1 App. D.C. 299 | D.C. Cir. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the appeals taken, the defendant objects to the jurisdiction of the court below, as a court of equity, to grant relief on the allegations of the bill. And if there be no jurisdiction, as contended, to grant the main relief, that is, permanent alimony, irrespective of any ground for divorce, and as no ground for divorce is alleged, it follows necessarily that no alimony, either permanent or pendente lite, can be granted on this application.
Is there, then, jurisdiction in the Supreme Court of this District, exercising equity powers and jurisdiction, to grant alimony as permanent relief, grounded upon causes other than those upon which judicial separation, or divorce a mensa et thoro, could be decreed by the Ecclesiastical Court of England, at the time of the declaration of our independence?
The laws of Maryland that were continued in operation and force in this District, by the act of Congress of 1801, embraced not only the statutory law, but the common law and the system of equity law, as then known and practiced in that State. The courts, exercising chancery jurisdiction in Maryland, at that time, had no power to decree divorces of
It is ■ true, the legislature of the State of Maryland, by the act of 1777, Ch. 12, Sec. 14, declared that the chancellor should and might hear and determine all causes for alimony in as full and ample manner as such causes could be heard and determined by the laws of England in the ecclesiastical courts there. And the contention of the defendant now is, that as the circumstances of this case would not
This is supposed to be the fair and rational construction of this act of 1777, Ch. 12. But the act must be construed with reference to the pre-existing law upon the subject, and there is nothing in the terms of this act that is restrictive. It is an affirmative declaration by the legislature and nothing more.
The contention for the defendant can be well answered in the language of Chancellor Johnson, in the case of Jamison v. Jamison, supra. In that case, as in this, it was contended that the statute confined the remedy to the cases within the cognizance of the English ecclesiastical courts. But to that construction the chancellor did not agree; and in answer to the argument he said: “ It gives full and complete jurisdiction over the subject of cases for alimony, but there is nothing in the language embodied in the section which necessarily restricts the court to the circumstances and causes which would entitle the party applying for alimony to a divorce according to the ecclesiastical law of England. The chancellor is to hear and determine causes for alimony as fully, and with as much authority, as similar causes are heard in the ecclesiastical courts, but it does not follow that, in granting relief, he is confined to the same grounds which must be shown in those courts to entitle the wife to a divorce a mensa et thoro. If, indeed, the court can only decree alimony where a similar decree can be obtained in the ecclesiastical courts, or the English chancery, and it can only be obtained there as a consequence of a divorce a mensa et thoro, then no decree for alimony could ever have been passed in Maryland from the passage of the act of 1777 to the act of 1841, unless the legislature had previously divorced the parties. The chancellor thinks that such cannot be the true construction of the act of 1777. If it is, then, in every bill for ali
The jurisdiction to grant alimony as independent relief has been fully recognized and enforced by the courts of this District. This is shown by the case of Auld v. Auld, 4 Cranch C. C. Rep., 84, on a bill filed in 1830, for alimony, and on which alimony was granted “to continue until the court should otherwise direct.” And so in the case of Pelz v. Pelz, considered and decided and decree made for alimony, by the General Term of the Supreme Court of this District, but which case has not been reported.
But the great and important question is at once suggested, why should not the jurisdiction exist to remedy great social wrongs, and to do justice to parties who are otherwise without adequate means of relief? Courts are instituted to redress wrongs and to furnish relief for the violation of the laws of society, and no wrong calls more imperatively for redress than that of a husband against his helpless wife, whom he has pledged himself to protect and defend.
