Bergheimer v. Bergheimer
This text of 17 D.C. App. 381 (Bergheimer v. Bergheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Two questions arise and have been discussed in this case : (1) Whether the parties to a'suit for divorce are competent to testify as witnesses on their own behalf; and (2) whether, with or without his own deposition, the appellant has supported the allegations of his petition by proof sufficient to entitle himself to the divorce which he seeks.
But it is argued that the case of Burdette v. Burdette has been overruled by the decision of this court in the case of Lusby v. Capital Traction Company, 12 App. D. C. 295. We do not so understand it. In this latter case it was held that in an action by husband and wife to recover damages for injuries to the wife caused by the alleged negligence of the defendant, the wife was a competent witness. But that was not a case of divorce; and divorce, as shown in the case of Burdette v. Burdette, is a matter sui generis, standing apart and alone, not affected and not intended to be affected by general statutes applicable to ordinary cases. In the case of Lusby v. Capital Traction Company this court said, that “ we are clearly of opinion that the general enabling provision (of sections 876 and 877 of the Revised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia) applies to and operates in actions by or against husband and wife as it does in actions by or against other parties, and that husbands and wives are competent to testify for and against each other, subject to the exceptions provided in the statute.” But a proceeding for divorce is not an action by or against a husband and wife; it is a special statutory action by one against the other; and our decision in the case of Lusby v. Capital Traction Company is neither by its letter or by its spirit applicable to it.
[386]*386We are of opinion, therefore, that the court below was entirely right in its ruling to suppress the depositions both of the appellant and of the appellee.
The letter is badly written, quite incoherent, and perhaps it might be characterized as hysterical. The writer seems to have been pregnant at the time with her second child, and some allowance should be made for her physical condition. She was moreover in straitened financial circumstances, without employment, dependent upon her parents for support, and without any support whatever from her husband — conditions which fully appear from the record. In this letter there is an expression of purpose on the part of the writer never to leave Richmond in order to follow her husband; and this expression it is which is relied on as constituting evidence of desertion. We can not so regard it. There might be various satisfactory explanations of it; and if we were at liberty to look into the suppressed depositions, [387]*387we would find ample explanation in the wayward habits of the appellant as understood by the appellee, and in his failure to provide her with the necessary means wherewith to make the change of domicil. The letter taken as a whole is evidently not an expression of absolute and final determination on the part of the writer to desert. It is at most only the indignant protest of a wife who regarded herself as having been injured by the conduct or misconduct of her husband; and it certainly did not cut off the opportunity for explanation and further negotiation. It is very evident that the appellant himself did not regard it as a finality; for he took no action on it for twenty years, although he allowed matters to drift for all that time without much concern for his wife and children. The interviews and the communications, direct or indirect, which he had with his wife in more recent years, are inconsistent with the theory of a desertion complete and final in 1879. We think that it would be greatly to be regretted if the law were such that the most solemn relation of human life could be disrupted upon testimony so slight and so unsatisfactory as that afforded by this letter.
In conclusion, it is our opinion that there was no error in the decree of dismissal of the appellant’s petition rendered by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in this case, and that the decree should be affirmed, with costs. And it is so ordered.
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