Aparecida Zildjian, the defendant in a complaint for divorce in the Probate Court, appeals from a judgment which granted her husband, Armand Zildjian, the plaintiff, a divorce for cruel and abusive treatment and awarded her "the sum of fifteen thousand (15,-000) dollars as alimony, said sum to be payable at the rate of three thousand (3,000) dollars each year for five (5) years.” She contests both the judgment of divorce and the sufficiency of the alimony.
The plaintiff filed a complaint for divorce on October 27,1972; the defendant’s answer denied the allegations of cruel and abusive treatment and alleged аs defenses con-donation and recrimination. The trial of the case began on March 19, 1974, and continued intermittently. 1 Both parties rested on August 16, 1974, when the case was continued for argument of counsel, which was heard on December 6, 1974. Judgment w&s entered on October 1, 1975. 2 Thereafter, on April 19, 1977, the judge filed a *3 report of material facts to which, on the defendant’s motion, he added two further findings. (The transcript of the testimony is before us.) We affirm the judgment insofar as it grants a divorce but remand the case for redetermination of the questions of alimony and counsel fees.
The following summary from the judge’s findings will serve as a background to our discussion. 3 In October, 1965, the defendant came from Brazil to work in the plaintiffs home in Hingham. She had been recruited through an agency which furnished domestic help to people in the United States. The findings state that "[t]he plaintiff had been previously divorced and had custody of his three children, two daughters age 17 and 16 and a son age 13 .... The defendant lived in the home of the plaintiff and along with duties as a domestic, she cared for the plaintiffs children, planned and prepared the meals. The defendant took her meals with the plaintiff and his family and from time to time would join in with the family at some birthday anniversary celebrations and the like. Beyond this, the defendant had no social contact with the plaintiff.” While employed by the plaintiff, the defendant trained at night to be a manicurist; and sometime late in *4 1966, after her year’s commitment was over, she left to take up that work.
Several months later, in the spring of 1967, the plaintiff telephoned her, and they began to see each other socially. They were married in December of 1967. At the time of their marriage, he was forty-six years old and she was thirty. It was her first marriage. The judge found that "[i]t was significant to note that after plans for their marriage were announced the attitude of the plaintiff’s children chаnged towards the defendant which involved a course of conduct by them ranging from their not speaking to the defendant to an outright ignoring of the said defendant.” The judge further found that from the beginning of the marriage, "a course of conduct between the parties was unfolding ... involving plaintiffs children and the defendant, which ... [resulted in] the ultimate deterioration of the marriage . ...” The judge set out a series of some fourteen altercations and generally irritating incidents involving the plaintiffs family, friends and employees.
. I.
The divorce.
The judge found four instances during the marriage when the defendant struck the plaintiff. These findings were suppоrted by the plaintiffs testimony, which the judge could choose to believe rather than that of the defendant.
Wilde
v.
Wilde,
A.
Condonation.
The defendant argues that the judge erred in rejecting the defense of condonation. She points out that the first two instances of cruel and abusive treatment found by the judge occurred in April, 1969, and June, 1970, and that despite those incidents the parties continued to live together as husband and wifе. But we need not pause to decide whether in the circumstances there was a complete resumption of the marriage.
5
See
Holsworth
v.
Holsworth, 252
Mass. 133, 134 (1925);
Sanderson
v.
Sanderson,
The judge found that the rift in the marriage was definite and final on January 2, 1971, when the plaintiff ordered the defendant from the marital home, and she left to stay with her brother. On March 15, 1971, she returned on the advice of her attorney, letting herself in by breaking a pane of glass in the back door. The plaintiff again ordered her out, but she did not leave. The judge found that thereafter "the рlaintiff and defendant occupied separate bedrooms and did not engaged in marital relations.” The situation continued until the end of July, *6 when she was hospitalized at a private psychiatric hospital. Upon her release on September 19, 1971, she moved into her own apartment and has since lived apart from the plaintiff.
After she left on January 2,1971, the parties discussed divorce and a financial settlement. The judge found that the plaintiff took the position with the defendant that "he did not want the defendant any longer and that the principal objection to her returning to the home was the defendant’s inability to get along with his children ....” He further found that "in all of their discussions the plaintiff put his children before the defendant.” "Condonation is a state of mind to be determined upon all the evidence, including rational inferences.”
