Brown v. Brown

177 A.2d 380, 94 R.I. 23, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 31, 1962
DocketEx. No. 10221
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 A.2d 380 (Brown v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Brown, 177 A.2d 380, 94 R.I. 23, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 23 (R.I. 1962).

Opinion

*24 Condon, C. J.

This is a wife’s petition-for divorce from bed and board. The cause was heard in the superior court on the respondent’s pleas to the jurisdiction of that court over the subject matter. After the hearing the trial justice overruled the pleas in a written decision to which he later filed what he termed an “addendum” supplying certain inadvertent omissions in the decision. The cause is here on the respondent’s bill of exceptions to the decision and also on his appeal from the addendum which he filed because of doubt as to the effect thereof on his exceptions.

In our opinion the cause is properly here on the exceptions. Since the matters alluded to in the addendum do not materially alter the decision, the filing of the addendum may be disregarded in so far as the propriety of appellate proceedings is concerned. The respondent’s appeal therefrom is accordingly dismissed pro- forma.

The pleas to the jurisdiction substantially averred among other things that the marital domicile was in the District of Columbia and that petitioner without just cause had left such domicile. The petitioner contended that she had left because of certain cruel treatment by respondent and she testified as to the nature and extent of such treatment. The respondent also testified concerning the same in a vein that tended to minimize if not to contradict petitioner’s testimony. There was no corroboration of petitioner since the incidents upon which she based her claim of extreme cruelty occurred in the privacy of the parties’ apartment, in the District of Columbia. However, on the evidence the trial justice found that while the marital domicile was in the District of Columbia petitioner nevertheless was entitled to acquire a separate domicile because of respondent’s cruel treatment and that she had lawfully established a domicile in Rhode Island.

*25 . Under his exceptions respondent contends that the trial justice erred. He argues that the law permits a wife to acquire a separate domicile on the ground of the husband’s cruel treatment only if such cruelty is sufficient to warrant a divorce or judicial separation. He claims that the evidence upon which the trial justice relied falls short of such requirement. On the other hand petitioner contends, if we understand her, that such is not the law and that a less quantum of proof of cruel treatment would warrant in the discretion of the trial justice a finding that justifiable cause existed for the wife to acquire a separate domicile. And she argues further that this is especially SO' in a case where as here she is merely seeking a judicial separation and not an absolute divorce.

It is not clear from the trial justice’s decision upon what view of the law he relied. He reviews the evidence at great length therein and expressly finds as a fact that on April 14, 1957 respondent did commit an assault and battery upon her. However, he also reviews certain other evidence relating to letters which respondent had received from a former wife and which apparently precipitated the assault. Based on the testimony of petitioner regarding these letters he concluded that: “The respondent was apparently still emotionally involved with his first wife when he married the petitioner. He had not severed all ties; he was certainly not ready to be married to someone else.”

Whether the evidence reasonably supports such a conclusion we need not determine. We shall assume that it does. Based on this assumption it would appear that the trial justice found petitioner’s justification for leaving respondent in that finding of fact coupled with the fact of the assault and battery. The question then is did the trial justice equate such conduct with extreme cruelty as a ground for divorce or with a kind of cruelty of less gravity. And if the latter, did he apply the correct rule of law to the evidence.

*26 While the law is now settled, at least in the United States, that for justifiable cause a wife may acquire a separate domicile of her own for the purpose of divorce, it is not settled whether such right is absolute or conditional. See Note, 39 A.L.R. 706-712. However, it has been stated by one leading text writer on the subject that, “Most of the decisions indicate that conduct less than sufficient to amount of itself to ground for divorce or judicial separation, in' the absence of separation by consent, will not support the acquisition of a separate domicile or residence by the wife.” 2 Nelson, Divorce and Annulment (2d ed.), §21.24, p. 660. See also Keezer, Marriage and Divorce (3d ed.), §60, p. 90.

Such was the view expressed by this court over a century ago in Ditson v. Ditson, 4 R. I. 87, and it has been reiterated since in White v. White, 18 R. I. 292. In Ditson we said that the domicile of the husband is by law that of the wife but that when he commits an offense or is guilty of such dereliction of his marital duty as entitles her to have the marital bond either partially or totally dissolved she may acquire a separate domicile of her own. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the conduct of respondent which petitioner relies upon here as a cause for leaving the marital domicile in the District of Columbia and adopting a separate domicile of her own must be of such enormity as to amount to the ground of extreme cruelty.

If the trial justice did not so conceive the rule of law to be applied to the evidence he was in error. On the other hand if he applied the correct rule the question remains whether the facts as he found them on the conflicting evidence constituted extreme cruelty within the meaning of that term as this court has heretofore construed it. In answering this question we shall not weigh the conflicting evidence but shall assume the facts to be as he found' them, namely, that respondent was guilty of an assault and battery, that he was “still emotionally involved with his- first *27 wife” when he married petitioner, and that he had not severed all his former marital ties.

These findings were based principally on petitioner’s testimony of certain events in the parties’ apartment in the District of Columbia on Sunday morning, April 14, 1957. It appears therefrom that shortly before noon the parties were engaged in a conversation concerning certain letters to respondent from his first wife largely about his son by that marriage but also containing allusions to or reminiscences of incidents which she and respondent had apparently enjoyed together during such marriage. Whether she was thereby attempting to reawaken the dormant affection of a once happy past or to fan into flame again the embers of a passion that had not wholly burned out with their divorce is not evident from the letters. But to petitioner who had read them and apparently pondered over them they were eloquent with such an implication.

The upshot of the conversation was an angry altercation in which she charged respondent with an immoral relationship with his first wife whereupon he struck her and she fled from the apartment to the apartment of an acquaintance in the same building. An hour or so later she returned and started to pack her traveling bag preparatory to leaving respondent because, as she said, of her fear of him while he was so enraged.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Douglas v. Douglas
306 A.2d 847 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1973)
Poirier v. Poirier
267 A.2d 390 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 A.2d 380, 94 R.I. 23, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brown-ri-1962.