There is no question or doubt of the legal duty of the husband to provide a suitable maintenance for his wife, and that if he will not do so, some proper remedy should exist to compel him to perform this duty. A wife may be totally abandoned and deserted by her husband, as in this case, or she may be driven from his home, and compelled, by his ill-treatment and cruelty, to seek an asylum elsewhere; and yet the conditions may not exist to enable her to apply for and obtain a divorce, even if she desired to adopt that alternative, and the question then arises whether, under such circumstances, courts of equity have a general authority to take cognizance of the case, and to administer relief by decreeing ali
Judge Story, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, after referring to the English doctrine on this subject, and to what appeared to be the state of the law in this country, adds: “ In America a broader jurisdiction in cases of alimony has been asserted in some of our courts of equity, and it has been held that if a husband abandons his wife, and separates himself from her without any reasonable support, a court of equity may, in all cases, decree her a suitable maintenance and support out of his estate, upon the very ground that there is no adequate or sufficient remedy at law in such a case, and there is-so much good sense and reason in this doctrine, that it might be wished it were generally adopted.” 2 Eq. Juris., Sec. 1423a:.
Since the writing of that very learned and distinguished jurist, the doctrine enunciated in the section of his work just quoted has become more generally adopted, and, indeed, in a large number of the States, has become the firmly settled law. And, after all, it is but a small and reasonable amplification and extension of a well established doctrine of equity, that whenever the wife has any equitable property within the reach of the jurisdiction of a court of equity, it will lay hold of it, though the husband may be legally entitled to it; and in the case of the desertion or ill treatment of the wife by the husband, as well as in the case of his inability or refusal to maintain her, the court will decree her á suitable maintenance out of such equitable funds. Nicholls v. Danvers, 2 Vern., 671 ; Wright v. Morley, 11 Ves., 20-23 ; Duncan v. Duncan, 19 Ves., 394, 397; 2 Sto. Eq. Juris., Sec. 1424. In decreeing alimony the money is payable out of the estate of the husband, instead of the payment out of the equitable property of the wife that the husband might be entitled to seize.
To entitle the wife to alimony, it is, of course, necessary that she should establish the fact of desertion or ill treatment
The decisions that maintain the right of a deserted or maltreated wife to apply to a court of equity and obtain a decree for alimony against her husband, as independent substantive relief, are numerous and are entitled to the highest respect. Prominent among the cases sustaining this doctrine are Purcell v. Purcell, 4 Hen. & Munf., 507; Butler v. Butler, 4 Litt., 202 ; Galland v. Galland, 38 Cal., 265 ; Garland v. Garland, 50 Miss., 694; Prince v. Prince, 1 Rich. Eq., 282 ; Graves v. Graves, 36 Iowa, 310; Glover v. Glover, 16 Ala., 440; Earle v. Earle, 27 Nebr., 277. See, also, the recent work of Brown on Divorce and Alimony, at page 268, where the cases are collected, and the result of the decisions stated.
It is also objected that, if there be jurisdiction in the court to grant alimony as independent relief, the plaintiff does not show herself to be entitled to maintain this suit against her husband residing here, because the parties were married in the State of Massachusetts, and the plaintiff has continued to reside there ever since the marriage. We are clearly of
Upon the whole, this court is of opinion that there is full jurisdiction in the court below to grant the relief prayed; and if the allegations of the bill be established, the plaintiff will be entitled to a decree for permanent alimony; and the bill showing a case for permanent alimony, the plaintiff is entitled to an allowance pendente lite for support and counsel fees.
With respect to the amount of such allowance pendente lite, that depends largely upon the extent of the delictum, and the pecuniary circumstances of the husband. It is mainly a matter of discretion in the court below, though a judicial and not an arbitrary discretion. A court of appeals must see clearly that the allowance is excessive before it will interfere to reduce it. In this case, looking to all the disclosures made in the pleadings, we cannot say that the allowances for support pendente lite, and for counsel fees, are excessive. In view of the salary received by the defendant, these allowances would seem to be reasonable.
Then, with respect to the ruling of the court below on the plaintiff’s exceptions to certain parts of the answer of the defendant, as being scandalous and irrelevant, this court fully concurs with the court below. The matter set forth in the answer and excepted to, could have no other effect than to degrade the character of the plaintiff; and all the matter
■ It follows that the orders appealed from must be affirmed, with costs to the appellee; and the cause will be remanded, for further proceedings.
Affirmed.