Morse v. Morse

25 Ind. 156
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 25 Ind. 156 (Morse v. Morse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse v. Morse, 25 Ind. 156 (Ind. 1865).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

This was a complaint for divorce and alimony, filed by Eugenia L. Morse against Thomas B. Morse, her husband. The complaint, after averring their marriage, the number and ages of their children, &c., charges cruel treatment as the cause for which a divorce is claimed.

The principal acts of cruel treatment specified are that [157]*157in 1858, and frequently afterward, until the fling of the' complaint, her husband falsely charged her with improper intimacy with other men. That' in April 1862, knowing her to be in poor health, the defendant frequently, before the plaintiff went to bed, poured cold water on her night clothes and on that portion of the bed occupied by her. That for five years next before the filing of the complaint, the defendant prohibited her from social intercourse with her friends and relatives, and without cause forbade them visiting at his house. That frequently for days and weeks he failed to speak to her, and paid no attention to her when she spoke to him, and treated her as if unworthy of his notice.

The defendant answered in three paragraphs.

1st. The general denial, except as to the allegations of the marriage and the number and ages of their children, which were admitted.

2d. As to charging her with improper intimacy with other men, that if he had done so, it was because of her open avowal to him that she did not recognize the obligations of the marriage tie, subsisting between them, as constraining her to accept him, against her choice or affinities, as the father of her offspring, and that she had the moral right, independent of that tie, to choose the father of her children; that she had no affinity for him, and regarded, cohabitation with him as legalized adultery.

3d. That if cruel treatment had been practiced, it had been condoned.

The plaintiff replied’: 1st. In denial of the answer.

2d. That, as to the second paragraph of the answer, if she made use of the statements and avowals therein charged, it was in a joke, and was so understood by the defendant, he well knowing that she never entertained any such opinions.

3d. As to the third paragraph of the answer, that since the condonation, the defendant had repeated his acts of cruelty.

[158]*158The jury to whom the cause was submitted for trial found a general verdict for the defendant. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.

On the trial, after the defendant had given evidence tending to prove the facts set up in the second paragraph of the answer, the plaintiff offered to prove by one Thomas Gales, a competent witness, that after the time the plaintiff’ made the statements imputed to her, and before the defendant charged her with improper intimacy with other men, “the defendant had, from his own admissions to the witness, learned that said plaintiff did not entertain such opinions and doctrines as set out in said second paragraph of the answer.” But the court refused to permit the evidence to be given to the jury. This ruling is assigned for error. The seeond reply alleges that if the plaintiff made the avowals charged in the second paragraph of’ the answer, they were made in jest, and that the defendant knew she did not entertain such sentiments. As the defendant had introduced evidence tending to prove the averments in the answer, as an excuse for charging his wife with improper intimacy with other men, it is clear that the evidence offered was pertinent to the issue, and should, therefore, have gone to the jury. Indeed, the defendant’s counsel do not controvert the fact that the court erred in rejecting the evidence, but they insist that the judgment should not for that error be reversed, for the reason that it is shown by the record that the charge-of improper intimacy with other men, even if wanton and unfounded, was afterward forgiven by the . plaintiff.

The third paragraph of the answer, as we have-seen, alleges that if cruel treatment had been practiced it had afterward been condoned. And the jury, in answer to several interrogatories propounded to them by the court, at the request of the defendant, found that the charge of adultery was made once only; that it was made to the plaintiff alone,.and not.to or in the presence of any other person; that the plaintiff forgave him for said charge, and [159]*159there was a reconciliation, and that the defendant never repeated the charge afterward. Condonation, or forgiveness, was a good answer to that act of alleged cruelty, or cause for divorce, and if the jury had found that the charge of adultery was wanton and unfounded, and that the defendant, at the time he made it, knew that the plaintiff did not entertain the sentiments and opinions imputed to her, still the verdict should have been for the defendant, on the finding of the jury that the charge was afterward condoned, and not repeated subsequently. Section 101 of the code provides that “ The court must, in every stage of the action, disregard any error or defect in the pleadings or proceedings which does not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party, and no judgment can be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect.” 2 G-. & H., 122.

Here, as we have seen, the plaintiff was not injured by the error of the court in rejecting the evidence. Her substantial rights were not affected thereby, because the general verdict as to that specification'must have been for the defendant, even if the issue to which the evidence was alone directed had been found for the plaintiff. But it is insisted by the plaintiff’s counsel that the charge, though once forgiven, was again revived by the defendant’s subsequent acts of cruelty. The date of the condonation is not found by the jury. The evidence is not in the record, and there is no special finding of any other alleged act of cruelty, except perhaps that of pouring water on the bed, &c., in reference to which the court, at the request of the plaintiffj propounded to the jury the following interrogatory, viz: “Were the bed and clothes wet by the defendant as stated in the complaint?” To which the jury answered: “Not at all times.” Assuming that this answer is, in effect, a finding that the bed and clothes were wet as charged, but not as frequently as alleged in the'complaint, yet the jury found that the parties continued to live together, and traveled together on trips of pleasure. And, “that at the time the [160]*160complaint was filed, they were absent on a pleasure excursion to Toledo, Ohio, with the children, and that they had lived together ever since, and until within two days of the trial of the cause” in the court below. We find nothing in the record to justify us in holding that the charge of improper intimacy with other men was revived by subsequent acts of cruelty.

Certain special interrogatories were addressed to the jury, for answers, at the request of the plaintiff, in case they found a general verdict. On the return of a general verdict, with the answers to the interrogatories, the plaintiff asked that the jury be sent back to answer the interrogatories more definitely, but the court refused the motion, and this is urged as error. The interrogatories, and the answers thereto which are complained of, are as follows:

“ 1st. Are the facts stated in the complaint true as stated in said complaint?” Answer. “No.”
“ 2d. If there are any facts stated in the complaint that are not true, state what facts are not true?”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Poston v. District Court
269 P. 35 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1928)
Princeton Coal Mining Co. v. Lawrence
95 N.E. 423 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1911)
Stutsman v. Stutsman
66 N.E. 908 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1903)
Cleveland & Elyria Electric Railroad v. Hawkins
64 Ohio St. (N.S.) 391 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1901)
Walker v. Walker
50 N.E. 68 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1898)
Lamy v. Catron
5 N.M. 373 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1890)
Stultz v. Stultz
8 N.E. 238 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1886)
Evans v. Evans
5 N.E. 24 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1886)
Powell v. Powell
3 N.E. 639 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1885)
Graft v. Graft
76 Ind. 136 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1881)
Scheible v. Law
65 Ind. 332 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Hershman v. Hershman
63 Ind. 451 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Todd v. Fenton
66 Ind. 25 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1878)
Kingen v. State
50 Ind. 557 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1875)
Musselman v. Musselman
44 Ind. 106 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1873)
Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad v. Horn
41 Ind. 479 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1873)
Campbell v. Dutch
36 Ind. 504 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1871)
Leffel v. Leffel
35 Ind. 76 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1871)
Manning v. Gasharie
27 Ind. 399 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1866)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ind. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-morse-ind-1865.