Hendry v. Hendry

1 S.E.2d 340, 172 Va. 368, 1939 Va. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 20, 1939
DocketRecord No. 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 S.E.2d 340 (Hendry v. Hendry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hendry v. Hendry, 1 S.E.2d 340, 172 Va. 368, 1939 Va. LEXIS 243 (Va. 1939).

Opinion

Gregory, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Dr. Ernest Hendry, appeals from a decree in which the court declined to grant him a divorce a mensa et thoro on the grounds of desertion as asked in his cross-bill. By the decree the appellee, Mrs. Isabel Hendry, was also refused a divorce on the grounds of cruelty, non-support and desertion but she was allowed permanent alimony of $100 per month.

In the original bill filed by Mrs. Hendry against her husband she founds her claim for a divorce from bed and board and alimony on allegations of cruelty and desertion. She charges that in the later years of their married life Dr. Hendry became abusive toward her by using boisterous language and slandering her in a cruel and brutal manner, without provocation or having just cause therefor, and that these acts on his part have seriously impaired her health. She alleges that during their entire married life Dr. Hendry was parsimonious and has failed to support her properly and adequately and that she has been dependent on members of her family to supply her with necessities, such as clothing. Complaint is made that he wilfully and deliberately deserted and abandoned her during the month of September, [370]*3701935. Mrs. Hendry declares that her husband failed to care for her health by neglecting her and being utterly indifferent toward her in regard to medical and surgical attention which she needed on numerous.-occasions,, and that he refused to alleviate her suffering. She alleges that this cruel and inhumane treatment of her by Dr. Hendry-forced her to leave him in October, 1935, and to institute divorce proceedings.

Dr. Hendry filed his answer in which he denied the charges of cruelty. He states that he had- shown- the plaintiff nothing but kindness and forbearance, and that if she would return to his home he would treat her with due consideration and support her to the best of his ability. Dr. Hendry confutes her charge of non-support. ■ He says that she insisted that he purchase a country home in Virginia and that.he bought the home-for $58,000 against his better judgment and thereby greatly burdened himself with a debt too large to carry. He avers that Mrs. Hendry wilfully deserted him without just cause, and that she took away from his home at the same time many personal effects belonging to him.

About three months later, no reconciliation having taken place, the appellant filed a cross-bill in which he ,asks that he be granted a divorce a mensa et thoro on the grounds of unjustifiable desertion on her part and that this divorce be merged into a decree a vinculo, dissolving all marital ties at the expiration of the proper statutory period for the granting of such an order.

The lower court, as already indicated, entered a decree denying a divorce to either party but requiring Dr. Hendry to pay the sum of $100 per month to Mrs. Hendry for her maintenance. It is from this decree that the appellant, Dr. Hendry, has appealed to this court. He now asks that he be granted a divorce on the grounds of desertion and that it be made absolute because the two year statutory period has elapsed, and if this is denied he asks that the alimony allowed which he claims is excessive be discontinued because of his wife’s refusal to become reconciled.

[371]*371There is a great mass of documentary evidence, comprising 284 pages, which is needlessly printed in the record. Voluminous depositions were also taken which bore upon non-essential and incidental matters and which were not necessary to a correct determination of the cause. Code, section 6344, provides that if part of a record is unnecessarily copied, the cost of printing the same, in the discretion of the appellate court, shall be paid by the party at whose instance such copying was done. We intend to vitalize section 6344 by enforcing its provisions. In this case, however, we must content ourselves by simply denouncing the practice of unnecessary printing, because the appellant here who was partly responsible for the useless printing must bear the expense. The General Assembly has made ample provisions for parties to bring before this court the original exhibits filed either with the pleadings or the evidence, without incurring the cost of copying or printing. See Code, section 6357, as amended by the Acts of 1938, ch. 76.

We must decide which of the parties was at fault in bringing about the marital difficulties which eventuated in their final separation. The trial court has found that both were at fault and has denied a divorce to either of them, but under section 5111 of the Code, as amended, the court has ordered the husband to pay his wife as alimony $100 per month. Neither of the parties is satisfied with the decree. The husband says the court should have granted him a divorce upon his cross-bill and that having been denied he should not be required to pay his wife the alimony, and, finally, that the alimony is excessive. The wife by cross-error says that she should have a divorce. Between them and their respective and conflicting positions we must determine their rights and to do so we must look to the evidence. It is unsatisfactory, as is so often the case, and it will not be profitable to refer to all of it.

The appellant is a physician of standing and prominence, practicing his profession in the city of Washington. He graduated from Johns Hopkins in 1911 and later completed additional training in diseases of the stomach. His interne-[372]*372ship was served at the Union Memorial Hospital and there he met the appellee who was then a nurse in the hospital. In 1916 she severed her connection with the hospital and returned to the home of her mother in Baltimore where she remained for two years. At the end of that period she and'the appellant were married. He was a struggling young physician thirty-seven years of age and she an experienced trained nurse of forty years.

They removed to Washington where he opened an office. At first his practice was small and his income meager. In fact, they were greatly aided financially and otherwise by appellee’s sister, Mrs. DiGiorgio, who seems to have been a kindly and thoughtful woman of means. The appellee, during the lean years, was constantly alert and successful in her efforts to advance and improve the practice of the doctor. Finally they arrived at a position where the appellant had an extensive and paying practice and a comfortable home. As the appellant’s practice enlarged, they raised their standard of living. This resulted in the purchase on credit of a $58,000 home in Virginia, a short distance from Washington where they lived well. Dr. Hendry kept a staff of three servants and he and Mrs. Hendry enjoyed most of the desirable worldly goods. There were no children born of this marriage.

Mrs. Hendry was in ill health during her married life. She had extensive medical attention and a number of surgical operations. She received the best services the profession could afford in Washington and Baltimore and at little 'or no expense, because her husband was a doctor.

The appellant was not in good health in the latter days of their married life and he from time to time required medical attention.

From the testimony it may be concluded that as they grew older and their illnesses became more serious, their affections for each other waned, and their conduct was inimical to a pleasant married relationship. In July, 1935, the appellant accepted his brother’s invitation to spend his vacation in Maine.

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Bluebook (online)
1 S.E.2d 340, 172 Va. 368, 1939 Va. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendry-v-hendry-va-1939.