McCord v. McCord

78 S.E. 833, 140 Ga. 170, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 78 S.E. 833 (McCord v. McCord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCord v. McCord, 78 S.E. 833, 140 Ga. 170, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 67 (Ga. 1913).

Opinion

Beck, J.

Mrs. McCord filed her libel for divorce, basing her action upon the alleged willful and continuous desertion of her husband for a period of three years prior to the commencement of the suit. The husband filed his plea and answer, denying the truth of the material allegations in the plaintiffs petition. Upon the trial a verdict in favor of the petitioner, granting a total divorce, was rendered by the jury. A motion for a new trial was. made by the respondent, which being overruled, he excepted. The plaintiff filed her cross-bill of exceptions, complaining of the admission in evidence, over objection, of a letter written by her to the husband a short time before the commencement of the period of desertion alleged in the petition.

1. The court did not err in refusing, upon oral motion in the nature of a general demurrer at the trial term, to dismiss the petition on the ground that a schedule of the property of the plaintiff and defendant was not attached to the .petition.

2. Both in the motion for a new trial filed by the husband and in the cross-bill of exceptions filed by the wife, who was the prevailing party in the action, exceptions are taken to the admission in evidence of communications in the shape of letters from the complaining wife to her husband, which letters were written a short time before the alleged desertion began. The plaintiff introduced three of these letters written by herself, and the husband introduced one letter from his wife written to him. Objection was made to the introduction of the letters written by the plaintiff and tendered at the trial by her counsel, upon the ground, among others, that the same were nothing more than self-serving declarations. The letters contained, among statements and communications that are immaterial, complaints upon the part of the writer of the husband’s coldness towards the writer and neglect of her, of his failure to give indications of love and affection, and of indifference to her welfare. This is not a full statement of the contents of the letters, but it sufficiently illustrates their character for the purposes of this decision. The letter from the wife to the husband, which was introduced in evidence by the husband over objection of counsel for the plaintiff, was as follows: “Mr. McCord: I send you your ring and also the brooch, and ask you-to kindly return my ring by registered mail to Quitman, Ga. I expect to reach home soon, and ask you in advance to not make any attempts to see me. Very resp’t’ly, [Signed] Mattie E. McCord.”

[173]*173While the question of the admissibility of this last letter is raised in the cross-bill, the question is considered here in connection with the objections raised by the defendant to the admission of the letters from the wife which were tendered in evidence by her. So far as relates to the letters written by the wife to the husband and tendered by her, they should have been excluded upon the ground stated, viz.: that in so far as they were relevant to the case they were purely self-serving declarations. It was not competent for the wife to write to the husband charging him with certain acts and a course of conduct which, in a suit subsequently brought for divorce, would corroborate her testimony as to his desertion, and then, by means of a notice to produce, have these letters brought into court and made evidence for herself. Whether these letters at the time they were written were penned with an eye to the use which the plaintiff subsequently sought to make of them, or whether penned under the stress of sincere grief and passion aroused by the husband’s real or seeming neglect or indifference, they contain nothing-more, relatively to the issue involved between the husband and wife in this case, than declarations made by the wife in her own favor, and they should have been excluded under the rule applicable to self-serving declarations offered by the party making them.

As to the letter written by the wife to her husband, introduced in evidence by him, counsel for the wife raised the objection that it was in the nature of a confidential communication between husband and wife, and fell within the inhibition contained in section 5785 (1) of the Civil Code, which excludes, on account of public policy, communications between husband and wife. The language of the section referred to is as follows: “There are certain admissions and communications excluded from public policy. Among these are — 1. Communications between husband and wife.” In discussing a somewhat similar provision at common law and in other jurisdictions in this country, Prof. Wigmore, in his work on Evidence, says: “(1) That the disqualification of husband and wife to testify the one on the other’s behalf is distinct from the privilege of either against the other’s disclosure of communications ought to be plain enough. The judicial confusion of them is nevertheless frequent; and the occasional legislative commingling of them in the same sentence of the same enactment has given rise to much of this confusion. Perhaps the commonest error is to ignore [174]*174the husband’s right to waive the privilege, i. e. when he offers the wife to prove his communications to her, the erroneous tendency is to treat the disclosure as absolutely prohibited in spite of his consent. A disqualification, of course, can not be waived; but it is of the essence of this privilege (as of every privilege) that it may be; 'and yet the communications, when offered by the privileged person, are even yet repeatedly excluded, in apparent ignorance of the distinction.” Yol. 4, p. 3259. And on page 3268 of the same work it was said: “(1) The privilege is intended to secure freedom from apprehension in the mind of the one desiring to communicate (ante, § 2332); it thus belongs to the communicating one, and the other one — the addressee of the ■ communication — is therefore not entitled to object; unless, as already noticed (ante, § 2338, par. 4), the latter’s silence is desired to be treated as an assent and an adoption of the statement, which thus makes it doubly a communication and doubly privileged. (2) The spouse possessing the privilege may of course waive it. The waiver may be found in some extrajudicial disclosure, or in some act of testimony which in fairness places the person in a position not to object consistently to further disclosure, — for, as already noted (ante, § 2327), the principle of waiver can not depend solely upon the interpretation of conduct implying willingness to waive. Nevertheless, in a few courts the doctrine of waiver appears to be ignored entirely. This confusion of a disqualification with a privilege has been already adverted to (ante, § 2334); it is entirely unjustifiable (except as required by the express words of some perversely-phrased statute), and is so radical an error of principle that no further argument would cure such a misapprehension.”

The reasoning in the passages last quoted from Prof. Wigmore’s work and the distinction between a disqualification and-a privilege seem to be sound, and relatively to the question under consideration the same distinction is drawn in Greenleaf on Evidence. Laying it down as an accepted rule that “one spouse may not testify to confidential communications by the other,” he says: “Under the third head [which- embraces the rule last stated];, the principle applies quite irrespective of whether either spouse is a party to the cause. Moreover, the death or the divorce of the other member does not affect the policy of prohibition. Again, the other member may always waive the privilege.” 1 Greenleaf oh Evidence, § 333c. [175]

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.E. 833, 140 Ga. 170, 1913 Ga. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccord-v-mccord-ga-1913.