Nichols v. Palmer

5 Day 47
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1811
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 5 Day 47 (Nichols v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Palmer, 5 Day 47 (Colo. 1811).

Opinion

Baldw in, J.

The plaintiff in error, coni ends for lhc«-versal of the judgment, on the following grounds, viz.

1. That the declaration is sufficient.

[51]*51i. That the pleadings do not disclose any fact3, which shew ¿hat the plainfiff cannot recover.

R. That no answer is given to the issue joined by the parties;;

As ¡he second point was admitted in the argument, ant! :he third is a question of practice merely ; the sufficiency of the declaration, demands our particular attention.

it is objected to the declaration, that it exhibits a contract, depending lor its basis, on an agreement between husband and wife to part and liye separate. It is contended, that such an agreement cannot be recognized as of any validity, because sound principles of policy forbid it, as contra bonos mores ; and that of course, all contracts engrafted upon such a stock, must also be void. I admit, that contracts between husband and wife simply, cannot be enforced; yet when such agreements are executed by the intervention of a trustee, I contend, that the contract with the trustee, is not necessarily void.

The doctrine of separate maintenance, by the aid of a trustee, is found in the earliest records of English jurisprudence. Such contracts have, for ages, been protected and enforced in their courts of chancery : and when collaterally brought to view in courts of law, have been recognized as I he basis of legal adjudications. So far have been the courts ■ n England from questioning the efficacy of such agreements to support a contract for maintenance, that a very different question has agitated them in modern timei, vis. the capacity of ¡he wife during such separation. When we thus find a practice of this sort, long used, and universally recognized in the courts of that country, from whence we derive the principles of our common law, we ought to be clearly satisfied, that it is opposed to principle, before we reject it.

This question has not, till lately, become the subject of judicial decision in this state. Cases of the kind have, indeed, occurred, and passed in silence ; but are rare, because the reasons which would otherwise induce a separation, generally, here lead to a dissolution of the marriage, by divorce. And the legal provision in our law for divorces, is [52]*52used as an argument against the admission of separation, by agreement, for any cause. The policy of our laws has not, indeed, considered the marriage relation indissoluble. Perceiving that, from the vices and imperfections of human nature, some of these connexions, instead of a blessing, become the source of wretchedness, to one or both the parties ; it admits, that more than one cause may exist, which will evince a breach of the contract, and render even a dissolution of the marriage proper. The legislature have also, in a few extraordinary cases, without dissolving the marriage, enforced a separation ; — yet I cannot admit, that our laws have, in these ways, provided for all cases in which a separation may lie proper, nor that it. is always advisable to resort to them. Cases inay also exist, and sometimes do, where the wretchedness and misery of the connexion, arise from brutal cruelty, abuse and danger, and from other sources, not acknowledged by law, as cause for divorce, or as ground for legislative interference. In such instances, a compulsory cohabition would prolong, and probably increase the wretchedness of an innocent victim, and of a miserable family ; and no one end of the marriage relation could thereby be attained. What harm, then, is done to morality, or what sound principle of policy is impugned, by permittiug the parties, on good cause, to separate by agreement, and thus save the painful task of exposing the follies or the vices of partners, to obtain a compulsory separation, or the disgrace and misery of themselves and families, by fruitless attempts to live together in harmony. I cannot perceive that it would be morally wrong, that the innocent party should, in such case, separate, and that the guilty partner should agree to it; nor that sound policy would withhold the sanction of law to a provision for maintenance, through the inlet veution of a trustee, founded on the basis of such separation. — There is very little danger that cases of this sort, will arise from whim or caprice; nor are they likely to become frequent, under a government, where divorces may be obtained for most of the causes of separation in other countries.

I admit, however, that there may be cases of separation [53]*53by agreement, attended with such circumstances, and resting on such foul principles, that good policy will not support them. When a case is claimed to be of that description, it is incumbent on those who claim it so, to shew it. The cause may be sufficient, and yet of a nature, improper to be stated in the contract. No improper ground appears, or is preteuded to exist, in this case. It is, therefore, much stronger, than that of Goodwin v. Goodwin, 4 Day, 343. on which the court, at the last term, were divided.

In my view of this case, there is no necessity of considering the third ground of error ; yet, as the question is of some importance in practice, and the different branches of the Superior Court have adopted different rules, it is advisable to decide it, for the sake of uniformity.

The power of the court to try issues in fact, is of recent date. By the statute giving the power, the court, when the parties so agree, are substituted in lieu of the jury, to try such issues: and although the court, without a special motion for that purpose, have ultimately the power of deciding, and are, indeed, bound to decide, on the sufficiency of the declaration, and for the sufficiency in that, and for oth-. er defects in the record, to arrest the judgment, which would otherwise follow their finding ; yet, I apprehend, it would introduce much confusion, uncertainty and irregularity in the proceedings, if the practice in question were sanctioned. The parties have submitted a particular question of fact. This the court were bound to answer, as much as a jury. Whether the issue is material, or whether the declaration is sufficient to support a judgment, is a subsequent question, as distinct from the fact in issue, as though that were still tried by a jury.. In this way, that desirable distinction, which ought always to be made, between matters of fact, and questions of law, is preserved. The court, In trials to the jury, cannot stop the proceedings, on discovering cause of arrest; nor can they discharge the jury from finding the fact. In the case of Sanford v. Sanford, 2 Day, 559. judgment was reversed, because the Superior Court directed the jury to find for the defendant, on the ground that the decla[54]*54ration was insufficient; and yet flic Court of Errors were also of opinion, that the declaration was insufficient, and of course, that judgment ought to have been arrested, had the jury found the issue in favour of the plaintiff.

If it shall be established, that the court must find the issue before they arrest the judgment, we cannot presume, as has been suggested, that they will not do their duty : — or that they will deckle with prejudice, because they may think the finding of no avail; for if their judgment on the declara-fion should be reversed, their finding will be important It may be, on the principle of Gleason v. Chester, 1 Day, 27. 152.

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5 Day 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-palmer-conn-1811.