143 S.W. 720 | Tex. App. | 1912
Defendant in error brought suit for divorce against plaintiff in error, alleging (a) that the defendant had been guilty of excesses, cruel treatment, and outrages towards her of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable; (b) that he had left her for three years, with intention of permanent abandonment.
The cause was submitted on special issues. The jury found that the defendant had not been guilty of excesses, cruel treatment, and outrages of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable. Upon the issue of abandonment, the court submitted two issues, as follows: First. "Do you or do you not find the allegations of plaintiff's petition to be true that the defendant left her with the intention of permanent abandonment, as that term has been hereinbefore defined?" To this question the jury answered: "We find the allegations to be true." Second. "Do you, or do you not, find that Mrs. Wright consented for her husband to leave her? And if you answer this question in the affirmative, you will then answer whether she so consented because she desired him to leave without provocation on his part, or whether she consented because his treatment had been such as to render her further living with him insupportable." To this question the jury answered: "We find that she consented because his treatment of her convinced her he intended leaving her." Defendant moved the court to enter judgment in his favor upon the finding of the jury upon such special issues, which motion was by the court overruled, and judgment entered for plaintiff and the correctness of this action is here challenged.
In McGowen v. McGowen,
We think, under the rule laid down in this case and in other decisions of our courts, the trial court was not warranted in entering judgment for the plaintiff, because it clearly appears from the finding upon the special issues submitted in the second question that she consented to the separation. The consent of the party seeking a divorce upon the ground of abandonment to the separation will not necessarily preclude such party from obtaining a divorce upon the ground of abandonment. The conduct of the offending spouse may have been of such character that the injured party may be justified in not regretting or objecting to the abandonment, although the conduct may not have been of such character as would authorize a divorce for cruel treatment, excesses, and outrages. It is voluntary consent to the separation, constituting collusion, in law, for the mutual purpose of accomplishing the mutually desired divorce, that prevents the separation from becoming such legal abandonment as would authorize a divorce. Camp v. Camp,
The first assignment of error is submitted in such a manner that we cannot review the same, because the proposition submitted in support thereof is in no wise germane to the assignment. The assignment complains of a paragraph of the court's charge, while the proposition is predicated upon the theory that the judgment is not supported by the testimony.
The sixth assignment of error is overruled. Under the testimony, we hold that the jury would have been warranted in finding that defendant left the plaintiff with the intention of permanently abandoning her. The questions presented by some of the other assignments will not arise upon a new trial, and what has been said disposes of all the remaining ones.
Reversed and remanded.