Hayden
v. Hayden,
The defendant urges us to find condonation on the basis of her testimony that the parties engaged in sexual relations after the incidents of cruel and abusive treatment. She testified that they lived together as husband and wife in the marital home throughout the period from March 15, 1971, up to the time she was hospitalized. The judge, however, could, as he did, believe the plaintiff’s testimony to the contrary. Further, it is apparent that — though the parties were living in the same house — the relationship had deteriorated to a "truce” with both parties represented by counsel. They were "not liv[ing] together as husband and wife in any real sense.”
Hayden
v.
Hayden,
The defendant also testified that after she was hospitalized on July 29, 1971, and thereafter during the remain
*7
der of the year 1971, and from time to time during 1972, she had sexual relations with the plaintiff at various hotels and motels. The judge pointed out in his findings that the defendant had put in evidence as exhibits twelve hotel and motel registration cards which "would give weight” to her testimony of sexual relations at the times and places indicated. We agree with the trial judge that even if her testimony, supported by the exhibits, is accepted, it does not require a finding of condonation. Sexual intercourse is not, as the defendant would have us hold, per se condonation. Even fifty years ago when sexual relations may have been viewed as more significant, the Supreme Judicial Court did not go beyond holding that sexual intercourse "ordinarily implies” condonement.
Coan
v.
Coan,
This case is similar in principle to
Littlefield
v.
Littlefield,
B. Recrimination. The defendant argues that the judge erred in failing to find cruel and abusive treatment by the plaintiff, which would sustain her defense of recrimination. However, that defense was foreclosed by St. 1973, c. 740, entitled “An Act providing that recrimination shall not be a defense to libel for divorce.” 7 That statute was approved September 5, 1973, and thus became effective long before the judge entered judgment on October 1, 1975 (see note 2, supra, and text to which it is appended), and indeed before the trial of this case which began on March 19, 1974. By this statute (hereinafter the 1973 statute), the judge was precluded from "entertain-[ing]” or — to use a synonym — considering 8 the defense in deciding the case. It is thus at the point of judgment that the 1973 statute is expressly made applicable rather than at the point in 1972 when the defense may have arisen.
Our approach is suggested by the analysis in
Goodwin Bros. Leasing
v.
Nousis,
The intent of the 1973 statute, to speak as of the time of the judgment, is also supported by the correlative provision of the statute in the first clause. Here, too, if we "look to the stage of the proceedings affected by the change”
(Porter
v.
Clerk of the Superior Court,
The change made by the 1973 statute is suggestive of the statutory change mаde by St. 1838, c. 126, permitting a final divorce (a vinculo) for desertion which theretofore had been a cause only for judicial separation (a mensa et thoro). In
Stevens
v.
Stevens,
It is instructive that the New York Divorce Reform Law (1966 N.Y. Laws, c. 254) — reminiscent of the early Massachusetts statutes permitting the transformation of a judicial separation into a final divorce — also provides for a final divorce predicated on a judgment of separation under which the parties have lived apart for a specified period. N.Y.Dom.Rel.Law § 170(5) (McKinney 1977). The Court of Appeals in
Gleason
v.
Gleason,
This also has application to the abolition of the defense of recrimination which has been widely criticized and of which it has been said: "Recrimination is the outrageous legal principle which ordains that when both spouses have grounds for divorce, neither may have a decree.” Clark, Domestic Relations § 12.12, at 373 & n.l (1968).
DeBurgh
v.
DeBurgh,
Chief Judge Fuld also observes that: "It is worthy of note that the overwhelming weight of authority supports retroactive application of legislative creation or amendment of divorce grounds, unless the statutory language employed precludes such a construction,” citing a number of cases and Annot., 23 A.L.R.Sd 626, 630-632 (1969).
Gleason
v.
Gleason,
II.
Alimony and counsel fees.
Our analysis of the 1973 recrimination statute also applies to G. L. c. 208, § 34, as appearing in St. 1974, c. 565 (hereinafter referred to as the new alimony statute).
13
Here, analogously, c. 565 purported to affect the "order ... to pay alimоny,” which may be entered "[u]pon a divorce or up on petition at any time after a divorce.” It was obviously rt 'nedial and when made "upon a divorce” was concerned with the adjust
*13
ment between the parties upon the dissolution of their marriage. As early as
West
v.
