Beebe v. Beebe

10 Iowa 133
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 9, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 10 Iowa 133 (Beebe v. Beebe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beebe v. Beebe, 10 Iowa 133 (iowa 1859).

Opinion

WRIG-ht, C. J.

It is provided by tbe 7th clause of section 1482 of tbe Code, that divorces from tbe bonds of matrimony may be decreed against tbe husband, “when be is guilty of such inhuman treatment as to endanger tbe life of bis wife.” And then section 1483, enacts that a husband may [135]*135obtain a divorce from the wife for a like cause. The question in this case is, whether taking the bill as true, complainant is entitled to a divorce, under this provision of the Code, or in other words whether he shows such inhuman treatment as endangers his life.

As a specific cause of divorce this clause is the definition of that degree of cruelty which in this State entitles a party to a divorce. The language used differs from that found in the statutes of any other state, but is more like that of Pennsylvania than any to which our attention has been directed. The words of their statute are, “when the husband shall have by cruel and barbarous treatment, endangered his wife’s life.” In Connecticut, the words are, “intolerable cruelty in Massachusetts, “extremo cruelty;” in Kentucky, '“cruel, inhuman and barbarous treatment;” and while the forms of expression in these states are different, and while still other forms are adopted in other states, yet according to Mr. Bishop, they are regarded as having the same legal import, and are construed to mean the same as the sceviiia or cruelty of the ecclesiastical courts of England. Mar. & Div. section 455.

The leading consideration in cases of this character is, that courts interfere, not to punish an offence committed, but to relieve the complaining party from an apprehended danger. Where adultery, wilful desertion, or a conviction of felony is charged, the party asks a divorce, not because of some threatened injury, but on account of something done by the guilty party, which in legal contemplation releases the innocent one from the obligations arising from the contract, and entitles him or her to its dissolution. In the case of cruelty under our statute, the treatment received is not of itself a cause of divorce, and becomes material only as showing a just foundation for the apprehended danger to life. And this cause of divorce is founded on the well recognized law of nature, that the duty of self preservation takes precedence, and that the duties of this relation are not required to be performed in a state of personal danger. Bishop, section 457.

Cruelty is defined to be any conduct, in one of the mar[136]*136ried parties, which furnishes reasonable apprehension that the continuance of the cohabitation would be attended with bodily harm to the other. Evans v. Evans, 1 Hag. C. R. 35; 4. Eng. Ec. 310, 312. Or again, that kind of conduct which endangers the life or health of complainant and renders cohabitation unsafe. Perry v. Perry, 2 Paige 501. Or still again, there must be ill treatment and personal injury, or a reasonable apprehension of personal injury. Words of menace, accompanied by a probability of bodily violence, will be sufficient. Whispell v. Whispell, 4 Barb. 217. There may be legal cruelty without evidence of actual personal violence. Harrott v. Harrott, 7 N. H. 196, and cases there cited. Where words of menace are used, which are merely the language of passion, they are not sufficient to justify the interposition of the court. It is different, however, where they are the expression of a determined malignity, and if likely to bo carried into-effect, will warrant a divorce in order to prevent the threatened mischief, for “assuredly,” says Lord Sto well, “the court is not to wait till the hurt is actually done.” Evans v. Evans, supra, Bishop, section 466, and eases cited in note 1. 'Actual violence is not necessary, and this is said to bo as firmly established as any principle of law can be in England, and the American states generally. Honliston v. Smyth, 2 C. & P. 22; Graecen v. Graecen, 1 Green Ch. 459 ; 11 Harris, Pa. 156 ; 19 Ala. 307. And in Dysart v. Same, 11 Jur. 490, it is stated as a deduction from the leading case of Evans v. Same, supra, “that if austerity of temper, pet-ulence of maimer, rudeness of language, a want of civil attention, occasional sallies of passion, do threaten hodily harm, they amount to legal cruelty.” This idea expressed axiomatically, according to a case much considered in the Common Pleas of Penn., Butler v. Butler, 1 Par. Cas. 329, would be but the assertion of the principle, “that whatever form marital ill treatment assumes, if a continuity of it involves the life or health of the wife, it is legal cruelty.”

Under our statute it is not sufficient that the threatened injury shall create an apprehension of bodily harm, merely, [137]*137but the treatment must endanger the life of the complainant. The language of the statute is, “such inhuman treatment as endangers the life,” &c. Any wilful conduct on the part of the husband, which endangers, and which was designed to endanger the life of the wife, can be nothing less than inhuman treatment. So that when it is once ascertained that because of the conduct of the guilty party, the life of the libel-lant is endangered, the nature of the treatment is inhuman or is legal cruelty. Nor is it necessary that the party, before seeking the aid of the court, shall wait until he or she is in-contestibly and beyond all question satisfied that there is danger to life; but the true inquiry is, whether there is a reasonable apprehension of such danger.

Treatment, as used in the statute, doubtless implies primarily, such inhuman conduct as injures the body, and thus endangers the life. And yet we are by no means prepared to say that any treatment, whether calculated to endanger life, by working upon the mind, or injuring the body, may not bo inhuman, within the meaning of the legislature. Rut this question we need not at present discuss, for in the case before us, the facts charged relate to injuries and wrongs committed and threatened to the person, to the body of the libel-lant. The only question is, whether they are sufficient to entitle the husband to a divorce. Not without some doubt, we have concluded that they are, and that the respondent’s demurrer was properly overruled.

The bill charges repeated instances of injuries to the person of complainant, and that they were committed under circumstances manifesting wilfulness and a deliberate intention on her part to disregard the obligations of the marital relation. If the bill is true, then there can be no pretence that affection dwelt in the household, but on the contrary the wife talked of the death of the husband as an event greatly desired on her part, and over which she was ready to rejoice. She has often said, that she wished he was dead; language which if not intended to be used seriously, certainly shows a reckless disregard of the husbands feelings, and if serious, [138]*138wbo can say that sbe would not execute what her heart desired. Payne v. Same, 4 Humph. 500. And again it is charged that she uses profane and indecent language in the presence of the children, and beats and bruises them in a shameful manner. And this is not irrelevant. 1 Barb. supra, 516, Bishop, section 471, Toume v. Same, 2 La. 452. And that her treatment of petitioner, aside from any physical injuries, have been such as at least to render his life intolerable.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Iowa 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beebe-v-beebe-iowa-1859.