Carter v. Carter

37 Ill. App. 219, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 690
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 9, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 Ill. App. 219 (Carter v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Carter, 37 Ill. App. 219, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 690 (Ill. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Gary, P. J.

While Judge Garnett was still a member of this court we studied the evidence shown in the voluminous record of this case, with all the care that the utmost hopes or fears of the parties themselves could exact.

That evidence need not be recited or summarized; it is enough to say that it is' such that the verdict of the jury, upon the issues joined between the parties, is final and conclusive, if there be no fatal error in the proceedings through which that verdict was reached. With, therefore, no further reference to the evidence than may be necessary in discussing the other questions in the case, the assignment of error, upon the denial of the motion for a new trial, is overruled.

The other questions can be discussed most perspicuously by taking up the case here in the order of its presentation in the Superior Court, and reviewing them with the aspect they then bore.

The appellant filed in that court on the 5th day of November, 1887, her original bill for a divorce from the appellee, and on the 12th day of March, 1888, an amended bill, which took the place of the original. This amended bill charges cruelty, with specifications of the particular instances, as the ground for relief. It alleges that finally her health was broken down; that by the advice of eminent physicians, she, in October, 1885, went to Europe for the second time during that year, having first gone in August. And that the defendant, “ though a man of large means, failed and refused to furnish any portion of the moneys necessary for the support of complainant during her said trip in Europe; but complainant was obliged to sell her wardrobe to defray part of her expenses, and to rely upon means derived from her mother and a lady friend for her support while so in Europe.”

This allegation the answer of the appellee denied, not on!y by the general traverse, but substantially in the terms in which it was made. The answer also denied all charges of cruelty, and by a replication all the matters charged in the bill and not admitted by the answer were put in issue. She was her own first witness. On her direct examination the only testimony which bears any relation to the matter of the allegation quoted, is, that in a conversation between the parties the day before she sailed on her first trip, in which she told him she was going the next day, she says: “ I told him I intended to support myself in whatever way I could, get employment if I could. He did not offer me any money then, and he did not ask me any questions as to what money I had.”

Condensing from her testimony on her cross-examination, she says that when she went in August, her mother gave her a part of the money she had then, and part of it she had saved from time to time, and then, with a good deal of uncertainty as to the period to which the testimony relates—for it appears she came back in September, 1886, went again, and finally returned in ¡November, 1886—she says she received no money from her husband, that she can remember of, while absent in Europe; none from any gentleman other than her husband; that she had money, but don’t think she can tell within §25,000 how much; don’t know that such an amount of money as over §60,000 was remitted to her from ¡New York between October, 1885, and ¡November, 1886, to her credit; had money, and it must have been sent to her from ¡New York; always had a letter of credit. In reply to this cross-examination, the counsel of the appellant sought to prove, by her, on re-direct examination, that a Mrs. Constable, who seems from other parts of the record, to be a resident of ¡New York City, “ was a wealthy lady in her own right; that she was childless herself; that Mrs. Carter related to Mrs. Constable to a great extent the nature of her troubles; that she became interested in Mrs. Carter, and assured Mrs. Carter that she would assist her financially on her trip; that, as Mrs. Carter understood, that assistance was to be sent to the banks, and when it came from the banks, it was to be a full verification of what she understood Mrs. Constable was to do, and received it with that understanding.”

This not being permitted by the court is the subject of the first exception taken on the trial, and is now for consideration.

The offer, as then made, as has been seen, was not that the fact as to where the money came from could be proved by what took place between the two ladies before it came, but the belief of Mrs. Carter as to where the money came from, and why she so believed, was the matter to be proved by the circumstances detailed. The argument to the Superior Court was, “counsel (for the appellee) wants to draw the inference, because she received money not from her mother, that it was from somebody for improper purposes. Mow, we propose to show that she related her troubles to Mrs. Constable; that Mrs. Constable told her that she would aid her, and that as she was at the time receiving, she understood it came from Mrs. Constable.” There was no issue in the case as to her belief where the money came from, but the testimony being specifically offered for the one purpose of proving her belief and the ground for it, if it was not admissible for that purpose, the rejection of it was not error. Byler v. Asher, 47 Ill. 101; State v. Neville, 6 Jones’ Law, N. C. 425; Beard v. Dedolph, 29 Wis. 136; In re Story, 20 Ill. App. 185.

This last case was reversed in the Supreme Court (120 Ill. 244), but this point left untouched. And see a general discussion on the subject, Sec. 675 et seq., 1 Thomp. on Trials.

True, the appellee in his answer had charged adultery, but if this testimony could have any relevancy to that charge, the appellant certainly did not intend to then enter upon her reply to that charge, and thus, under the rules of practice (1 Greenleaf Ev., Sec. 74), perhaps be compelled to exhaust her evidence on that subject, before any evidence was put in against her. Nor was the offered testimony in reply to, or explanation of, any circumstances elicited by the cross-examination. The amount of money she had in Europe was a fact independent of the source it came from. And as touching her credibility as a witness, testifying to alleged acts of cruelty—the only matter in issue at this stage of the trial—can it be believed that she would have strengthened that, by stating her belief that a rich and childless woman, moved by sympathy and pity, had supplied her with money to an amount exceeding the salary of the president of the United States in the same period? The admission of this testimony would have involved this inconsistency: that under color of proving a fact not within the issue, hearsay and incompetent, as will be hereafter shown, evidence of a fact in issue might be given, even when counsel offering it did not claim that it was admissible as evidence of such fact. In another connection it will be necessary to determine whether testimony of this character can be received as evidence of the fact of the source of the money.

The next thing that claims attention in the order of the events on the trial, is the refusal of the Superior Court to permit witnesses—the mother and the maid of the appellant—to testify to declarations of the appellant on several occasions, when she came of nights, and in nightdress, crying, to their rooms. That she did so come, was testified to without objection. It is not, therefore, a question whether evidence of that coming was admissible.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Ill. App. 219, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-carter-illappct-1890.