54 Ark. 20 | Ark. | 1890
The appellee, the wife, sued for and obtained a decree of divorce from the appellant, her husband, from which he appealed to this court.
The appellee testified to cruel and barbarous personal abuse of herself by the appellant, calculated to render her condition intolerable, in consequence of which she fled from her home.
Barker, a witness, testified in substance, that appellant admitted to him that he had slapped appellee, and threatened to strike her with a board, and would have done so, but that he was prevented by his mother’s persuasion.
not be taken as true because of the defendant’s failure to answer, or his or her admission of their truth.” Mansf. Dig., sec. 2561.
He also said that, “A divorce will not be granted on a demurrer to a bill, or upon failure to answer, or upon admission in an answer, or alone upon declarations or admissions of a defendant, proven by depositions or otherwise, because the public, and not the parties only, are interested in such suits.” Kurtz v. Kurtz, 38 Ark., 119; Brown v. Brown, id., 324.
The parties to this suit, under the practice and decisions in this State, were competent witnesses. But the testimony, of the appellee is without corroboration.
The admissions of the husband could not be taken as corroborative evidence of the truth of her statements.
The decree was based upon the testimony of the wife and the admissions of the husband alone, and for the want of sufficient testimony it is reversed, and the complaint is dismissed.