Bascomb v. Bascomb

25 N.H. 267
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 N.H. 267 (Bascomb v. Bascomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bascomb v. Bascomb, 25 N.H. 267 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1852).

Opinion

Woods, J.

This case is a libel for divorce. The ground [271]*271of complaint is corporal impotency, arising several years after the intermarriage of the parties.

Chapter 148, § 3 of the.Revised Statutes provides that cc A divorce from the bond of matrimony shall be decreed for the following causes, in favor of the innocent party; for impotency,” &c., &e.

Section 5 provides that “ no divorce shall be granted for any cause except adultery, unless such cause shall be in existence at the time of filing the petition for such divorce.”

It does not become necessary to determine whether the character of the infirmity is such as to constitute impotency, within the meaning attached to that word in the law, as the same has been applied to cases where divorces have been sought for that cause.

In all eases of impotency, in order that it should constitute a proper ground of divorce, it is necessary that it should be incurable. It has been holden that where the infirmity is curable, or where the obstruction complained of is capable of removal, by a slight surgical operation, or by other appropriate remedies, endangering neither life nor health, the cause is wholly insufficient. The cause of the present complaint is impotency, arising from the rupture of the neck of the womb in child-birth, the effect of which would be, as the medical witnesses testify, “ to destroy the natural physiological action of the organs diseased;” and that such has been the result in the present case. It is stated in the evidence, also, that if the disease were removed, there is no reason to suppose thatthe organs would not recover their usual power. Dr. Phelps thinks that for three reasons, specifically assigned by him, the disease is incurable, namely, its extent, its time, and habit of continuance, and the failure of appropriate and established modes of treatment to accomplish the purpose. Dr. James Batchelder thinks that the prospect for the recovery of the libellee is almost hopeless.

The opinion of the surgeons is, that sexual intercourse [272]*272would be attended with extreme pain on her part, and that any attempt of the kind would be highly improper.

Whether the infirmity be shown to be so probably ineurable, or whether the infirmity is, in other respects, shown to be of a character to warrant a divorce, the court do not find it necessary now to decide.

The alleged cause of divorce arose after the intermarriage of the parties. The main question that arises is, whether for that reason the impotency, if such it be, furnishes the cause contemplated by the statute.

The alleged cause arose not only after the marriage, but as a consequence of it. From the evidence in the case, it seems to be a result not unfrequently arising from the same cause. It would seem to be the result not of the neglect, but of the performance of duty. It is no fault of the libel-lee, that she has fallen into her present condition, but is a consequence of the appropriate discharge of her marital duties. If it should be found to be the cause contemplated by the statute, it would seem to stand upon other principles than those which lie at the foundation of the other causes. The other causes all plainly rest upon some wrongful act or neglect of duty, on the part of the party against whom the proceeding will lie. Of this character is desertion, habitual intemperance, adultery, &c.

The statute does not, in terms, declare at what period the impotency must be proved to exist; whether it must be shown to exist at the date of the marriage, or may arise at a subsequent period. The language of the act is, that “ a divorce from the bond of matrimony shall be decreed for the following causes, in favor of the innocent party,” and then proceeds to enumerate the causes, and among others is “ impotency.” The language thus used, providing for the decree of divorce “ in favor of the innocent party,” would seem, in some degree, to indicate the sense of the Legislature upon this subject. From the language of the act, and the nature of the causes prescribed generally therein, it would [273]*273hardly seem that a person entirely faultless, one who had in all particulars conformed her conduct to her duties and proper relations in life, is the party upon whom the law intended to visit the severe penalty of a divorce. No other of the causes enumerated in the statute is of the character supposed; but every one of them implies, and is wholly and manifestly based upon, the positive wrongful act or neglect of duty on the part of the party complained of. Each and every of the other causes is a palpable and flagrant violation of the duties and proprieties of life, growing out of the marriage relation. We are of the opinion, however, that the facts in this case cannot be regarded as furnishing the cause which the statute intends.

The corporal infirmity must exist at the time of the marriage, in order to constitute the cause of impotency intended by the statute. Its existence at that time may well be regarded as a fault, in the nature of a fraud, and may thus be justly and properly redressed, by the only adequate remedy of a decree of divorce.

When the legislature enacted the cause under consideration, we do not think they intended to adopt a different principle from that which had been recognized in England, and perhaps we may safely say, in all other Christian countries, as establishing a just foundation for a dissolution of the bond of matrimony, and for the sundering of the most important relation in life. And it is believed that neither in England nor in this country is a case to be found in any degree countenancing the idea of the right or power of any court to decree a divorce under circumstances. like those under consideration, although impotency is, and long has been, a cause in England, and has also been made such in some, if not all the States of this Union, by positive enactments by their respective legislatures.

Mr. Dane, in his abridgment, lays down the rule in general terms, that impotency, to be a ground of divorce, must [274]*274exist at the time of the marriage. Dane’s Ab. chap. 46, art. 1 § 3.

Mr. Chancellor Kent says, the canonical disabilities, such as • consanguinity, affinity, and corporal infirmity, arising prior to the marriage, render it voidable only. ■ 2 Kent’s Comm. 81.

In Connecticut, corporal imbecility has been adjudged sufficient to dissolve a marriage, on the ground of fraud. 1 Day’s Rep. Ill; 2 Kent’s Comm. 81.

In New York, in 1825, it was decided in their court of chancery, that that court could not dissolve a marriage, or decree a divorce, for the cause of corporal impotency. It was said in that case, that the law of England, concerning divorces, is chiefly the ecclesiastical, and not the common law of that country, and that it had never been adopted in New York. It was further said,' that their statutes, concerning divorces, are original regulations, and do not adopt or introduce the English law. It was further averred in that case, that there was, in that State, no court authorized to adjudge a marriage illegal, and to separate the parties. Burtis v. Burtis, Hopkins’ Rep. 557.

In Devanbagh v. Devanbagh, which arose after the pase in Hopkins, and is reported in 5 Paige’s Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.H. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bascomb-v-bascomb-nhsuperct-1852.