Umlauf v. Umlauf

6 N.E. 455, 117 Ill. 580
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 6 N.E. 455 (Umlauf v. Umlauf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Umlauf v. Umlauf, 6 N.E. 455, 117 Ill. 580 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The appellant, Victoria Umlauf, on the 2d of December, 1880, commenced a proceeding in chancery, in the Superior Court of Cook county, against her husband, Lewis Umlauf, for a “reasonable support and maintenance, ” she at the time living separate and apart from him. The Superior Court, upon the evidence before it, found the equities with the complainant, and rendered a decree accordingly, which, on the 4th of October, 1881, was reversed, and the bill dismissed, by the Appellate Court for the First District.

On the 12th of February, 1883, Lewis Umlauf filed in the same court a bill against Mrs. Umlauf for a divorce, charging her with willful and continuous desertion, “without any reasonable cause, ” for a period of more than two years from the 2d day of December, 1880, being the date of the filing of her bill against him for separate maintenance. Upon the hearing ■ of the cause, the Superior Court admitted in evidence, against her objections, the pleadings and decree in the suit for separate maintenance, and also excluded all evidence offered on her part tending to disprove the charge in the bill that “she willfully deserted and absented herself from her husband without any reasonable cause. ” The ruling of the court in this respect must have been' upon the hypothesis that the issue in both suits is the same, for it is evident it can not be sustained on any other ground. If in fact and in law the issue was the same in both suits, the court’s ruling was clearly correct, for no principle is better settled than that where a question proper for judicial determination is directly put in issue, and finally determined in a legal proceeding by a court having competent authority and jurisdiction to hear and determine the same, such decision and determination of the question will be deemed final and conclusive upon the pa.rties and their privies in all future litigation between them in which the same question arises, so long as the judgment remains unreversed or is not otherwise set aside. For the purposes of this rule it is not sufficient that the question arising in subsequent litigation is identical with the one decided, in some respects, only,—it must be so in all respects. If, therefore, there is an element in one of the questions which is not contained in the other, the rule does not apply, for the obvious reason that this additional element may have been the turning point in the previous decision.

The question then recurs, is the proposition that Mrs. Umlauf lived separate and apart from her husband “without her fault,” identical with the proposition that “she willfully -deserted and absented herself from him without any reasonable cause?” We are of opinion they differ in several essential particulars. The element of willfulness contained in the latter proposition is clearly not to be found in the former. Nor do we regard the two expressions, “without fault,” and “without reasonable cause, ” either in a popular or legal sense, as equivalent terms. For illustration, if one enters the house of his neighbor and grossly insults him, and is thereupon ordered to leave, he certainly has cause for doing so; yet it can not be truthfully affirmed that his being compelled to leave was without his fault. So the wife may have cause, in the misconduct of her husband, for living separate and apart from him; yet if such misconduct has been induced by a failure to perform her duties towards him, her living apart from him could not properly be said to be “without her fault, ” and hence in such case an action could not be maintained by her for separate maintenance. The statute authorizing actions for separate maintenance was adopted for the exclusive benefit of those whose conduct has not materially contributed to a disruption of the marital relations. If the wife, therefore, in bringing a suit of this kind, is not prepared to show that she is without fault, she will fail to bring herself within the statute, and must necessarily be defeated in her action. But such a defeat does not at all affect her common law rights. The only question it conclusively settles is, that her living apart from her husband was not without her fault. But does the establishment of this fact entitle the husband to a divorce, without regard to his own treatment of her? In the separate maintenance suit, his conduct wras involved ■ in a subordinate degree only. It related to but one branch of the case, which she was bound to establish in order to .recover, namely, that she had cause for living apart from her husband. But this was not sufficient. She had to go one step further, and show that such living apart from her husband was without fault on her part. For aught that appears the jury may have found -against her in that suit solely on the ground she was partly in fault. To demonstrate- the unsoundness of the position, suppose a husband and wife mutually drift into a quarrel, and- that after the wife has greatly provoked the husband, and offered him many indignities, he turns upon her and cruelly beats and drives her aw-ay from his home, telling her if she ever returns he will take her life, and that he never thereafter relents or invites her back; or, to make the case stronger, perhaps, suppose they quarrel, and mutually agree to live apart, and accordingly do so; Under these circumstances she files a bill against him for a separate maintenance, and of course fails, her suit, as in this case, having been protracted two years. The husband thereupon files a bill against her for a divorce, and relies upon the decree dismissing her bill, as is the case here, to establish his right to a divorce. Would it not be a travesty on legal justice to permit him to succeed, under the circumstances supposed ? And yet, in principle, we perceive no difference in the case suggested and the one before us. If, in either of the cases supposed, the'husband had 'first brought his action for divorce, all will concede that on proof of the facts stated he would have been defeated and his bill dismissed. But it would seem, according to the theory of appellee, because the wife happened to bring her suit for separate maintenance first; and was unsuccessful, by some mysterious logic the record of her defeat is converted into ineontestible proof of his right to a decree. Suppose appellee had brought his suit for a divorce first, and had been unsuccessful, would the record of the dismissal of his bill have been conclusive evidence of his wife’s right to maintain a suit against him for separate maintenance ? It certainly would, if the position of appellee is. correct.

The question now under consideration is not a new one in this court. In Wahle v. Wahle, 71 Ill. 510, it was directly presented, though from a different aspect. In that case Wahle sued his wife for a divorce, alleging desertion by her without reasonable cause. Upon answering, the wife filed a cross-bill for separate maintenance, under which she was bound to prove, as is the case here, that her living separate from her husband was without her fault. The court, on the hearing, rendered a decree dismissing the original bill, the jury having found the issues against the complainant, and it was contended by the wife that the record of that decree was conclusive evidence of her right to maintain her cross-bill for maintenance, and in answering this* position it was there said: “Is, then, the record of.

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6 N.E. 455, 117 Ill. 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/umlauf-v-umlauf-ill-1886.