177 Wis. 475 | Wis. | 1922
Plaintiff and defendant were married at Warsaw, Poland, January 23, 1894. A son was born in February, 1895. About six months later plaintiff came to this country, and communication between the parties ceased soon thereafter. The defendant earned her own livelihood, and, with her own earnings and by the help of her relatives, nurtured and reared the son. The plaintiff was married to another woman in the city of New York on the 7th day of October, 1900. In 1910 the plaintiff, who then was a physician and surgeon, contemplated taking a further medical course in Europe. About that time he renewed correspondence with the defendant and asked her to join him upon his arrival. She complied with his request, and lived and cohabited with him for about two months during the summer of 1910. It was considered for a time that defendant with her son should return to America with plaintiff, but, for some reason which does not satisfactorily appear, neither she nor the son accompanied him on his return. Shortly after his return he secured a divorce from his second wife.
In 1911 the defendant with her son came to America and took up their abode with friends in Kenosha. On April 25, 1911, she instituted an action for divorce against the plaint
Mrs. Salinko experienced great hardship in Warsaw because of the breaking out of the war, and her return to this country was prolonged because of her inability to secure passage and the failure of the defendant to provide her with a ticket and sufficient funds to reach a sailing point, for
The court by its decree allowed Mrs. Salinko $1,000 in lieu of all alimony and as a final distribution of the husband’s estate. The court found that the husband had an estate of $5,000; that he was a practicing physician with a gross income of'$5,000 per year and business expenses to the amount of $3,300 per year. It is true that his accumulated estate and his net income is not large. However, we hold the allowance, under the circumstances, is unjustifiably meager. The duty of the husband to support his wife continues after divorce, except when a divorce is obtained on the ground of her adultery. This duty results from the marital relation. It is a part of the marriage contract and is recognized as a legal duty in the statutes and in the decisions of this court. Campbell v. Campbell, 37 Wis. 206; Pfingsten v. Pfingsten, 164 Wis. 308, 314, 159 N. W. 921.
While defendant has no claim upon plaintiff’s estate by reason of her contribution to its accumulation, which is frequently an important consideration in the division of a husband’s estate, nevertheless his duty to contribute to his wife’s future support is not at all affected by this circumstance. To relieve him of that duty by the payment of $1,000 is to treat the duty lightly. His full contribution to _ the support of his wife and the education and maintenance of the son is found by the court to have been $1,200. It is a ju?f inference that defendant has contributed more to the support and maintenance of the son than has the plaintiff.
It will thus be seen that plaintiff’s legitimate marital obligations have rested rather lightly upon him, while they have been a source of burden and hardship to the wife from the beginning. While it is possible that she is presently able to
The judgment should be modified so as to allow the wife 'the sum of $3,500 out of the estate of the husband, such sum to be paid within three years from the date of the entry of the original judgment, and in such amounts and .at such times as the trial court may determine.
By the Court. — It is so ordered. No costs to be taxed in this court; appellant to pay clerk’s fees.