271 Mass. 386 | Mass. | 1930
These are two appeals from decrees entered by the Probate Court, one from a decree of divorce nisi for cruel and abusive treatment on the part of the libellee, which also awarded custody of the minor children of the parties to the libellant, and the other from a decree dismissing the petition of Helen D. Sanderson for separate support. The cases were tried together by a judge of the Probate Court for the county of Middlesex, who filed a report of
The parties were married January 27, 1917, and lived together as husband and wife until December 24,1928. “The last act of violence set forth in the specifications or testified to by the libellant occurred in February, 1928, but the parties continued to live together as husband and wife until December 24, 1928, when the libellee went to Nova Scotia with his permission to join her children who had been living there with a cousin of the libellant since the preceding September. The libellant accompanied her to the boat when she sailed, and testified on cross examination that their parting ‘was as friendly as you could expect under the circumstances/ ” On February 4, 1929, the libellant wrote his wife a letter in which he said: “I want you to pick up your belongings and start for home this week. I think you have staid [sic] long enough.” The libellant testified that, after writing this letter and her refusal to comply with his request, he reached the decision to bring a libel for divorce. The libel for divorce, alleging cruel and abusive treatment, was filed May 28, 1929, and was served on her by registered mail in Nova Scotia after she received the letter above referred to. She remained in Nova Scotia until June, 1929. She testified that on her return to Massachusetts she went to her mother rather than to her husband because she had received the divorce summons and considered that her husband did not want her to come back to him; that within two weeks after her return from Nova Scotia she asked her husband to take her back and he refused; that she was always ready and willing and wanted to live with her husband and was so willing up to and including the time of the trial.
The libellee requested certain rulings as to the nature and kind of cruelty and abuse which lays a legal foundation for a divorce under G. L. c. 208, § 1. The judge refused to give the requested rulings and found as a fact that the libellee had been guilty of cruel and abusive treatment and that she was not living apart from her husband for justifiable cause. In' passing we assume the judge instructed
We assume, without decision, that the facts reported warranted the conclusion of fact that the libellee had been guilty of “cruel and abusive treatment” as that phrase is defined in the cases above referred to and similar cases.
The judge refused to permit counsel for the libellee to argue the question of condonation “on the ground that no answer had been filed Q>y the libellee] nor that defence pleaded,” in compliance with Divorce Rule 8 of the Probate Court to the effect that a contesting libellee “shall, forthwith, file an answer,” and denied a motion of the libellee to file an answer setting up that defence. He also refused to instruct himself that as matter of law the libellant has condoned the alleged offence and that “The husband or wife who, knowing of a marital offence committed by the other, continues to live with that other in marital relations, condones the offence and cannot set it up as a ground of divorce,” referring to Holsworth v. Holsworth, 252 Mass. 133, 134, from which the request is quoted. While it is true the rule has the force of law and the judge has no power to dispense with it, Carp v. Kaplan, 251 Mass. 225, Webster v. Webster, 264 Mass. 551, 554, and it is also true that a libellee has no right in the absence of an answer to introduce evidence to support an affirmative defence or to avail himself of it when disclosed in the libellant’s testimony, it is nevertheless true, if the facts be not in dispute, that the question whether the divorce should be denied because to grant it would be against public policy is one that can be raised by a libellee on motion and one which, if presented by counsel or noticed by the court, should be passed upon by the court. Webster v. Webster, supra. This is an exception to the rule and is applicable and controlling in the disposition and determination of all causes over which the courts have justiciable cognizance and are called upon to lend aid to the enforcement of alleged rights. Rodman v. Guilford, 112 Mass.
Ordered accordingly.