Carter v. Carter

Illinois Supreme Court
Carter v. Carter, 62 Ill. 439 (Ill. 1872)
Walker

Carter v. Carter

Opinion of the Court

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Appellant filed a bill in the McDonough circuit court against appellee to obtain a divorce. The bill alleged wilful desertion, without any reasonable cause, for the space of more than two years. Appellee answered, and filed a cross bill, setting up, as a justification, extreme and repeated cruelty and adultery on the part of the husband. A replication was filed to the answer, and an answer to the cross bill, denying the .charge of cruelty and adultery. A trial was had resulting in favor of defendant, whereupon the court dismissed the original bill, and, under the cross bill, decreed her an annual allowance of three hundred dollars, payable semi-annually, as a separate maintenance. Complainant has appealed to this court and asks a reversal upon the ground that the evidence does not sustain the verdict and decree.

We have examined the evidence with much care, and are constrained to hold that the objection is well taken. It is not contested that appellee absented herself from the home of appellant for more than two years before the original bill was filed, and it devolved upon her to show, by a preponderance of evidence, that it was justified. While appellee testifies to a-number of acts of cruelty, extending over a series of 'twenty-seven years, her story seems to be extremely improbable. That she would have remained with appellant, and make no complaint, or even communicate to any person in the neighborhood, the fact that appellant had, on more than one occasion, administered to her poison, and had attempted to shoot her and stealthily attempted to cut her throat, and not at. the time have left him and communicated the fact to the neighbors, is so extremely improbable that we can not give it credence unless it was supported by corroborating evidence. It has every appearance of the vagaries of a crazed or distempered imagination.

Again, these charges are totally denied by appellant. He is explicit and positive in his contradiction of each and all of these charges. When she says, that he, while riding in a carriage with her, attempted to drive over a precipice, or such a place as would have produced her death, she does not seem to remember that it involved the destruction of his own life. As to all of these charges we think them so extremely improbable that, uncontradicted, we could not hold that they would have justified the decree, as some of them are unreasonable, and her conduct seems to contradict all of them. Had such attempts been made upon her life she would, undoubtedly, have left appellant and have made it known to her friends, and commenced legal proceedings. That her imagination is diseased seems to be more than probable. Her account of being choked in her sleep until life was almost extinct, and not be aware of the fact until she, next day, saw the prints of fingers on her neck is improbable. Such evidence seems to be entirely worthless.

As to the difficulty that occurred at the time when the separation took place, it appears that appellant was highly excited, and was acting under great provocation. When he was so wantonly insulted by appellee it was but natural that he should lose his temper, and he may not have restrained it, and have avoided its energetic manifestations to the extent that he should, and others might have done. But when he simply informed appellee that he did not want her to sell any more honey, for her to reply that he lied, was well calculated to throw the coolest and best balanced temper off its balance. So far as we can see, the insult was unprovoked, unexpected, and entirely wanton. And it was not to be expected that appellant would remain calm under such a provocation. He may have made demonstrations that were violent, and even improper, in a man of strong will and self-government, but when the weakness of human nature is considered, we are not prepared to hold, that, under the provocation, it was extreme cruelty. He did no personal violence to appellee, although he made demonstrations that may have induced her to believe she was in danger; but it must be remembered that she provoked it, and seems to have been seeking to induce such action as would afford an excuse for a separation, as such a thing had been previously spoken of by the parties.

But in this altercation, appellee does not pretend that she received any personal injury, but says he struck at, and attempted to kick her. This, appellant denies, in the most emphatic terms, as v'ell as all other specific charges. Again, persons who lived in the family all concur in saying, so far as they saw, he treated her kindly and properly. His neighbors speak well of him as a man of good disposition, a good citizen, and a truthful man. It would be strange, if he had treated appellee as she claims, that their children, persons living in the family, and their neighbors, with whom they had lived for years, never had discovered the fact.

To have been justified in leaving her husband, his conduct should have been such, as if continued for the statutory period, would have authorized the decreeing of a divorce. In the attempt to show such facts we think appellee has wholly failed in her proof. That an altercation occurred is true, but it was sought and produced by her own acts. Appellee having deserted appellant, without reasonable cause, for the space of more than two years before the bill was filed, he was entitled to a divorce, unless it is shown that he was guilty of adultery, as charged in the cross bill and answer.