West,
We reject the plaintiff’s contention that we should apply the new alimony statute only in cases in which it was in effect during the trial. Conditions on which the judgment is based are, to be sure, usually elicited at trial. But we have no doubt that when conditions change unexpectedly and radically immediately after trial (e.g., one of the parties should suddenly become disabled after trial but before judgment was entered), the proceedings would be reopened on motion. Here, too, if it could have been said that the standards of the new alimony statute were unknown and unanticipated so that the presentation by the parties was not properly focusеd, a party who felt aggrieved could have asked that the proceedings be reopened when he learned of the new standards. Here, however, the new standards were enacted on July 19, 1974, while the trial was in progress (note 1,
supra; see Attorney Gen.
v.
Prudential Ins. Co.,
Accordingly, it was error for the judge to rule that the. new alimony statute was not applicable; he was required to consider all the factors listed in that statute. Therefore, we must remand for such consideration unless indeed "the record indicate[s] clearly that the judge considered all the mandatory statutory factors.”
Rice
v.
Rice,
The judge termed the alimony he granted as "in the nature of rehabilitative alimony”; and we are not sure of the significance of this characterization in the circumstances of this case.
14
There may be situations in which,"] a husband and wife of comparable professional and economic status having been divorced, it is fair and realistic, when all the statutory factors are considered, to givе the spouse, who may on marriage have discontinued a career, sufficient funds merely to resume such an independent career. But see
Grinold
v.
Grinold,
The phrase "rehabilitative alimony” has a certain attraction, for it suggests an equality of economic opportunity between the sexes. But such an equality may be illusory in a concrete case, and under such circumstances an attempt to apply the notion may work an injustice. The caveat in
Sisson
v.
Sisson, supra,
is worth emphasizing. In that case the Supreme Court of Florida applied for the first time the Florida statute referred to in note 14,
supra,
in order to resolve conflicts among the District Courts of Appeal. A District Court
of
Appeal had reversed a lump sum grant of alimony on the ground that the wife was already trained as a physical therapist and required no rehabilitation. The Florida Supreme Court reinstated the award. It said: "Whether or not alimony is characterized as rehabilitative, the principal questions are the need of the spouse seeking alimony and the ability of the other spouse to pay.... With increasing opportunities for employment available to women, it may well be that wives today are generally less dependent financially on their husbands than their mothers were, and so less often in need of alimony if the marriage is dissolved.
But care must be taken to avoid confusing the general with the specific and mistaking the promise of the future for the realty of the
present” (emphasis supplied).
Sisson
v.
Sisson,
Since the grant of alimony requires reconsideration, it is appropriate that the judge reconsider the matter of counsel fees. See G. L. c. 208, § 38. These two matters should be considered together, for "a spouse’s neеd for adequate legal representation in a lawsuit affecting the marital status is not materially different from those other needs ... which fall within the more common meaning of alimony or support.... Although... particular considerations in measuring ... [counsel fees] may differ from those applicable to alimony or support, the basic factors of need and relative economic positions of the spouses are relevant to all these matters.”
Goldman
v.
Roderiques,
III.
Evidentiary matters.
A. We agree with the defendant that the judge impropеrly admitted testimony elicited by the plaintiff from the defendant on cross-examination about her relationship with a married man prior to her marriage to the plaintiff. The judge admitted this evidence on the question of alimony (it obviously had no relation to the cruel and abusive treatment alleged in this case), referring in his ruling to prior evidence of "a discussion concerning the amount of money it would take her to live, and ... a discussion entered into in which she testified to concerning her values as far as marriage ....” Since we remand this case for reconsideration of the grant of alimony in any evеnt, the testimony has become harmless. We point out, however, that its admission is inconsistent with the new alimony statute which provides that the judge "shall consider ... the conduct of the parties
during the marriage”
(emphasis supplied). G. L. c. 208, § 34. "[H]is consideration of factors not enumerat
*18
ed in § 34 ... constitute^] an error of law.”
Rice
v.
Rice,
B. There is no merit in the defendant’s contention that the judge erred in refusing to allow the defendant on cross-examination to elicit that prior to the marriage the plaintiff had entertained women overnight in his house and in an apartment which he rented. It is difficult to see the relevance of this testimony to the physical acts of cruel and аbusive treatment which formed the basis for the divorce. If there was discretion in the trial judge to admit this testimony (which we need not decide), it was certainly no abuse of discretion to limit the defendant’s cross-examination to exclude this peripheral subject matter.
Campbell
v.
