Davis v. . Davis

75 N.Y. 221, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 850
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 75 N.Y. 221 (Davis v. . Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. . Davis, 75 N.Y. 221, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 850 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The plaintiff commenced her action for a separation, upon the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment by the husband and that his conduct towards her rendered it unsafe and improper for her to cohabit with him. The specifications, upon which she founded her complaint, were that the defendant had, during several years, been guilty of criminal solicitation of the female servants employed in the family, and had, on numerous occasions, attempted to debauch them ; and also that he had indecently exposed the person of his daughter, an infant of about three and a-half years of age. There were two children of the marriage, — a son of about the age of thirteen years and the daughter, before referred to, — and the complaint charged that the defendant was an unfit and improper person to have their custody and education. The relief demanded was a judgment of separation from bed and board, and awarding to the plaintiff the custody of the *223 children, with a provision for a reasonable support of the plaintiff and her children, out of the property of the defendant. The judge before whom, the case was tried found that the charge of criminal solicitation of servants by the defendant was true. He made no finding in respect to the charge of improper treatment of the daughter, and the evidence did not tend to establish this charge. The court denied the relief asked, so far as it related to a separation, on the ground that the facts alleged and proved did not establish either of the causes alleged in the complaint, for which a separation was demanded, and refused to make any provision for the support of the plaintiff. The court did not, however, dismiss the complaint, but directed judgment awarding the custody of the children to the plaintiff and requiring the defendant to pay her annually the sum of $468 for their support and maintenance. The judge, in his findings, states that the plaintiff is a fit and suitable person to have the custody, care, and education of the children, and that their welfare requires that they should remain with the mother.

The question presented for our determination is whether the court, in an action for a limited divorce brought by the wife against the husband, after having denied the principal relief sought, on the ground that the evidence does not establish any of the causes for which a separation can be adjudged, may nevertheless, by its judgment in the action, award to the plaintiff the custody of the children of the marriage, and make provision for their maintenance out of the property of the husband.

This question depends exclusively upon the statutes authorizing and regulating divorces. These statutes point out with much detail the cases in which divorces may be granted, the proceedings to be taken, and the decree which the court is authorized to make. The authority exercised by the court, in this case, is supposed to be conferred by the fifty-fifth section of the article of the Bevised Statutes, relating to separations or limited divorces (2 R. S., 147), and it must be admitted that, considered independently and without *224 reference to the other sections of the same statute, it is in terms broad enough to justify the court in granting the partial relief awarded in this case. That section is as follows : “ Although a decree for separation from bed and board be not made, the court may make such order or decree for the support and maintenance of the wife and her children, or any of them, by the husband, or out of his property, as the nature of the case renders suitable and proper.” But notwithstanding the comprehensive and general language of this section, a reference to its origin and to the associated sections of the statute, will show that it was not intended, to confer upon the court the power to make a decree for the support and maintenance of the wife or her children by the husband, in a suit brought by the wife for a separation, when the evidence does not establish any of the causes for which, under the statute, a separation may be decreed.

On the 30th of March, 1787, the Legislature passed an act authorizing divorces to be granted, in cases of adultery. This was the first statute, in this State, on the subject of divorces. On the 13th of April, 1813, an act was passed, providing, in greater detail, for divorces for adultery, and for the first time authorizing divorces a mensa et thoro, on a bill filed by the wife and specifying the same causes for which limited divorces are now allowed.

The provisions in the act of 1813, on the subject of limited divorces, are mainly contained in sections 10 and 11 of the act. Section 10 authorizes the filing of a bill by the wife, specifying therein particularly the circumstances on which she relies, “ and praying such relief as she may think herself entitled to.” Section 11 provides that “ in case it shall appear” to the court that the defendant is guilty of such cruel and inhuman treatment towards her as renders it unsafe and improper for her to cohabit with him, or that he has abandoned her, and refuses and neglects to provide for her, “ it shall and may be lawful for the Court of Chancery to decree a separation from bed and board forever thereafter, or for a limited term, as shall seem just and reasonable, or to make *225 such other decree, in the premises, as the nature and circumstances of the case require; and (the section proceeds) whether the court shall decree a separation from bed and board or not, to make such order and decree for the suitable support and maintenance of the wife and her children, or apd of them, by the husband or out of his property as the nature of the case and the circumstances of the parties render suitable and proper, in the opinion of the chancellor.” It will be observed that section 55 of the Eeviscd Statutes is nearly a literal transcript from section 11 of the act of 1813. Indeed the provisions of the act of 1813 are the basis of the article of the Eeviscd Statutes, on the subject of limited divorces. That article is, in the main, a re-enactment of the act of 1813, separated into an additional number of sections. It is clear that the authority, conferred upon the court by the act of 1813, to make a decree for the maintenance of the complainant or her children, in an action for separation, when no decree for separation was made, was confined to cases where cruel and inhuman treatment, or other cause of divorce, should be made to appear to the court. The language of the eleventh section is that “ in case it shall appear to the court ” that the charges are sustained, then “it shall and may be lawful,” etc.

The design of the clause in the act of 1813, now forming the fifty-fifth section of the Eeviscd Statutes, may have been to provide for cases where the wife, although entitled to a decree of separation, should choose to waive her right thereto,insisting only on a provision for the maintenance of herself and her children.

It cannot be presumed that the Legislature, when it incorporated i.ito the Eevised Statutes the provision of the act of 1813, now constituting the fifty-fifth section of the act relating to divorces, intended to enlarge the scope or purpose of the original enactment, or to authorize the incidental relief mentioned in that section to be given, except in the cases where it was obtainable under the act of 1813. “ Where

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.Y. 221, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-davis-ny-1878.