This is a libel for divorce filed in a probate court. The grounds set out in the libel of the husband as originally filed on January 10, 1930, were cruel and abusive treatment and gross and confirmed habits of intoxication. On February 7, 1930, the libellant was allowed to amend his libel by adding an allegation that the libellee at various times committed the crime of adultery with a person whose name and address are known to the libellant. On the same date a further amendment was allowed whereby the name of the co-respondent was inserted. Later the libellee filed an answer denying specifically the charges and alleging by way of cross-libel against the libellant the same grounds as were set out in the libel as amended and naming the co-respondents. When the case came on to be heard a stenographer was appointed on the request of the libellant to take the evidence under G. L. c. 215, § 18, as amended, to be reported to this court. A decree nisi was entered granting divorce to the libellant for the cause of adultery on the part of the libellee. The libellee filed requests for rulings which are printed together with the disposition of them made by the judge; she excepted to the action of the judge so far as these requests were denied. Rightly no bill of exceptions was filed. Mackintosh, petitioner,
There is in the record no agreement by parties approved by the judge to the effect that these so called excerpts from the evidence present all the evidence material to all questions raised by the appeal. Therefore the case is not before us for review of findings and rulings by the trial judge under general equity practice, even if it be assumed that an equity case rightly may be brought before this court on such abridgment of the record. Romanausky v. Skutulas,
The record is informal and defective. Abeloff v. Peacard,
The . libellee has argued her case on the theory that the only adultery found by the judge to have been committed by her was on a date subsequent to the filing of the libel, but before the filing of the amendment, and that the decree was based solely on such finding. The record does not show facts to support this theory. A request for finding of material facts would have disclosed the ground on which the decree rested. The date of the alleged adultery of the libellee was not specified in the amendment to the libel and it is not disclosed on the récord. For aught that the record reveals, the conduct of the libellee by reason of which the decree of divorce was granted was proved to have occurred before the filing of the libel. Since the evidence is not reported we cannot say .that that was not the finding of the trial judge.
One of the requests for ruling made by the libellee was that the libellant must prove adultery committed on January 31, 1930, in order to obtain divorce on that ground. Respecting this request the judge ruled “Refused, but immaterial as I find adultery on or about the date stated.” It is not likely that this request would have been ruled to be “immaterial” if the only act of infidelity found by the judge to have been committed by the libellee occurred on that date which was subsequent to.the filing of the libel. That this was not the only act of infidelity supported by some evidence is apparent from request 12 of the libellee which was predicated upon evidence of such acts “in October or November, 1929,” and related to conduct of the libellant which might constitute connivance. That request was refused because “all the facts assumed in the request were” not found to be true; nevertheless the judge may have found that those tending to show adultery were true and those concerning connivance not proved. Her requests 3 and 4 related respectively to instances of improper familiarity and existence of adulterous disposition between the libellee and the co-respondent “prior or subse
No presumptions can be indulged in favor of an appealing party who fails to cause to be set out in the record enough to show harmful error which has affected his substantial rights. See Posell v. Herscovitz,
Decree affirmed.
