Fulton v. Fulton

36 Miss. 517
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 Miss. 517 (Fulton v. Fulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton v. Fulton, 36 Miss. 517 (Mich. 1858).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This bill was filed in the Chancery Court for Madison county, by a husband against his wife, for a divorce from the bond of matrimony. • The alleged ground for the relief was wilful and obstinate desertion, continued for the period of three years. The answer denied, fully and specifically, the charge of desertion. And at the hearing, upon the bill, answer, and proofs, adduced by both parties, a decree was rendered for the defendant, and the bill was dismissed. The complainant, thereupon, appealed.

A motion to dismiss was pending, when the cause was argued and submitted, which was also submitted at the same time. It is proper, therefore, before entering upon an investigation of the merits, that the grounds for the motion should be examined. These are, that the act, in regard to the proceeding for a divorce, has made no provision, by appeal or otherwise, for a revision of the decree therein pronounced; and that the statute regulating appeals from decrees in chancery does not apply to such a proceeding.

The Statute of 1822, gave to the Court of Chancery, established under the first constitution of this State, full jurisdiction in all cases of divorce, and provided that the like process and proceedings should be had and pursued in such causes, as were had and pursued in other chancery causes, except that the answer of the defendant was not to be under oath. This it was, doubtless, competent for the legislature to do. Hence, when the convention, which adopted the present constitution, assembled, according to the system then prevalent, the power over the subject of divorce was a branch of [520]*520the chancery jurisdiction. It is clear that it was so considered by the convention. In fact it is apparent from Art. 4, § 16, of the Revised Constitution, that matters of divorce were considered and treated as subjects of equity cognizance; in regard to which, jurisdiction vested in the Superior Court of Chancery under the general grant of “jurisdiction in all matters of equity.” And such has always been the construction given to the provisions of the constitution, by which the Superior Court of Chancery was created; and concurrent equity jurisdiction, in certain cases, conferred upon the circuit courts.

The 16th section of Art. 4 was abrogated and stricken out, by which of necessity the Superior Court of Chancery was abolished, and the concurrent jurisdiction vested in the circuit courts withdrawn, and in lieu thereof'a section, which provides that, “ Chancery courts, with full jurisdiction in all matters of equity, shall be held in each judicial district, by the circuit judge thereof,” &e., was inserted. And as no law has since been adopted, with the object, or the effect of which is, to put in any court, jurisdiction in cases of divorce, it follows, that, unless jurisdiction in such cases was given to the chancery courts, by said amendment, it is possessed by no other. But we apprehend that the legislature, in proposing the amendment, and the people when they voted for it, intended to give to the chancery courts, the same - jurisdiction which then belonged to the Superior Court of Chancery.

It is manifest that the legislature, in prescribing the mode of procedure in a suit for a divorce, not only considered such a suit as a proceeding in chancery, but went upon the ground that the courts of chancery possessed jurisdiction in matters of divorce. Art. 18, p. 335, Rev. Code. It hence follows that, except in cases where express exceptions have been made, the laws regulating the practice in the courts of chancery, apply in cases of this character, as in all other cases. And the. statute organizing .these courts and regulating the practice thereof, provides expressly that appeals from any final decree therein, may be taken in term time, or within three years after the rendition of the decree, by either party to the suit, upon complying with the conditions prescribed by law. Rev. Code, p. 555, 556; §§ 103, 108. These directions are too explicit and imperative for this court to disregard them, and to assume that the [521]*521legislature did not intend what they have expressed in very plain terms, and to adopt a different construction, from any view of the injurious consequences which might otherwise ensue. The reasons for the motion are, therefore, untenable.

It is an established and conceded fact, that the appellant and his wife, Mrs. Fulton, were living apart, from the latter part of the year 1854, down to the time of filing this bill, which was the 24th of October, 1857. The alleged desertion, to have entitled the complainant to relief, must, therefore, have occurred as early as the 23d of October, 1854. In view of the facts, and one of the grounds assumed in defence of the decree, it is material to ascertain the true point of time at which the separation commenced.

The facts more directly connected with this question, are as follow. Early in the month of September, 1854, Colonel and Mrs. Fulton were at Cooper’s Well, in Hinds county, where they had been staying some time. Mrs. Fulton was then suffering under an attach of typhoid fever, and, at the suggestion of Dr. Harreld, and upon medical advice, she determined to remove from that place; and accordingly went to the house of Dr. Harreld, w’ho lived some miles from Canton, at which place the appellant resided, in a fine and comfortable mansion. She went there on the 6th of September, and remained some two months, and never afterwards returned and took up her residence at the matrimonial mansion. Colonel Fulton had never, during his connection with the appellee, been neglectful of the duties of a husband: he had uniformly treated her with respect, had been kind and affectionate towards her, and attentive 'and careful of her wants. On the occasion of the removal from the Well, he had made the necessary preparations; and seems to have been under the impression that the appellee was to be removed to their own home in Canton. The expressed object of the ap-pellee, in going to Dr. Harreld’s, was to afford him, who was her favorite physician, a better opportunity for treating her disease; and the determination to go there, was made without consultation with the appellant, who, however, when informed of that fact, made no opposition. For some time after she had been removed, and while her illness was considered dangerous, the appellant was attentive, and frequently visited her at Harreld’s, although he was laboring under a severe wound. But an event had transpired before the [522]*522appellee was removed to Dr. Harreld’s, which disturbed their previous affectionate and harmonious relations. At night, while asleep in his bed, a murderous attack was made upon the life of the appellant. The perpetrator of the deed was unknown ; but suspicion immediately attached to Samuel L. Montgomery, who was the appellant’s step-son, and the only child of Mrs. Fulton. While the latter was staying at Dr. Harreld’s, Montgomery was indicted for the offence, by the grand jury of Hinds county; and, whether upon sufficient or insufficient evidence, the appellant was firmly convinced that the charge was well founded; and, acting upon the conviction of Montgomery’s guilt, he determined that there should be no further intercourse between him and his family, — that Montgomery should not be permitted to visit his house. Mrs. Fulton, influenced, naturally, by her maternal affection, did not believe that Montgomery had committed the assault. At all events, she was not willing to give up her son, and be deprived of his society.

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36 Miss. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-fulton-miss-1858.