118 S.E. 767 | S.C. | 1923
August 13, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The defendant was convicted of a violation of Section 697, Criminal Code, 1912, which provides that an able-bodied man who, without just cause or excuse, abandons or fails to support his wife, or minor unmarried children, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. He appeals *403 upon the ground that the Circuit Judge committed error of law in denying his motion for a directed verdict of "not guilty."
There was evidence tending to establish that the defendant was lawfully married to his wife, Mary, in July, 1921; that he took her to his mother's home in the Laurens Mill village; that he had told her before marriage that they would go to housekeeping in three weeks after the marriage; that in November, some four months after the marriage, the defendant having refused to go to housekeeping or to make other arrangements for a separate home, his wife left the house, presided over by the defendant's mother, and returned to that of her parents in the same village; that in March following the wife gave birth to a child which has ever since been in her custody; that the defendant, an able-bodied young man, had contributed nothing to the support of his wife subsequent to her departure from his mother's home and nothing to the support of the child; that during the wife's stay in the home of defendant's mother, the mother had subjected the wife in defendant's presence to cruelly abusive treatment, in that she called the son's wife "a red-headed whore" and "a red-headed bitch," had charged her with unfaithfulness to her husband, had told her son to "take her out," and had threatened her with violence, etc.; that after the wife left the home occupied in common by the defendant and his mother, she had worked in the mill, had saved her money, had rented a house, bought furniture, and sent for the defendant to come and live with her there; that he had refused, in violent and insulting language, to accept her invitation.
Appellant's legal position is that the wife forfeited the right to the husband's marital care and support by leaving and remaining away from the home he had provided for her. His contentions are that the husband has the right to determine the marital abode; that the wife has no right to *404
leave the abode so fixed except for conduct on the part of the husband which amounts to saevitia (Hair v. Hair, 10 Rich. Eq., 173; Wise v. Wise,
Appellant's position is untenable. Marriage imposes upon the husband the duty at common law of providing the wife with a reasonably adequate and suitable home and support. 13 R.C.L., p. 1188, § 220; State v.English,
But in the case at bar the abusive language which, appellant says, did not justify the wife in leaving the marital abode chosen by the husband, was used by the mother-in-law. The wife marries the husband, not his mother. His first and paramount obligation is to his wife. Matt. XIX:5. The duty of the wife to forsake her family and cleave to her husband is no more imperative or sacred than the corresponding duty of the husband. Neither spouse has the right in mere wantonness or caprice to demand the estrangement of the other from his or her parents.Coulter v. Coulter,
"It may, however, be said, as the general effect of the decision, that the duty of a husband to provide a home not only extends to the furnishing of material comforts in accordance with his means, but requires the furnishing of a home wherein the wife is free from abuse, ill treatment, and unwarranted interference from members of the household. If such a home is not provided, the wife is justified in leaving, and not only is not guilty of desertion in so doing, but may charge the husband with constructive desertion." Dakinv. Dakin, 1 Neb. Unof., 457; 95 N.W., 781. Day v. Day, *406
Applying the foregoing principles to the facts of this case, it would seem too clear to warrant argument that the Circuit Judge could not properly have held as a matter of law that the defendant's wife had left and remained away from the marital abode without just cause. The issue was properly submitted to the jury, and for their finding there was ample evidential basis.
All exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY did not sit.