Raymond v. Raymond

132 A.2d 427, 120 Vt. 87, 1957 Vt. LEXIS 70
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 7, 1957
Docket556
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 132 A.2d 427 (Raymond v. Raymond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. Raymond, 132 A.2d 427, 120 Vt. 87, 1957 Vt. LEXIS 70 (Vt. 1957).

Opinion

línlburd,, J.

Under date of March 18, 1954, the libellant brought his libel for divorce from the libellee, Lucette Raymond. It alleged two grounds: one, that the libellee, "At divers times has committed adultery”, and, secondly, that the libellee "treated the said libellant with intolerable severity”. The libellee answered, and filed a cross-libel charging intolerable severity on the husband’s part.

On Dec. 28, 1954, apparently at the libellee’s request, the *89 libellant filed a bill of particulars as to the alleged acts of adultery claimed by him. It covered a period from April 23, 1951 to Dec. 24, 1954 and specified eight different acts of adultery, giving date, place and name of man with whom each act was claimed to have been committed. A hearing was held on the libel and cross-libel in May, 1955. As a result, a divorce was granted the libellant on the ground of adultery, the cross-libel dismissed, and property and custody orders were made. Numerous exceptions were taken by the libellee in connection with the hearing and the resultant findings and decree. We will proceed to deal with those which have been briefed for our consideration.

The libellee’s first exception, as briefed, is to the court’s .finding No. 13 which reads as follows:

”13. On August 26, 1954, a time subsequent to the institution of these divorce proceedings and during a period when the libellee had been given exclusive custody of the principal Raymond living quarters in the South Main Street property, the libellee met one Charron in the park in St. Albans. Charron had been drinking and had some liquor in his possession. The libellee invited Charron to her home on South Main Street. Charron and the libellee proceeded by taxi to the South Main Street location. In the dining room of the Raymond home the libellee and Charron had a drink and embraced. Mrs. Raymond guided Charron to her bedroom upstairs. Shortly after Mrs. Raymond entered the bedroom the bedroom light went out. While the libellee and her male companion were in the bedroom the libellant entered the second story of the Raymond house by way of a porch and climbed through the window. As he was entering the window the libellee left the bedroom to investigate the noise created by the libellant’s entrance. At this time Mrs. Raymond was clad only in a housecoat. When the libellant reached the bedroom Charron was clad only in an undershirt. The libellee’s slippers were located at the foot of the bed. The Libellant struck Mrs. Raymond’s male companion *90 inflicting serious bodily injury upon him. At about this time the St. Albans police arrived to intercede and quell the disturbance.
"The court finds Mrs. Raymond’s explanation of the presence of the male companion in her bedroom entirely unworthy of belief. Prior to her husband’s intervention, the libellee had both the disposition and opportunity for illicit intercourse with her companion.”

The libellee’s exception to this finding goes to the last sentence in the last paragraph. The libellee has not argued that what the court has found in the first paragraph is unsupported by the evidence. The claim is that the final sentence stating that the libellee had the opportunity and disposition, for illicit intercourse with Edward Charron is not supported by a preponderance of evidence. The attorney for the libellee suggests that the findings of fact fail to reveal any other incident in which Charron and the libellee are "intimately associated”, and that the court’s finding as to disposition and opportunity, therefore, must be determined wholly on this sole incident.

We have no hesitancy in stating that a finding of criminal disposition and an opportunity to commit adultery may be based on a single incident as well as upon a series of episodes. Where the incident is comprehensive, disclosing all the circumstances necessary to support the finding, the court-is not prevented from making it because it stands as a single event. Episodes like witnesses are to be weighed and not counted. It is enough if there was evidence tending to show the finding as made. Its weight and sufficiency are for the trial court. The finding is not for revision here. Taft v. Taft, 80 Vt 256, 259, 67 A 703. Compare Walker v. Walker, 92 Vt 443, 445, 104 A 828.

The libellee says, however, that the "incident upon, which the court found illicit intercourse” occurred subsequent to the institution of the divorce proceedings, and if the libellant, intended to rely on such an act he should have pleaded it by supplemental petition. The libellee cites 17 Am Jur 311, in *91 support of this claim. It is true that the libellant did not adopt the procedure now suggested by the libellee. He did file a bill of particulars in which he specified, among others, two acts of adultery with Charron: one on Sept. 24, 1952, and another on Aug. 26, 1954. During the course of the hearing when evidence was offered in connection with the latter date, the libellee made no objection to it nor did she seek to limit its application. We think that failure to do so places the libellee in a position which does not entitle her to raise the question thereafter. Steele v. Lackey, 107 Vt 192, 200, 177 A 309; Perkins v. Vt. Hydro-Electric Co., 106 Vt 367, 417, 177 A 631; Gentes v. St. Peter, 105 Vt 103, 104, 163 A 569. It should be borne in mind that the libel did contain a general allegation of adultery — limited to no particular person — as set forth earlier in this opinion. A bill of particulars, later filed, apprised the libellee of the very incident in question. We think under our practice that this procedure was sufficient. In Hemenway v. Hemenway, 65 Vt 623, 27 A 609, this Court held that a divorce for desertion might be granted upon a petition brought before the necessary three years had elapsed provided the period had fully rim before trial. The Court in connection with that decision said at page 624: "Divorce proceedings are of the nature of session proceedings, and not subject to the ordinary rules of pleading and practice. Usually there are no pleadings except the libel. The libel is not required to conform to the common law rules in regard to declarations. The libel is frequently helped by rule for specifications**** from all that has been said in the decisions by this Court in divorce cases they may be regarded as exceptional, and not subject to the usual rules of pleading and practice. No right of the libellee is disregarded or curtailed by allowing, as has been the practice, the libel for a divorce for wilful desertion to be brought before the completion of the three consecutive years.”

Since it has been held, where the ground for divorce is adultery, — in accordance with the practice by the English eccelesiastical courts, — that the complainant is not bound by the contents of his original complaint, but that fresh acts of adultery may be pleaded supplementarily [see 17 Am Jur at *92 p.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A.2d 427, 120 Vt. 87, 1957 Vt. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-raymond-vt-1957.