Beck v. Beck
This text of 129 A. 275 (Beck v. Beck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Errors predicated upon the correction of the finding are not well taken. The credit to be attached to the testimony of the plaintiff was for the court, and the court has found, as the finding discloses, in important particulars, adversely to his testimony. The finding, uncorrected, does not present a case from which we can say, as matter of law, the conclusion of intolerable cruelty must be drawn. In determining such issue, we are controlled by these rules of law. The finding must show not only acts of cruelty on the part of the defendant, but facts which show that in their cumulative effect upon the plaintiff “they are intolerable in the sense of rendering the continuance of the marital relation unbearable by” the plaintiff. VanGuilder v. VanGuilder, 100 Conn. 1, 122 Atl. 719. “It is only when the cumulative effect of the defendant’s cruelty upon the suffering victim has become such that the public and personal objects of matrimony have been destroyed beyond rehabilitation, that the condition of fact contemplated by the intolerable-cruelty *756 clause of the statute (§ 5280) should be found to exist.” McEvoy v. McEvoy, 99 Conn. 427, 122 Atl. 100. Applying these rules to the facts found, we cannot hold that the conclusion of the trial court was erroneous.
No error.
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129 A. 275, 102 Conn. 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-beck-conn-1925.