Amend v. Amend

296 P. 875, 135 Or. 550, 76 A.L.R. 986, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 50
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 296 P. 875 (Amend v. Amend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amend v. Amend, 296 P. 875, 135 Or. 550, 76 A.L.R. 986, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 50 (Or. 1931).

Opinion

*551 RAND, J.

Plaintiff commenced this suit for divorce on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment. Defendant answered, denying the acts of cruelty alleged in the complaint and prayed for a divorce upon the ground that plaintiff had committed adultery on October 27, 1928, with one Newt Ellis, which charge was denied by the reply. Upon the issues thus joined, the cause was tried in the court below and, from a decree in favor of defendant, plaintiff has appealed.

It appears from the evidence that the parties intermarried at St. Paul, Minnesota, on October 1,1914, and later removed to Oregon, where they have since resided on a farm near Salem, and that there are three minor children, the fruits of the marriage. There was evidence offered upon the trial tending to show that defendant had committed the acts of cruelty charged in the complaint. There was also evidence offered by defendant as a witness in his own behalf that on October 27,1928, he had been personally present and had seen acts done by plaintiff and Newt Ellis which convinced him that plaintiff had committed adultery with Ellis at said time. There is no other specific act of adultery charged in the answer or testified to by any witness, although there was a general charge made by the answer that plaintiff had committed acts of adultery with Ellis previously at times and places unknown to defendant. It also appeared from the evidence that on or about November 1, 1928, because of their marital troubles, plaintiff left defendant, remained away from birri until January 1, 1929, when a complete reconciliation took place and they resumed their marital relations with each other and thereafter for a short time lived and cohabited together as husband and wife. Both parties *552 so testified. The specific allegation contained in the complaint in respect to this reconciliation and agreement to condone is as follows:

“That on account of the conduct of the defendant herein plaintiff left said defendant in about the month of November, 1928, and remained away from him until the 1st day of January, 1929, at which time a complete reconciliation between said parties was effected, and at said time the plaintiff herein expressly forgave the defendant for Ms past ill treatment and agreed to return to their home and resume the marital relations on condition that said offenses should not be repeated by the defendant.”

Then follows an allegation of defendant’s promise to not repeat his former offenses and his failure to perform the terms of his agreement by cursing and swearing at her, calling her vile and indecent names, and accusing her of having committed the crime of adultery. The specific allegation contained in the answer is as follows:

“That thereafter and about the 1st day of January, 1929, a reconciliation was perfected between plaintiff and defendant, and plaintiff returned to the home of defendant and lived with defendant for a while as defendant’s wife.”

Following wMch is an allegation that it was a term of the agreement that plaintiff should discontinue associating with other men and should attend to the duties she owed to the children and to the defendant, and that she had failed to perform the agreement by associating secretly and without his consent with other men.

A careful examination of the entire testimony in the case shows a total want of any evidence of such association or of any imprudent or wrongful act done by plaintiff after the reconciliation had been effected *553 and the marriage relations had been resumed. As said by this court in Eggerth v. Eggerth, 15 Or. 626 (16 P. 650).

‘ ‘ Condonation is a conditional forgiveness, the condition being that the offense shall not be repeated. If the charge or offense be repeated, then the condonation is to be deemed withdrawn or avoided, and the plaintiff may avail herself of the facts alleged to have been condoned, just as if no condonation had occurred.”

It is the conditional forgiveness or remission by a husband or wife of a matrimonial offense which the other has committed and the condition is that the offense will not be repeated and that the offender will thereafter treat the injured spouse with conjugal kindness, and while the condition remains unbroken the condonation is an absolute bar to the remedy for the particular injury condoned: Saville v. Saville, 103 Or. 117 (203 P. 584), and authorities there cited. Or, as stated by Bishop, in 1 Bish. on Marriage and Divorce, (1st Ed.), §§ 269 and 308:

“Condonation is the remission, by one of the married parties, of an offense which he knows the other has committed against the marriage, on the condition of being continually afterward treated by the other with conjugal kindness, — resulting in the rule that while the condition remains unbroken there can be no divorce, but a breach of it revives the original remedy.”

Hence, so far as entitling defendant to a divorce because of the offense charged to have been committed by plaintiff on October 27, 1928, if committed as contended for, it is wholly immaterial whether plaintiff was guilty of the offense charged or not, for the facts were known to the defendant and the offense, if committed, was condoned by the subsequent voluntary cohabitation between the parties and this operates as *554 a complete bar of any remedy for the condoned offense unless the matters to which we now refer operate to remove the bar.

In the instant suit the plaintiff did not admit the adultery and plead condonation in bar of the suit but she denied the adultery and pleaded condonation. Section 6-911, Oregon Code 1930, provides that:

“In a suit for the dissolution of the marriage contract on account of adultery, the defendant may admit the adultery, and show in bar of the suit, either,— * * * 2. That the act has been expressly forgiven, or impliedly so, by the voluntary cohabitation of the parties after knowledge thereof.”

In Rice v. Rice, 13 Or. 337 (10 P. 495), where the suit was not based upon a charge of adultery and the question arose upon the demurrer to the complaint, the court, in construing this statute, said inter alia:

“* * * The language of the statute is that‘the defendant may admit the charge, and show in bar of the suit,’ etc. — that is, admit the truth of the facts charged as facts, and show other facts in bar — confess and avoid. ’ ’

In Eggerth v. Eggerth, supra, Mr. Justice Strahan, speaking for the court, said:

“The special defenses provided for in this section are only available when the answer expressly admits the charges in the complaint (Rice v. Rice, 13 Or. 337), and cannot be joined in an answer which denies all of such charges. For the purposes of the suit a demurrer admits all facts which are well pleaded in the pleading demurred to; but in Bice v. Bice,

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Related

State ex rel. Pearcy v. Long
383 P.2d 377 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1963)
Claude v. Claude
174 P.2d 179 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1946)
Dougherty v. Dougherty
48 A.2d 451 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
296 P. 875, 135 Or. 550, 76 A.L.R. 986, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amend-v-amend-or-1931.