Morris v. Morris
Before: Cope
Synopsis
Exteeme cruelty, in our Divorce Act, means the same thing as the scesüia or cruelty of the English Ecclesiastical Courts.
It may he defined, generally, to be any conduct, in one of the married parties, which furnishes reasonable apprehension that the continuance of the cohabitation would be attended with bodily harm to the other.
Courts grant divorces, in such cases, not to punish an offense already committed, but to relieve the complaining party of apprehended danger. And the divorce may follow, even in the absence of any actual violence.
But if there has been actual violence, it must'be attended with danger to life, limb or health, or be such as to cause reasonable apprehension of future danger.
Cope, J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Baldwin, J. concurring.
This is an action for divorce, on the ground of extreme emelty. It appears that the parties were married in Philadeljffiia, on the 28th of December, 1849, and came to this State in the month of -November, 1852, where they resided and cohabited as husband and wife until their separation, in Jan. 1857. There is some evidence showing that the marriage was never productive of much happiness to either of the parties. The plaintiff, if her own declarations are to be relied on, was an unwilling party to its consummation, and sacrificed her own feelings to the authority of her mother. It could hardly have been expected that much happiness would result from a marriage thus contracted. The testimony relative to the conduct of the defendant towards the plaintiff, prior to the occurrences which led to their separation, is conflicting and unsatisfactory. It is not alleged that any act of personal violence was ever committed or attempted; and it does not appear that the ¡ilaintiff at any time expressed or entertained apprehension of personal danger. The most that can he claimed as the result of the evidence on this point is, that the defendant, in his intercourse with the plaintiff, did not exhibit that regard for her which was due from him as her husband, and which their relative situations should have inspired.
In our opinion, the case of the plaintiff must stand or fall upon the fact of the violence to her person, committed on the day preceding the separation, and its immediate attendant circumstances, and can derive no support from the previous or subse[79]quent conduct of the defendant. The allegation of the complaint that the plaintiff was forced from her home by the defendant and compelled to seek a refuge elsewhere, is not sustained by the evidence. At the moment of leaving, she declared to a female acquaintance that she would even then forego her purpose and remain, if he would express any sorrow or regret for what he had done. Why this declaration, if she was compelled to go ? Does it not show conclusively that her going was a voluntary act, and not the result of any force or coercion whatever? A few days after, she returned, with the consent of her husband, to the very home from which she alleges she was driven. The circumstances, taken together, are irreconcilable with any other conclusion than that her act in leaving was entirely voluntary, induced, no doubt, by the violence of the preceding day, but without any immediate force or coercion, or any apprehension of future danger.
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