96 Ky. 382 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion op the court.
Nannie Steele brought this action against her hus
His answer was' made a counter-claim, in which he-prayed for absolute divorce because, as alleged, their marriage was brought about by fraud of plaintiff and her friends, she being at the time without defendant’s knowledge pregnant by another man.
The lower court rendered judgment dismissing his counter-claim, and for five hundred dollars in her favor for alimony.
The evidence shows she was at the time pregnant, but he knew it, and we are satisfied is the father of the child for whose benefit the judgment was in part rendered.
It appears that the father of plaintiff, when her condition was found out by him, had a personal interview with Craig Steele and his father on the subject, in which he stated that he believed defendant was author of his daughter’s misfortune, and, if so, he ought to marry her. Craig Steele did not then deny, but admitted he was, and both he and his father agreed it was his duty to marry her, and they were married. But before the marriage took place there was another' interview between plaintiff’s father and Craig Steele and his father in reference to reports of her lewdness and unchastity previous to any sexual intercourse between her and Craig Steele. In that interview her father stated that if those reports, which he requested them to investigate, turned out to be true, he did not ask or expect him to marry her. To what extent they did then institute inquiry on that subject does not
About seven months after the marriage she gave birth to a child, proved to be mature and fully devel•oped. But her husband was not then nor had for a month or more been with Ms wife, though they resided at the house of his father from time of the marriage, and the child was born there. There is enough in the record to show that Craig Steele had, prior to the birth of the child, determined to abandon his wife, and the malignancy and pertinacity with which he and his relatives have, during this litigation, hunted testimony to destroy and degrade her, shows she could not remain at the house of his father. So the only place she had to go was the house of her father, who is a very poor, though, according to this record, a just and upright man. And though when this action was brought, the husband had not abandoned his wife long enough, one year, before to entitle her to divorce for that specific cause, he was guilty of abandonment in meaning of the statute, and, therefore, as heretofore held by this court in analogous cases, she can maintain this independent action for alimony. And it may as well be said in this connection that in our opinion the allowance to her, by the judgment appealed from, of five hundred dollars was not in our opinion excessive.
Section 2120, Kentucky Statutes, provides that “cohabitation as naan and wife, after a knowledge of adultery or lewdness complained of, shall take away the right of divorce therefor.” And it seems to us,
In the first place he had knowledge before the marriage that there were reports affecting her character for chastity, and was not only entirely free to investigate the truthfulness of such reports, but distinctly told by plaintiff’s father not to marry her if they turned out to be true. Having, in such case, elected to marry her, he can not be now heard to say he was induced by fraud of his wife and friends to marry her. Second. Though declining to make the investigation at the proper time, and professing to be satisfied the reports were untrue, defendant, on this question of alimony, seems to have spared no expense or time to procure testimony, which, if true, shows his wife, though only sixteen years old when she married him, to have been a creature of almost unexampled and notorious lewdness. Indeed, it is seldom a court is called on to consider such a filthy batch of depositions. And in our opinion it is incredible that.what
Judgment affirmed.