Lewis v. Lewis
Before: Sloss
Synopsis
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Charles Monroe, Judge.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
[733]
SLOSS, J.
The plaintiff appeals from a judgment denying her prayer for divorce. The complaint was based on the ground of desertion. The defendant defaulted, and the court, after hearing plaintiff’s proofs, concluded that she had failed to make out a case, and entered judgment accordingly.
The plaintiff testified that she and the defendant had been married on March 1, 1910. She was then forty-one years old. His age was eighty-one. They had been acquainted but a short while. After the marriage, the parties took up their abode at Long Beach, in a house owned by defendant. As a result of litigation then pending, this house was lost to defendant some four and one-half months after the marriage. Thereupon the defendant “went away,” stating that he was unable to support the plaintiff, and that he would have to go and live with his own people.
A witness on behalf of plaintiff testified that Lewis, the defendant, had told him, before the separation, that he could not support his wife, “and he could not live with the woman if he could not support her.” He also said that “he never expected to live with her again, he could not support her.” After the separation the defendant told this witness that he would never return to live with plaintiff.
A son of defendant testified that the defendant had told him, prior to his leaving Long Beach, that he “was going away, and that he would not return—could not stay under the circumstances; that he would soon be without means, and would not return.”
The court is not authorized to deny a divorce where the evidence of the plaintiff, adequately corroborated, establishes the truth of the allegations of the complaint.
(Kirkpatrick
v.
Kirkpatrick,
152 Cal. 316, [92 Pac. 853];
Benkert
v.
Benkert,
32 Cal. 467.) A case having been made out, there is no arbitrary power to grant or refuse the relief. But, in every action for divorce, the court is called upon to determine whether the evidence before it does establish the truth of the charge made in the complaint. As in other cases, every intendment is in favor of the finding made. Such finding is not to be overthrown on appeal unless it is very plain to the appellate court that the conclusion reached cannot be supported on any rational view of the testimony. In view of the care with which the law has sought to guard against collusive
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