Ashler,
IV. Conclusion. Accordingly, so much of the judgment as relates to alimony is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings, which may include taking further evidence, to redetermine alimony pursuant to G. L. c. 208, § 34, as most recently amended, and costs and expenses, including counsel fees in the Probate Court and on appeal — all in aсcordance with this opinion. The judgment of divorce is otherwise affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Evidence was taken on March 19, March 20, March 28, April 17, April 18, May 16, May 17, May 22, and August 16, 1974.
The judgment bears the notation "nunc pro tunc as of December 6,1974.” Assuming, as the defendant contends, that this was improper
*3
(see
Silverstein
v.
Silverstein,
The standard of review, which we follow throughout this opinion,
\
is set out in
Ober
v.
Ober,
The allowance of the plaintiff’s additional specifications of cruel and abusive treаtment was within the judge’s discretion. There was no abuse.
Gardner
v.
Gardner,
See
Littlefield
v.
Littlefield,
The judge found that on March 15,1971, "the defendant scratched the plaintiff on his left cheek and slapped his face several times as well.” The judge also found that on April 30, 1971, and into May 1, 1971, "the defendant kicked the plaintiff on his legs and grabbed plaintiffs middle finger of his left hand and bent'his finger backward causing the finger to swell....”
That act amends G. L. c. 208, § 1, and provides in part: "[A] divorce shall be decreed although both parties have cause, and no defense founded upon recrimination shall be entertained by the court.”
Webster’s Third New Intl. Dictionary 757 (1971).
Ribaudo
v.
Citizens Natl. Bank,
Statute 1975, c. 400, § 6, amending G. L. c. 208, § 1, changed "decreed” to "adjudged” in conformity with the Massachusetts Rules of Domestic Relations Procedure.
This case is cited in
Sparhawk
v.
Sparhawk,
In 1973, bills were introduced to reduce the necessary period of desertion as a ground for divorce from two consecutive years to one year (S. 566, H. 2941, H. 3683, H. 3686), to dispose of marital property at the time of divorce (S. 569, S. 731), and to provide for various forms of no-fault divorce (S. 566, H. 1367, H. 2311, H. 2941, H. 3683, H. 3686, H. 6161). Reform statutes were subsequently passed in 1974 (one-year desertion — St. 1974, c. 358, § 1; alimony and property division — St. 1974, c. 565) and in 1975 (divorce for irretrievable breakdown — St. 1975, c. 698, § 2).
A number of cases quote the following from that section of the treatise: "If, contemplating the interest involved as public, it is for the public order and profit that marriage be dissoluble after the transpiring of a particular delictum, it can make no difference what was the date of the delinquency, or whether before or after the statute was enacted. Hence, when the legislative intent does not directly appear in the statutory words, they should be applied equally to past and future transactions.”
General Laws c. 208, § 34, was further revised by St. 1975, c. 400, § 33, and St. 1977, c. 467, so that it now provides: "Upon divorce or upon motion in an action brought at any time after a divorce, the court may make a judgment for either of the parties to pay alimony to the other. In addition to or in lieu of a judgment to pay alimony, the court may assign to either husband or wife all or any part of the estate of the other. In determining the amount of alimony, if any, to be paid, or in fixing the nature and value of the property, if any, to be so assigned, the court, after hearing the witnesses, if any, of each party, shall consider the length of the marriage, the conduct of the parties during the marriage, the age, health, station, occupation, amount and sources of income, vocational skills, employability, estate, liabilities and needs of each of the parties and the opportunity of each for future acquisition of capital assets and income. The court may also consider the contribution of each of the parties in the acquisition, preservation or appreciation in value of their respective estates and the contribution of each of the parties as a homemaker to the family unit.”
See Note, A Survey of Florida Alimony Since Passage of the 1971 Dissolution of Marriage Act, 28 U. Fla. L. Rev. 763, 774-776 (1976), discussing the varying approaches by the District Courts of Appeal in applying Fla. Stat. § 61.08(1) (1975), which provides: "[T]he court may grant alimony to either party, which alimony may be rehabilitative or permanent in nature.” See also Note, Rehabilitative Spousal Support: In Need of a More Comprehensive Approach to Mitigating Dissolution Trauma, 12 U. S. F. L. Rev. 493 (1978).
In 1978, Fla. Stat. § 61.08 was amended to add a number of specific factors, while retaining the former reference to rehabilitative alimony and a catchall provision for consideration of any factors "necessary to do equity and justice between the parties.” 1978 Fla. Laws 78-339.
