McCampbell v. McCampbell

46 S.W. 18, 103 Ky. 745, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 28, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 18 (McCampbell v. McCampbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCampbell v. McCampbell, 46 S.W. 18, 103 Ky. 745, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 117 (Ky. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

JUDGE GUFFY

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant instituted this action in the Jefferson circuit court against the appellee in which she sought judgment for a separation from his bed and board, and that pending the action she should be allowed maintenance for support of herself and children, and for a receiver of certain property described in the petition, and that defendant be enjoined from conveying or in any wise [748]*748alienating any of the said property set forth in the petition, and that defendant be enjoined from interfering in any wise with the plaintiff, and that she be given the custody of the three youngest children, who were under fourteen years of age, and that a trustee be appointed, and that defendant be required to convey to said trustee all his right, title and interest in and to certain property named in the petition.

The grounds relied on by plaintiff, authorizing the relief prayed for, are in substance, that defendant for more than one year last past has had a confirmed habit of drunkenness, accompanied with wasting of his estate, and without providing any suitable provision for maintenance of the plaintiff, or his children; of which, it is alleged they have six in number, their ages ranging from twelve to nineteen years.

Second: That plaintiff for more than six months past had behaved himself, and was then behaving toward plaintiff in such cruel and inhuman manner as to indicate a settled aversion to her, and to destroy permanently her peace and happiness.

Third: That defendant had been and was then living in adultery.

Fourth: That the defendant is a man of violent temper, and has beaten, and has often threatened to do plaintiff bodily harm while under the influence of whisky, and otherwise, and that it would be dangerous for defendant to come to her house on Chestnut street where she lives, .and to occupy the same house.

The answer of the defendant denied all the grounds [749]*749relied on for the divorce. Upon final hearing the court dismissed plaintiff's petition, and she has appealed to this court. Several grounds are relied on by appellant for a reversal. It is contended that the judgment of the court below is contrary to the evidence, and that upon the record as presented that appellant is entitled to the relief sought, which contention is controverted by appellee. And appellee also suggests that upon a questión of fact, that this court will not reverse the judgment of the court below, which, however, is not the rule of this court; but in all equity cases, this court will consider, the evidence and judge and determine as to the truth of the matters involved, of course, giving due weight to the opinion of the chancellor.

It seems to us, however, that it would not be equitable for this court to determine as to all the questions involved in this controversy upon the record as now presented.

It is the contention of appellant that the court below erred in not allowing the plaintiff to take her proof upon oral examination upon notice to the adverse party. That the affidavits filed by her and her counsel and others presented a state of case that entitled her as a matter of right and equity, to the order or rule asked for, and that the affidavits filed were not controverted; and besides, if they had been, the circumstances surrounding this case, and the issues involved therein tend strongly to show that the order asked for was indispensably necessary in order to a proper presentation of the issues involved, and' [750]*750to the full and complete presentation of all the facts bearing upon the questions at issue.

Without intimating that the appellee is guilty of any of the acts charged by the appellant, yet it is manifest that the proof in support of the allegations, if any such-proof can be had, must in the main come from friends and associates of the defendant; hence it is manifest that an oral examination was necessary in order to do justice to the plaintiff. The court below should have, therefore, sustained the motion of appellant to allow the depositions to be taken upon oral examination upon notice, as requested.

It is further contended by the appellant that the court erred in not requiring Hattie Lawrence to answer the interrogatories propounded to her. This record does not disclose the reasons for overruling the motion of appellant to require the witness to answer the interrogatories. It has been suggested that, perhaps, the reason was that 'it would either subject the witness to a criminal prosecution, or tend to degrade her, or render her infamous.

The witness should not be required to answer a question that would subject her to prosecution for a criminal offence, but the interrogatories as propounded if answered could not show the witness liable to any prosecution, and many of the questions could not in any event show that she had ever been guilty of an offence for which ..she could have been punished.

It may be conceded that there is some conflict of authority as to the extent that a witness may be compelled to answer questions which tend to degrade or render them [751]*751infamous. It is said in 1st Greenleaf on Evidence, Fifteenth Edition, section 454:

“Where the answer, though it will not expose the witness to any criminal prosecution or penalty, or to any forfeiture of estate, yet has a direct tendency to degrade his character. On this point there has been a great diversity of opinion, and the law still remains not perfectly settled by authorities. But the conflict of opinions may be somewhat reconciled by a distinction, which has been very properly taken between cases where the testimony is relevant and material to the issue, and cases where the question is not strictly relevant, but is collateral, and is asked only under the latitude allowed in a. cross-examination. In the former case, there seems great absurdity in excluding the testimony of a witness merely because it will tend to degrade himself, when others have a direct interest in that testimony, and it is essential to the establishment of their rights of property, of liberty, or even of life, or to the course of public justice. Upon such a rule, one who had been convicted and punished for an offence, when called as a witness against an accomplice, would be excused from testifying to any of the transactions in which he had participated with the accused,' and thus the guilty might escape. And, accordingly, the better opinion seems to be, that where the transaction, to which the witness is interrogated, forms any part of the issue to be tried, the witness will be obliged to give evidence, however strongly it may reflect on his character.”

[752]*752It is also said in the latter part of section 456:

“Nor does there seem to be any good reason why a witness should be privileged from answering a question touching his present situation, employment, and associates, if they are of his own choice; as, for example, in what house or family he resides, what is his ordinary occupation, and whether he is intimately acquainted and conversant with certain persons, and the like; for, however these may disgrace him, his position is one of his own selection.”

In Mitchell v. Commonwealth, 12 Ky. L. Kep., 458, this-court in discussing the privilege of witnesses said:

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 18, 103 Ky. 745, 1898 Ky. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccampbell-v-mccampbell-kyctapp-1898.