60 Neb. 138 | Neb. | 1900
This cause is submitted upon briefs of counsel and a printed abstract of the record and evidence, as provided by rule 2.
The plaintiff instituted proceedings to obtain a divorce from defendant, from the bonds of matrimony, upon the grounds of excessive intoxication, habitual drunkenness, and extreme cruelty upon the part of, and practiced by, the defendant towards the plaintiff, and also for permanent alimony. The answer, except as to the allegation of the marriage, consists of a general denial. Upon tlm trial in tliedower court, it was found that the charges in the petition of cruelty and drunkenness were true, and that the defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty towards the plaintiff. A decree of divorce as prayed was granted and the plaintiff awarded $1,000 permanent alimony. From the decree defendant appeals. The plaintiff also complains of the amount awarded as alimony, which, it is urged, is inadequate, and not commensurate with plaintiff’s equities, as disclosed by the evidence.
It is suggested by the defendant that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the decree of divorce. With this contention we can not agree. While the testimony on
The parties were married in 1890, and lived together only about six and a half years. Each had been married before. The plaintiff was fifty-six years of age, and the defendant was sixty-three, at the time of the divorce proceedings in 1897.
It appears that the defendant is a cripple, having lost a foot in a railroad accident, and was obliged to use crutches. The trial court found that the value of his property was $9,679, and “that, in consideration of the physical condition of the defendant and ability to perform manual labor and earn subsistence and support by labor or otherwise,” permanent alimony should be awarded in the sum of $1,000. Defendant’s property consisted principally of a farm of 160 acres in Otoe county, and a half interest in a farm of 160 acres in Nemaha county. Different witnesses valued the lands at from $30
Judgment accordingly.