Scroggins v. . Scroggins

14 N.C. 535
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 N.C. 535 (Scroggins v. . Scroggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scroggins v. . Scroggins, 14 N.C. 535 (N.C. 1832).

Opinion

Ruffin, Judge.

The legislature in the act of 1814, authorises divorces in two cases ; the one, impotency at the time of the marriage and still continuing; the other, a separation by one party from the other, and living in a state of adultery. The act of 1827, c. 19. empowers the Superior Courts to divorce either from the bonds of matrimony, or from bed and board, whenever they may he satisfied of the justice of the application.

This act imposes a task of great difficulty on the courts, and one, perhaps less agreeable than any they can be called on to perform, that of acting upon a most important subject without a rule laid down for them by the legislature, or heretofore adopted by their predecessors. The jurisdiction is a new one to our courts, and we find no precedents in those adjudications from which we draw our learning upon other subjects. Where such a jurisdiction is created, and the Legislature marks out those boundaries within which, in their wisdom, they think it proper the courts should be confined, or to which they shall go, obedience is both an easy and a pleasing duty. It is when we are told to do what is right, but not told what they deem right, that we are lost in the mazes of discretion. I cannot suppose however that the discretion conferred is a mere personal one, whether wild or sober; but must from the nature of things, be confined to the cases for which provision was before made by Saw or for those of a like kind. This presumption is the stronger, when the sub *541 ject is one upon which it is known that speculatists and moralists base much disputed, differing as to the policy of divorces and their influence upon the parties themselves, during their union, and after their separation ; and upon which law-givers, acting upon experience and disregarding theory, have generally been agreed in refusing them altogether, where the marriage was' lawful, except in the case of impotency. If the court could think that the duty to be performed was intended to be referred to the priyate opinions of the judges, it would be promptly, though reluctantly, executed ; for there is no member of the court who is not strongly impressed with the conviction, that divorces ought in no case to be allowed, but in that already mentioned, and near consanguinity. Wo know, that individuals may experience much misery by an unhappy connexion, where tempers are incompatible ; where there are disgusting personal defects; moral depravity ; mutual injuries, proceeding even to unfaithfulness and unchastity. We know too, that like consequences often follow from a mere change of affection; and that the growing indifference of the one, not only produces pain to the other, but irritates and provokes reproaches, until hatred takes the place of former regards, and the tie between them is severed, as far as the law will allow it. If the consequence of dissolving the union entirely, slopped with those parties, and conferred on them peace, instead of the pain they suffered, it were but cruel ty not to unloose the chain. But the knowledge that when this last stage of distress arrived, it would of itself bring relief, would precipitate its approach. Slight differences would grow into lasting dissentions, and a single act of unfaithfulness could easily be converted into habitual adultery. These evils are, in a great measure, avoided by the principle of our law, which declares the marriage contract to make a perfect union between the parties, so that they become one ; and, to carry it out, they ought to believe and feel that they are ever to remain so — •that absolute union is also indissoluble. That and that alone, can impress upon each, the necessity of mutual forbearance, of submitting to slight inconve- *542 <1 contributing to the econcile ourselves to inences, overcoming antipathies ar ■enjoyments of each other. Ve i what is inevitable. Experience fnjids pain more tolerable than it was expected to be; and habit makes even fetters light. Exertion, when fcnc wn to be useless, is unassaycd, though the struggle might be violent, if by possibility it could be successful. A married couple thus restrained, may become, if not devoted in their affections, at least discreet partners, striving together for the common good, and steady f riends, ready to perform all offices of kindness required by the other — instead of the dissentient heads of a distracted family, driven by inflamed passions to a degree of madness, not to be satisfied with less than an entire separation, though it bring disgrace on themselves ard their offspring, and deprive the latter of the greatest c arthly advantage, the nurture and admonitions of a parent. For these reasons in most, and I believe, in all Christian countries, although the contract be regarded by the 1 aw merely as civ il, it is usually executed with some religious ceremonial; so as in a degree to impress upon it, in the eyes of the individuals themselves, a character of holiness — that it may appear to be entered into before a witness who cannot be deceived or forget, and therefore, to bo infrangible. Our restless dispositions, and capricious tastes and tempers, require these checks and restraints. Why shall they be removed? Why give way to those very propensities in our nature, which it is our interest to repress? Is it not wiser, better, kinder to the parties themselves and their issue,.to declare the engagement to be unsuscep-tible of modification, much less abrogation — to make their Union so intimate, so close, and so firm, that no discoveries of concealed defects, more than supervenient disease, depravity, dissoluteness or dissension could rend it asunder? Such being the case, the state would be the more discreetly entered into, and the intercourse through life be the more harmonious. Such considerations have produced the private con victions felt by those who are now the judges of the court. But they seem not to have made the same impressions on all; and it is our duty, *543 notwithstanding the unlimited powers which we are commanded to exercise, to endeavor to ascertain, as well as we may, in what cases the legislature would, upon ascertained facts, authorise the parties to abandon their former choice, and make a new selection.

To the extent of the act of 1814, we consider the court constrained to go. And from the second section of the act of 1827, we suppose that we are not at liberty to stop-there, since that implies, that there are other cases besides those specified in that act, in which divorces seem to have been expected to be properly applied for, and consequently granted. Yet, from the preamble of the last statute, one might infer the contrary ; and that the great purpose of the legislature was to free itself from applications which ought not to be granted, but which,' from the hardship to the parties, and feeling in the members, were sometimes obtained ; and to turn them over to tribunals which would do more impartial, or exact justice. Indeed, it is difficult for persons to put a just interpretation upon terms, conferring in themselves such boundless power. We cannot intend that the meaning was, that the courts should grant divorces, where, under like circumstances, the legislature had, or might be expected to grant them by statute; for the contrary is implied by commanding the action of courts, usually regulated by fixed rules.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.C. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scroggins-v-scroggins-nc-1832.