Chase v. Chase

72 Mass. 157
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 Mass. 157 (Chase v. Chase) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Chase, 72 Mass. 157 (Mass. 1856).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

The report in this case presents a question of law for the consideration of the whole court, preliminary in its nature, which, if decided against the plaintiff, precludes the necessity of considering other questions raised at the trial.

It is an action of tort for verbal slander; and the preliminary question is, whether the plaintiff can maintain such an action in her own name and right, as a feme sole, under the circumstances disclosed by the report. Job Chase, the defendant, now an old man, lives, and for his whole life, or for many years, has lived, at Harwich in the county of Barnstable. The plaintiff, Mary Chase, was married on the 20th of November 1833, at Enfield in Massachusetts, to Darius Chase, son of the defend ant; they first went to live at Harwich, and lived at that place some time, and afterwards at various places, and ultimately at Weston in this state. There was evidence tending to show that Darius Chase, the husband of the plaintiff, was living at Weston in Massachusetts not long before the proceedings hereinafter mentioned were instituted in the county of Cumberland in the State of Maine.

By the record produced by the defendant, it appears that the husband of the plaintiff, Darius Chase, filed a libel for divorce against his wife in Maine on the 16th of March 1852. It was entered at the supreme judicial court in Cumberland county at April term 1852, and continued to October term following, and personal notice to the wife ordered. In the libel, the libellant is [158]*158described as of Portland; no residence of the libellee is stated; but it appears by the record that she was served with notice as a resident of Palmer, Massachusetts.

In looking at this libel, it is manifest that the grounds set forth are not such as would be grounds of divorce a vinculo under the laws of Massachusetts. They consist of allegations of ill temper, neglect of duty to her husband and children, and actual cruel treatment, and frequently leaving his home, and one instance is specified in October 1849, two and a half years before the filing of the libel. To this libel the respondent appeared and filed an answer, denying the allegations against her, and alleging various species and acts of misconduct on his part towards her. The court, on a hearing in December 1852, granted the divorce prayed for by the husband.

By another record of the same court, at the same October term 1852, it appears that a cross libel, or counter libel, was filed by the wife against the husband on the 25th of October 1852. On this an order of notice was granted, returnable on the 9th of November 1852. The libel avers good conduct on her part as a faithful wife, and alleges a long course of abusive and cruel conduct on his part, and prays for a divorce and the custody of her children, and alimony. It sets forth no facts which would be a legal cause for a divorce a vinculo in Massachusetts; but each alleges the misconduct of the other as causes for which the libellants in both cases pray for divorce, by force of the statute of Maine authorizing the court to grant divorces, where the same are reasonable and proper, conducive to domestic harmony, and for the good of the parties, and the welfare and morality of society. The respondent appeared and answered, and upon a hearing, the court, on the 7th of December 1852, found the material allegations satisfactorily proved, and decreed a divorce from the bonds of matrimony for the causes alleged, custody of children to the wife, and a sum payable to the wife towards support of the children, and she to retain articles of personal property and wearing apparel of the children.

When this case came on to be tried, it appearing upon the evidence, and being admitted, that, at the time of the allege[159]*159d slander in October 1851, and at the time the cause of action accrued, the plaintiff was a married woman, it was objected that the action could not be maintained. To this the plaintiff answered, that after the cause of action accrued, and before the commencement of this action, a decree of divorce was passed by the supreme judicial court of Maine in December 1852, by which the bonds of matrimony between her and the said Darius were dissolved.

The defendant insisted that, the right of action and the right of damages having vested in the husband, although during coverture the wife must be joined for conformity, even the divorce would not devest the husband’s right and transfer the exclusive right to the wife. We should certainly have great doubts whether such a proposition could be maintained, because the damage is personal to the wife ; and we should be inclined to think the action would survive to her solely, as in case of the death of the husband, if not recovered, released or satisfied before the divorce. But the defendant, not relying much on this answer, submitted another, namely, that the divorce granted by the supreme judicial court of the State of Maine, at the suit of the wife, was void, because the same court, at the same term, had granted a divorce at the instance of the husband, by which the bonds of matrimony were already dissolved, on the ground that she was the guilty party.

But it being manifest that a valid decree of divorce a vinculo, at the suit of either party, would place her in the condition of a feme sole, it would be immaterial, for the purposes of this trial, whether the decree was obtained at the instance of the wifé or of the husband; if the decree at the suit of the husband was valid, it would be equally efficacious so far as this action is concerned. It did not appear that the plaintiff had ever resided with her husband in the State of Maine. The question therefore came before the court, whether the action could be maintained; and the court was requested to direct, as on a motion for a nonsuit, that the action could not be maintained. With a view to this motion, the defendant offered in evidence a declaration of the plaintiff, made on one occasion, [160]*160after these divorces, that her husband went to reside in the State of Maine for the purpose of obtaining a divorce from her. But there was no evidence that she went there for that purpose, unless it appears from said records, and from the fact of her being described in the writ in this suit, commenced soon after the divorce, as of Boston, Massachusetts.

The defendant also offered in evidence the declarations of the husband, to show that he went to reside in Maine for the purpose of obtaining a divorce, but this was rejected.

Upon the records aforesaid, and the evidence above stated, the defendant contended, and requested the court to rule, that the plaintiff could not maintain this action in her own name.

It was thereupon agreed by the parties, for the purpose of trying the facts and merits, that the court should overrule the objection. pro forma, reserving to the defendant, should the. verdict be against him, the right to carry this question before the whole court for their adjudication. If, in their opinion, the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain her action as sole plaintiff, the verdict is to be set aside, and judgment rendered for the defendant.

The question was upon the validity of these divorces, or of either of them, to dissolve the bonds of matrimony. So far as this depended on matter of fact, it would have been, without the above agreement, a question for the jury.

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

Related

Washington v. Washington
302 P.2d 569 (California Supreme Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 Mass. 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-chase-mass-1856.