Jegendorf v. Jegendorf

157 P.2d 280, 61 Wyo. 277, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 13
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1945
Docket2297
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 157 P.2d 280 (Jegendorf v. Jegendorf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jegendorf v. Jegendorf, 157 P.2d 280, 61 Wyo. 277, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 13 (Wyo. 1945).

Opinion

*281 OPINION

Riner, Justice.

This is a direct appeal proceeding brought to review a judgment of the District Court of Laramie County, granting the respondent, Gussie Jegendorf, plaintiff below, a divorce from Abe Jegendorf, defendant in that Court and appellant here.

The Legislature of this State, some years ago, (Laws of Wyoming, 1939, Ch. 108), enacted a statute reading:

“A divorce from the bonds of matrimony may be obtained, in addition to the causes now provided by law and subject to the same procedure and requirements, for the following cause:
When the husband and wife have lived apart for two consecutive years without cohabitation.”

The subsequent Legislature (Laws of Wyoming, 1941, Ch. 2), re-enacted this law but added after the word “cohabitation” the following language:

*282 “* * * but not upon such ground if such,separation has been induced or justified by cause chargeable in whole or material part to the party seeking divorce upon such grounds, in the action.”

It was under the authority conferred by the law as thus modified that the divorce was granted in the proceeding at bar.

Concerning enactments of this character it has been said appropriately:

“The public policy of these separation statutes is based upon the proposition that where a husband and wife have lived apart for a long period of time, without any intention ever to resume conjugal relations, the best interest of society and the parties themselves will be promoted by a dissolution of the marital bond. This is a comparatively new idea in the law of domestic relations and divorce. The object of the legislation is indeed plain enough, but the statutes through which it is sought to be accomplished are by no means uniform.”

51 A. L. R. 763 Note. That laws of this general type prevail in a number of the states of the union is readily gleaned from an examination of the supplemental annotations to that note in 97 A. L. R. 985, and 111 A. L. R. 867. However, we have had our attention directed to no statute exactly like the one involved in this case. Most of these enactments are more inclined to resemble that of the State of Nevada which grants an additional ground of divorce in this language:

“When the husband and wife have lived apart for five consecutive years without cohabitation the court may at its discretion grant an absolute decree of divorce at the suit of either party. Stats. 1931, p. 180, c. Ill, § 1.”

Concerning that law the court in Herrick v. Herrick, 55 Nev. 59, 25 Pac. 2d 378, said:

“The idea of a divorce on the ground stated is an idea of recent origin. The legislative concept embodied in *283 the statute is that when the conduct of parties in living apart over a long lapse of time without cohabitation has made it probable that they cannot live together in happiness, the best interest of the parties and of the state will be promoted by a divorce.”

In applying statutes like those last quoted, though it has been repeatedly urged upon the courts passing upon them that under them relief should be awarded only upon the application of the party not at fault, otherwise the grant of relief thus authorized would be allowing the wrongdoer to take avdantage of his own misdeeds, nevertheless it would seem that the majority of the opinions in the courts regarding this question deliberately reject this contention and permit either party to maintain the action irrespective of who was at fault . The ultimate result seems to be rested in a wise discretion to be exercised by the trial judge.

Our statute, given in full above, declares in substance that the separation of the parties to the marriage contract must not be “induced or justified” by a cause in “whole or material part” chargeable to the one who seeks the divorce. In other words, the one materially at fault in causing the cessation of cohabitation should not be permitted to invoke this ground. What that “cause” or fault shall be the statute does not say. We are inclined to think that it refers to something aside from “extreme cruelty” or “when either party shall offer such indignities to the other as shall render his or her condition intolerable” — grounds for divorce already established when the law aforesaid was passed — otherwise the statute would be without meaning. We are rather inclined to conclude that what shall constitute this “cause” must be left to the trial court to determine in the exercise of a sound discretion, reviewable here, of course, whether the “cause” chargeable to or fault of the party who seeks a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony on this ground was -sufficient *284 to bar a divorce on that account. All the circumstances in the case should be closely scrutinized and carefully weighed in reaching the ultimate disposition of the matter.

In the case at bar we shall not attempt to review in detail the evidence in the record though the contention is made that this evidence was insufficient to establish the statutory ground above quoted. It would serve no useful purpose to spread the history of this marital disaster upon the reports of this Court. The parties were married January 21, 1933, and lived together until May, 1941. There were no children. At the time of the trial the wife was thirty-four years old and the husband forty-three. They had been living apart for nearly three years. The separation had commenced by the wife leaving the apartment where the parties had previously lived and while an attempt at reconciliation was thereafter made by the husband and discussed by both it failed utterly. She testified that there was absolutely no possibility of her returning to live with him. While the immediate cause of the separation was a disagreement Concerning an apparently trivial matter yet during the whole eight years of their married life her testimony was that she was “miserable”; that she and her husband were not compatible in the more intimate associations of married life; that the ultimate result of it all was that her health failed and she suffered a “nervous breakdown”; that it became absolutely necessary for her to submit herself to a doctor’s care and treatment.

A licensed medical practitioner connected with the Court of General Sessions, and Bellevue Hospital of New York City, corroborated her testimony relative to her condition saying that when she came to him “she was in an acute state of anxiety and depression.” We have carefully studied this entire record having in mind *285 both the welfare of the parties and that of society, and in consequence we are unable to say that the trial court was in error in the exercise of a judicial discretion in granting plaintiff a divorce as announced by the judgment under review.

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Bluebook (online)
157 P.2d 280, 61 Wyo. 277, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jegendorf-v-jegendorf-wyo-1945.