51 N.E.2d 98 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1943
The appellant appeals from a judgment granting a divorce to the appellee and assigns as error the overruling of her motion for new trial which asserts that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law, and the overruling of appellant's demurrer to appellee's complaint.
In our consideration of the first assigned error we may consider only that evidence most favorable to appellee, Wharton
v. Wharton (1941),
Our attention is directed to certain letters written by the appellee to the appellant after their separation in *140
an apparent attempt to effect a reconciliation. In these 3, 4. letters the appellee protests his love for the appellant and their child, disparages himself as a husband and expresses hope for a happier married life in the future, and it is insisted that these letters in and of themselves constitute admissions which preclude the granting of a divorce to the appellee. It is the law that where each of the married parties have committed a matrimonial offense which is a cause for divorce, so that each of them would be entitled thereto in the absence of his or her own misconduct, the court can grant a divorce to neither whether the offenses committed by them are the same or not. McMurrey v. McMurrey (1936),
Appellant's demurrer to the complaint, so far as it is urged here, is based upon the proposition that the appellant's original residence affidavit was sworn to more than five days prior 5. to the date of the filing of the complaint. We also observe that this affidavit was sworn to, not before an officer of this State authorized to administer oaths, but before a Notary Public of the State of Texas, the appellee at the time being stationed there as a soldier. See § 3-1203, Burns' 1933. After the filing of appellant's demurrer, the appellee filed his substituted and supplemental residence affidavit, in form and substance in substantial *141
compliance with the statute, whereupon appellee's demurrer was overruled. While the requirement that plaintiff's residence affidavit be filed is mandatory, and failure to file it is cause for reversal, Klepfer v. Klepfer (1933),
Finding no error, the judgment is affirmed.
NOTE. — Reported in