Burr v. Burr

7 Hill & Den. 207
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Hill & Den. 207 (Burr v. Burr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burr v. Burr, 7 Hill & Den. 207 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Nelson, Ch. J.

The points in this case have been very much narrowed by the concession of counsel that they could not, as the proof stood, expect to sustain that part of the appeal going to the decree of separation a mensa et tlioro on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment. The principal question in the case, therefore, is as to the fitness and propriety of the allowance of alimony made by the courts below, for the support and maintenance of the wife during the separation.

The chancellor and vice chancellor have concurred substantially in the sum to be allowed; but the appellant insists that the allowance is unreasonable, extravagant, and beyond any authority conferred by law.

The statute provides that upon decreeing a separation &c., the court may make such order and decree for the suitable support and maintenance of the wife Spc., by the husband, or out of his property, as may appear just and proper.” (2 R. S. 147, § 54.)

The proofs in the case establish that the estate of the husband, real and personal, exceeds a million of dollars: That there are no children of this marriage surviving, and but one of a former marriage, (a wandering, unfortunate son, whom the father seems to have abandoned,) having any special or family claims upon the property; That a few years after the [210]*210marriage with the respondent, which was in 1799, the husband received some $7000 as the distributive share of his wife in her father’s estate: That she was a woman of education and refinement, of the first respectability, at the time of her marriage, and has sustained that character in an eminent degree throughout the whole course of her life: That a short time after the marriage, without any fault or provocation on her part, the appellant commenced a course of systematic cruelty and oppression towards her; of foul mouthed abuse and brutal violence, the very recital of which is unfit for a court of justice, and which continued, with few intervals, until her constitution and health sunk under the weight of her sufferings, and she was at last compelled to flee for refuge to her family connexions and friends. This was in 1835; since which time she has lived without any provision being made for her support, until 1841, some six years, when the present bill was filed, and an allowance of $2000 a year ordered pending the litigation.

The scenes of suffering through which this lady has passed during her cohabitation with the appellant, are so shocking and revolting to our nature as to induce one to discredit the account, were it not partially admitted in the answer, and most abundantly substantiated by the witnesses. It is not important to dwell upon this point of the case, however, as the decree for a separation a mensa et thoro—the justice and propriety of which, as already mentioned, are not questioned—fully justifies her withdrawal from his protection, and entitles her to a reasonable and liberal provision out of his property for support and maintenance. The only question is as to the amount.

The counsel for the appellant seemed to suppose that some question of law was involved in this inquiry, arising upon the statute. If they meant that the discretion of the court to be exercised in determining what amount of alimony would afford a “suitable support and maintenance” and be “just and'proper” under the circumstances of the case, is a judicial discretion, and not ap arbitrary one, I agree to the proposition. But beyond this, there is nothing like a question of law that can be raised upon the statute.

[211]*211The general rule is, that the wife is entitled to a support corresponding to her rank and condition in life, and the fortune of the husband. The law has fixed no definite proportion of his estate to be allotted for permanent alimony, in case of separation ; and the court must therefore look to all the circumstances of the particular case, as no two are alike, in order to award what is fair and just between the parties. Where the delinquency of the husband has been established, and the wife is the injured party, driven by his cruelty from the comfort of domestic enjoyments, she should be liberally supported.

I find it a settled principle in the ecclesiastical courts, which have exclusive jurisdiction of these questions in England, to make a more liberal alloivance in case of aggravating circumstances in the conduct of the husband, and where no imputation exists against the wife, than in other cases. (2 Phill. 44, 46, 110; 2 Addams, 2.) So the amount is always influenced more or less by the fact that the husband has a family of children to support. (2 Phill. 110; 3 id. 259.) In many cases the third part of the annual income of the husband has been assigned as permanent alimony; in others a moiety. (2 Roper On Husb. & Wife, 310, note, Jacob's ed.; Shelford On Marr. & Div. 592.) The cases referred to by the court below

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Bluebook (online)
7 Hill & Den. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burr-v-burr-nysupct-1843.