Stabile v. Stabile
Stabile v. Stabile
Addendum
On Rehearing.
The argument in support of the application for rehearing has been considered in the light of a re-examination of the record. Of course, the review on' appeal is restricted to the record of the cause in the trial court, and no subsequently occurring fact or action elsewhere can be considered. The court remains convinced of the correctness of both the conclusions of fact and of law stated in the foregoing opinion. It would serve no desirable purpose to note and further comment upon the evidence requiring the prevailing conclusions of fact. There being no foundation in the record for the view that collusion to secure a divorce, within the purview of Code, § 3799, characterized the conduct or statements of these parties, hone of the provisions of Code, § 3799, have any application to this cause. The progenitor of Code, § 3799, was section 1966 of the Code of 1852. That was the statute in effect when Ribet v. Ribet, 39 Ala. 348, cited in the original opinion, was decided. This was then held, most pertinently to the *636 present circumstances, with particular reference to the Code:
“In view of the provisions of the Code of Alabama on the subject of divorce, and the general current of authority, we hold the doctrine that any one of the statutory causes for a divorce may be set up in bar of a bill for a divorce a vinculo predicated on any other of the statutory causes. Barbour on M. and D. § 396 et seq.; 12 Mo. 53. Thus, if the husband proceeds for a divorce on the ground of adultery of the wife, she may defeat his suit by alleging and proving that he himself was guilty of such cruelty towards her as would otherwise have entitled her to a decree for a divorce as against him; and so, vice versa, if she proceed on -the ground of his cruelty, he may reply in bar that she was guilty of adultery. And, as has been already shown, if such bar is not actually set up and relied on in the answer of either party, and the proofs in the case nevertheless show the fact to exist, the court is authorized and required to hear such proof, and be governed accordingly. If both are guilty of such want of fidelity to their matrimonial vows, whether in one way or another, as goes to show that neither is strictly an ‘aggrieved’ party, the court will not disturb the binding force of that great bond of society, the marriage contract.”
The application for rehearing is overruled.
Opinion of the Court
The appellee was granted a divorce a vinculo from the appellant on the ground—the only one insisted upon— that the husband (appellant) had “committed actual violence on her person, attended with danger to life or health, and that from his conduct there is reasonable apprehension that he will do her bodily violence”—a charge referable, in a way, to Code, § 3795.
The decree appealed from is reversed, and a decree will be here rendered dismissing the complainant’s (appellee’s) bill.
Reversed and rendered.
Reference
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- Stabile v. Stabile.
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