Sisson v. Sisson

36 Haw. 606, 1944 Haw. LEXIS 23
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1944
DocketNo. 2521.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 Haw. 606 (Sisson v. Sisson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sisson v. Sisson, 36 Haw. 606, 1944 Haw. LEXIS 23 (haw 1944).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

The loAver court rendered a decree of absolute divorce in favor of George Sisson and against Mary Sisson, dismissing her cross libel for a divorce from bed and board after his libel and her cross libel had been consolidated in a contested trial at Avhich only the husband and wife testified.

*607 The cause of this divorce as alleged in the libel substantially follows the language of the statute, and in turn the grounds of the absolute divorce granted .by the decree are those permitted by paragraph 8 of section 4460 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii 1935, as amended by Act 27, Session Laws of 1935. The pertinent part of this statute is its heading and first sentence: “GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE. Divorces from the bond of matrimony shall be granted for the causes hereinafter set forth and no other,” and its eighth paragraph which reads: “When either party is guilty toward the other of such cruel treatment, neglect or personal indignities, though not amounting to physical cruelty, continued over a course of not less than sixty days, as to render the life of the other burdensome and intolerable and their further living together insupportable.”

The wife appeals. Her appeal questions as a matter of law the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the decree of absolute divorce in respect to the proof of the grounds upon which it rests.

Viewing the evidence in a light favorable to the husband and giving due regard for the determination of the trial judge, we find from the record that the purported proof of these grounds is in the testimony of the husband, who bases his cause upon a course of conduct of the wife and its cumulative and deleterious effect upon him. The gist of this proof is that the course of conduct complained of was her discordant behavior which had extended over a period of years, consisting mainly of frequent nag-gings and scoldings arising out of ordinary domestic matters and characterized by the husband as “tantrums.” In support of the effect which the husband claimed such behavior had upon him, he testified that his inability to endure it disturbed his peace of mind which prevented him from performing his work as he should, made him *608 dread coming home after work, forced him back to work from a sickbed before recovery, drove him out of the home to sleep in his automobile, to take a walk or attend a show, made him feel that if it continued he would become crazy, and caused him to entertain the thought of committing murder and suicide by driving his automobile with his • wife and himself in it over a cliff.

The testimony of the wife followed, and it should be pointed out that the husband’s subjective testimony on the mental distress which the wife’s conduct produced in him is entirely without corroboration and all evidence of it denied by the wife on the witness stand. Her testimony described their marital difficulties as normal differences reasonably to be expected in ordinarily happy marriages of many years' duration. Consistent with this description, he admits that during all the time when such conduct was occurring, together with its effect upon him, they were living as husband and wife and continued marital intercourse up to the day he left the home, which was only ten days before he filed his libel for divorce. In addition, he did not dispute the wife’s testimony that she was undergoing menopause at the time, and that she was then, and had been for eighteen years, suffering aftereffects of an operation performed a year after the birth of the only child of the couple. He did not claim that there was no reasonable explanation for her conduct, or make it clear that it in no way was attributable to his own. Further; he did not maintain that the wife was actuated by any ill will or hatred toward him, that she had ceased to love him, or at any time had indicated a desire of alienating their marriage relationship.

No marriage should be dissolved without clear and convincing proof of the causes provided by statute. The legal status of the relationship is an honorable estate requiring of every husband and wife a high degree of stead *609 fastness and forbearance throughout the vicissitudes and trials of life as part of its essential obligations. The continuing purpose and concept of the marital relation cannot be better stated than it was in the language of Judge Hemphill in the early case of Sheffield v. Sheffield, 3 Tex. 79, 85, 86, which is as timely today as when expressed almost a century ago. At the risk of tediousness, we quote: “The parties have pledged themselves, not only for their OAvn happiness, but for purposes important to society, to live together during the term of their natural lives. This engagement is the most solemn and important of human transactions. It is regarded by all Christian nations as the basis of civilized society, of sound morals, and of the domestic affections; and the relations, duties, obligations and consequences flowing from the contract are so important to the peace and welfare of society, as to have placed it under the control of special municipal regulations, independent of the will of the parties. The mutual comfort and happiness of the parties are the principal, but not the only, objects of the engagement. It is intended also for the benefit of their common offspring, and is an important element in the moral order, security and tranquility of civilized society. The parties cannot dissolve the contract, as they can others, by mutual consent, and no light or trivial causes should be suffered to effect its recision. While full effect is to be given to the statute, it should be remembered that, according to the experience of the most enlightened nations, the happiness of married life greatly depends on its indissolubility, and that the prospect of easy separation foments the most frivolous quarrels and disgusts into deadly animosities. Parties may not be able to live together very harmoniously, but they cannot be separated except for reasons approved of by the law. And when they know they must live together, except for causes prescribed by the law, they learn, in *610 the language of Lord Stowell, To soften, by mutual accommodation, the yoke which they know they cannot shake off; they become good husbands and wives from the necessity of remaining good husbands and wives; for necessity is a powerful master in teaching the duties it imposes.’ ..Such construction ought to be given the statute, and such weight allowed the acts of the parties, as would effect the legislative intention; but there should not be such looseness of exposition as would defeat the beneficial objects of the marriage institution, and sunder its bonds with almost as much facility as if it were a state of concubinage, dependent alone on the will of the parties.”

Paragraph 8, supra, was added to the lawfully prescribed causes of divorce by Act 196, Session Laws of 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Haw. 606, 1944 Haw. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sisson-v-sisson-haw-1944.