, alias Lottie E. Eoote, alias Alice Williams, defendant. Erom a decree of the court dismissing the bill, the case comes here on appeal.
It appears that complainant and defendant were married in the city of Washington on April 30, 1907. Defendant, prior to her marriage, had been an inmate of a house of prostitution in this city. Complainant had been in the habit of visiting her at this place, and was fully cognizant of the kind of life she was' living. The following statement of the testimony of complainant and defendant is inserted as it appears in the record: “The plaintiff, Oían G. Eoote, in response to questions by the court, stated: That, at the time of his marriage to the defendant, on April 30, 1907, he ‘must have been drunk;’ that, after the marriage ceremony, which was performed about 4 o’clock, p. m., he and his wife proceeded to a hotel on the north side of Pennsylvania avenue, N. W., in Washington, city, where he engaged a room for himself and wife; that they stayed at the hotel for several days, and that he paid for his own and his wife’s board and lodging there; that, on the Sunday following, he left Washington for Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he hoped to obtain employment, and left his wife at the said hotel, and gave her money with which to support herself until he could become permanently settled, he having already paid to the hotel his wife’s board in
We think, in view of other undisputed testimony appearing in the record, that it is not important what the relations of com
The case may be determined upon the evidence of the defendant alone, except as to the proof of her adulterous acts, which, from the nature of the place of her habitation, might almost be presumed. These acts, however, as before stated, we consider fully established by the testimony of disinterested witnesses.
In the case of Levy v. Levy, 16 Ill. App. 358, a case in which the facts were similar to the case at bar, the court held that where a man knowingly marries a prostitute, whom he had seduced before marriage, upon her promise of reformation, and she commits adultery after marriage, he is entitled to a divorce. It was also held that the rule would be the same whether there was an express promise of reformation, or the promise had to be inferred from the vows made at the marriage altar.
The complainant discharged his full obligation when he took steps to provide a respectable place of abode where he and the defendant might live together as husband and wife. Had she accepted, the complainant would be charged with having condoned her past offenses; but she refused, and continued her adulterous life. This furnishes the complainant a complete cause of action for divorce. So far as the record discloses, complainant has been guilty of no offense since he offered to live with defendant and condone the past that will prevent him from maintaining this action. He is here with clean hands. The rule that when a litigant comes into a court of equity, he must come with clean hands, refers only to the matter to be litigated, and no other. Viertel v. Viertel, 99 Mo. App. 710, 75 S. W. 187. The matter here to be litigated is the right of complainant to a divorce, by reason of defendant’s refusal to join him, when afforded an opportunity, and her subsequent adulterous acts. There is nothing shown in
The judgment is reversed with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed. Reversed.