Wise v. Wise

38 S.E. 794, 60 S.C. 426, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 794 (Wise v. Wise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wise v. Wise, 38 S.E. 794, 60 S.C. 426, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 111 (S.C. 1901).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

On the 14th day of February, A. D. 1898, this action was begun. The complaint in effect alleged that the plaintiff, Harriet C. Wise, became the wife of the defendant, Daniel Wise, on the 8th day of April, 1896, in the county of Richland, in this State, and that they resided in said county and State; that said wife, Harriet C. Wise, was always a dutiful wife to her said husband; that on the 16th day of November, 1896, the defendant, Wise, deserted the plaintiff, his wife, leaving her penniless, and soon after said Daniel Wise reached the State of Ohio, he began an action in one of the Courts of said State of Ohio for divorce, alleging that the plaintiff, his wife, had been criminally intimate with a negro boy, Thomas Thompson, and others; that as soon as he was confronted with her answer of indignant denial of such foul charges, he recanted and humbly apologized for such insults, and dismissed said suit; that upon his return to the State of South Carolina, he ardently sued for peace with the plaintiff, his wife, and he was conditionally forgiven, and the conditions, amongst others, were that he would provide the plaintiff with a home and the personal *428 property mentioned and set down in the exhibits with the complaint, all of which he did, except that no writings were executed 'between them; that the defendant began again to abuse and maltreat the plaintiff, his wife, failing to supply her necessities in food and raiment; that the plaintiff gave birth to a daughter on the'8th June, 1897; whereupon, so poorly did he provide for the wants and needs of his wife and child, that under the direction of Dr. Robert Earle, the plaintiff and her daughter were carried to the house of her foster parents, where she remained for two months; that his cruelty -by word and deed was so great that when he proposed to take the plaintiff to the city of Columbia to live, she declined to leave the home he 'had provided for her, though he left her penniless. That the defendant has considerable means. That the plaintiff prays that the defendant may be required to pay over to her a sufficient sum of money, as alimony, which will support the plaintiff and her babe. And that the defendant, Wise, may be decreed to turn over by deed the house and lot of fifteen acres and the personal property, in accordance with his promise made at the time of their reconciliation, in the first of the year 1897.

The defendant by his answer admits his intermarriage with the plaintiff; he denies all allegations of neglect or cruelty by word or act; he alleges that his wife refused to go to Ohio with him on 16th November, 1896; he alleges that the divorce suit was instituted while smarting under a sense of his wrongs at the hands of his wife and while maddened by reports of her infidelity to him — the latter of which soon proved utterly groundless; that he became reconciled to his wife after his apologies to her; that he denies that he cursed and abused her, or that he neglected or refused to supply her with proper food or appropriate raiment, or that he threatened their child; that this defendant attributes all the wrongs he has and is suffering from his wife to her foster parents, who are influenced by spite and hatred to him, and also by a desire to possess or control the worldly goods of which he is the owner. Indeed, his answer may be denominated a *429 denial of any injurious allegations in plaintiff’s complaint.

Und'er an order of one of the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas, all the issues of law and fact were referred to the master. The cause came on for trial before the Hon, O. W. Buchanan, as presiding Judge, in the year 1899. By his decree, he denied the plaintiff any relief, but directed her to turn over the fifteen acres to her husband. From this decree the plaintiff has appealed as follows :

“I. That his Honor, the Circuit Judge, erred in the following findings and holdings in his decree: 1. ‘That the plaintiff has not sustained1-the allegations of her complaint by the preponderance of the testimony.’ Whereas, he should have decided that she has sustained them. 2. ‘That the defendant has not deserted his wife, but she him.’ Whereas, he should have decided that defendant has twice deserted her. 3. ‘That the defendant has offered in good faith, I think, to receive her back, which will prevent a decree for alimony.’ Whereas, he should have decided that defendant’s offer was not a sincere and bona üde offer, to treat her with conjugal kindness and affection, on which she could with safety to her life and health rely, but that her living with him in the relation of wife would be the risk of peril to her, and that said offer does not prevent a decree for alimony. 4. ‘Nor do I find in the case any legal testimony which would justify the Court in directing the defendant to convey the land mentioned in the complaint to his wife.’ Whereas, he should have decided that the testimony showed that the defendant held the legal title to said land in trust for her as the equitable owner, and justified the Court in so directing. 5. ‘That she is not entitled to any of the relief demanded by her.’ Whereas, he should have decided that she is entitled to all of the relief demanded by her. 6. ‘The testimony shows that she has taken and retained possession of the land described in the complaint, her right to which she submitted to the Court for adjudication.’ Whereas, he should have decided that she simply remained in the house that he had *430 built for her, in which she was left when he last deserted her, and of which she was the equitable owner.

“II. That his Honor erred in not making the following findings and holdings, in two aspects of the case, as to both of which the decree is entirely silent: i. That during both period's of their coverture, when they lived together, defendant treated plaintiff with such cruelty, as justified the granting of alimony for herself and support for their child. 2. That defendant was guilty of such indecencies in his family as justified the plaintiff's claims.

“III. 1. That his Honor erred in ordering and decreeing that ‘defendant have leave to enter up judgment of dismissal of complaint, with a direction to plaintiff to surrender to him, without future waste, the possession of the land described in the complaint.' Whereas, he should have ordered and decreed that plaintiff have the relief sought in her complaint, and that defendant convey to her in fee the land described in the complaint.”

1 I am not disposed to interfere with the Circuit decree, so far as it relates to the findings of fact and1 conclusions of law reached by the 'Circuit Judge as to the fifteen acres of land, whereon a dwelling house now occupied' by the plaintiff, as well as to the personal property, .a list of which is attached to the complaint. It is a dangerous precedent to adjudge that such fifteen acres of land, the title to which was taken by Daniel Wise after the agreement connected with the reconciliation 'between the plaintiff and defendant, in January, 1897, should be conveyed to plaintiff. The statute of frauds and perjuries were intended, no doubt, to prevent just such contracts being enforced in the Courts of the country; all of such contracts are in parol.

In disposing of this appeal, I will first

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 794, 60 S.C. 426, 1901 S.C. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-wise-sc-1901.