Caswell v. Caswell

24 Ill. App. 548, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 713
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 26, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 Ill. App. 548 (Caswell v. Caswell) 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
Caswell v. Caswell, 24 Ill. App. 548, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 713 (Ill. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Conger, J.

This is a bill in the nature of a bill of review brought by appellee in the Piatt Circuit Court, December 22, 1883, to impeach and annul a decree of divorce obtained by appellant in said court at its September term, 1869, on the ground of fraud.

Appellant and ^appellee were married at Montevideo, Uruguay, August 15, 1862, where they continued to reside until 1863, when they removed to California, and remained there until April 10, 1865, at which date Caswell sent his wife to her father’s, home in Brooklyn, Hew York. Upon the same day he mailed a letter to her father, James M. Willis, which says, among other things:

“My wife and boy left me to-day for Hew York in pretty good health. I could not leave to go with them although should liked to have gone. The doctor says a sea voyage will do her good and she must have exercise when she reaches Hew York and not take much medicine as she has taken too much already. I can not write to explain many things to you now which I will when 1 see you, although I know that you have lived with her longer than I have, but I think I understand her ease pretty well. I shall be very lonesome now for a while. Good-bye. From your son,

“D. H. Caswell.”

Appellant continued to correspond with his wife and in the summer of 1866 visited her in Brooklyn and during the fall following they both removed to Cairo, Blinois, where they lived together until March, 1867, when appellant again sent his wife to her father’s home in Brooklyn, continuing a correspond ence with her and occasionally sending her money, until he again visited her in Brooklyn in October, 1867, their daughter Catharine having been born some weeks before on September 29, 1867. After remaining with his wife until November 14, 1867, appellant left Brooklyn with the avowed intention of returning to Illinois to work at his trade of millwright, which he did, andón the 17th of the same month writes to her from Decatur, Illinois, that he had arrived in safety, etc., and expresses a hope that the baby and herself are well, etc. From this date until ^November 15, 1868, he continues to correspond with her, writing to her about once a week such letters as would ordinarily pass between husband and wife, informing her as to his business prospects, where he had worked, inquiring as to the health of herself and child, acknowledging receipt of letters from her and occasionally sending her money.

On the 15th of November, 1868, appellant writes to his wife from Decatur telling her he is going.to work the next morning in a mill near Taylorville and instructs her to write him there, sends her §o and says he will send her more when he gets through with the job, and as soon as he knows what he will do, or where he shall go, he will let her know,, etc., and concluded: “I hope this will find you and baby well, as it leaves me at present, * * * so good bye—with a kiss for baby, from your husband,

“D. H. Caswell.”

Fifteen days thereafter, on the 1st day of December, 1868, appellant .filed in the" Piatt Circuit Court a bill for divorce against appellee; charging that on December 10, 1865, his-wife without cause deserted him and had for more that two-years past persisted in such desertion.

Having thus set in motion the legal machinery which lie-hoped would sever the marital relation existing between himself and appellee, appellant six days thereafter—to prevent his victim from being uneasy or suspicious at the long silence that was to follow, wrote her the following letter:

“ Taylokville, Dec. 6, 1868.

11 Dear Wife: I will try and write you to-day, as I have found out what I think that I shall do this winter, and where I shall go, as I told you in my last, that I was waiting to see some men that I expected here and they have come and I have made arrangements with them to go to Mexico. They are going to build a mill there and as I talk Spanish and can do the work on the mill and understand quartz mills too, as it is to be a quartz mill, they offer me §150 per month and board, so I think that the best thing I can do is to go. Mo doubt but that you will think it is a good ways off, but what is the difference whether I am here or there, if I can do better there than here. I think it is the best thing to go, for a man can not do anything without money, that you know as well as I do, and if I live, I think I shall do well there with the wages and I can save something to come home with in the spring. We shall start in the morning at six o’clock. There is five of us, the two men that I am going with and two others besides myself, and the men’s names that I go with is Williamsons, and we shall go from here across the country into Texas and from there to Mexico with teams, and we expect that it will take us six weeks or two months to get there this time of the year, and if I have a chance to write on the way I will do so and if I have not, you will have to wait till I get there.

“ They say it is a wild country that we shall go through, and if so, I don’t expect that I shall have any chance to send any letters back. We have teams enough, so I shall take all my things, tools along, as well.

“Mow, you will not go to feeling bad about mv going, for.I have considered it all over many times before I made up my mind to go; so, as we leave early in the morning, you need not write till you hear from me again, for I have forgotten the name of the place where we are going to, so I can not tell it to you now, although it is a Spanish name. I will send you §5 by this, for it is all I can spare now, for I have not got much and Walter Lovejoy owes me §20, and I will write to him and tell him to send it to you; so if you want it before you get any more from me, send to him for it and tell him that,I wrote to you to do so, and if he can not send it all at once, he can send you §5 at a time till he pays you what he owes me ; for he has not paid me anything, nor sent me any money either; so I think that you can get along with the §5 I send you and the 820 he owes me till you hear from me again, although you need not feel bad if you do not hear from me till I get there, for if it is as they say, I don’t suppose I shall have any chance to. send any letters back. So take good care of the baby and don’t spoil her, and when I get back I shall want to see a fine child of her.

“ So remember me to all, and I hope this will find you all well, as it leaves me. So good-bye. From, your husband,

“D. H. Caswell.

£‘P. S.—Write to Jane and Walt, and I think they will send you that money when you want it. I will tell them to do so..

“ Dar.”

Appellant, however, instead of going to Mexico, in January following, before any decree had been rendered upon his bill for divorce or any evidence had been taken thereon, went to Dayton, Ohio, and there married. His own explanation of this proceeding is as follows. “ I was married to my present wife in January, 1869. It happened in this way: I was called away from here, on business, to Cincinnati. I had no intention of marrying when I left. I told Bixby I was going away, and would, perhaps, be gone some little time, and I supposed that this decree would be granted, as I understood from McWilliams, and to see him and get the papers.

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Related

Carlisle v. Carlisle
55 N.W. 673 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ill. App. 548, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caswell-v-caswell-illappct-1886.