There was much testimony taken to prove that appellant was guilty of adultery with different women. In this we think there was an entire failure. It is true, that after appellee left, appellant employed a widow to keep house for him, but as a matter of precaution against scandal he also kept in the house a hired girl during the time. And no improper acts between them were proved. Much testimony was taken that, at most, could only raise a suspicion. An attempt was made to show that this woman was not virtuous, but her character seems to have been sustained by those who were most intimately acquainted with her, and who lived in her neighborhood.

But had the evidence shown that her character was not good, that of itself would not have proved the charge. The mere fact that appellant employed a housekeeper, which was rendered necessary to enable him to carry on his farm by ap'pellee’s desertion, does not prove adultery. Nor do we find other evidence in this record from which it can be reasonably inferred. The fact that he employed a man and his wife to come to his house a day or two, although the wife’s character for virtue may not have been good, does not prove adultery by appellant. The labor they were hired to perform seems to have been necessary and proper, and until shown to have been for improper purposes, should not fix the charge of adultery on appellant.

The evidence of the general character of the widow he employed, even had it shown that it was bad, was not admissible to prove adultery. Nor was the evidence introduced for the purpose of showing that appellant’s character for virtue' was not good. This is a specific charge, and must be proved, like any other fact, by either positive or circumstantial evidence, and not by hearsay or mere rumor and gossip of the neighborhood. If guilty, the charge must be established by evidence of acts and circumstances that convinces the understanding.

Nor do we see that the fact that he may have, during the period his wife was absent, visited, on one or two occasions, female friends, or at one or more times been seen riding in a carriage with females, prove the charge. No attendant circumstances indicate- that he acted improperly on those occasions, and we can not infer adultery from them. Nor do we see, from the entire evidence in the record, that the charge is estáblished. It should be proved, and by evidence that is legitimate and convinces the mind by a preponderance of its weight, and not by mere suspicion or conjecture from vague, indefinite circumstances, pointing to no specific time, place, or act. Such loose evidence can not, even if it were admissible, prove the charge; and there is no'legitimate evidence upon which to base the conclusion that he committed adultery.

We now cometo consider the instructions. Appellant asked and the court refused to give this instruction:

“ The jury are also further instructed, that the law does not allow the jury to presume the adultery of the complainant where the facts or circumstances relied upon to establish the same may be as well attributed to an innocent intent or motive as a guilty one.”

No objection is perceived to this instruction. It announces a correct rule of law, and is free from even verbal criticism, unless the word “if” should be substituted for the word “ where.” But it is the undoubted rule of law, that where immorality or wrong is imputed, it must be established by at least a preponderance of proof. And when the evidence may as well establish innocence as guilt, the jury should always adopt the former rather than the latter hypothesis ; and the same is manifestly true where a violation of the marital rights is charged by the commission of an act that degrades the parties and inflicts great wrong upon society. When such a charge is made it involves the character of both parties to the offense, and the character of the woman to whom it is of priceless value; she should not be found guilty on evidence which may as well import innocence as guilt. All persons are presumed to be innocent until proved guilty, and to hold that act, which may as reasonably be attributed to an innocent intent, as a guilty act, would impair if it did not abrogate the rule; it would authorize the finding the existence of a fact on evidence that was in equipoise. It was error to refuse this instruction.

The sixth of defendant’s instructions should have been modified. In the previous instructions the court very properly told the jury what acts on the part of the husband would constitute reasonable cause for appellee’s leaving her husband; but in the latter clause of the sixth instruction, the acts and circumstances which would constitute a justification, are left to the determination of the jury. Now we can not see which the jury followed; and we can see that if they followed the latter, it must have operated to appellant’s prejudice, and accounts for the verdict which they returned. In this there was error; for the errors indicated the decree of the court below is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings, in conformity to this opinion.

Decree reversed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Lawson G. Carter v. Sarah Carter
Cited By
12 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
1. Divorce—desertion. Where the wife has absented herself from the house of her husband for more than two years before suit is brought for divorce, she must show, by a preponderance of evidence, that she was justified in so absenting herself, in order to prevent her husband from obtaining a divorce for such cause. 2. Same—conduct justifying desertion. To justify a wife in leaving her husband, and absenting herself without giving him cause for divorce after the statutory period, it seems that his conduct must have been such as to authorize a divorce in her favor. 3. Same—cruelly. On the trial of a bill by the husband, and cross bill by the wife, for divorce, where the husband relied on desertion for the space of two years, and the wife charged him with extreme and repeated cruelty, and adultery, it appeared that the husband had made demonstrations of personal violence when highly excited by great provocation and wanton insult on the part of the wife, but committed no personal violence in fact; and it also appeared that the wife provoked the difficulty as a pretext for separation, and that the husband was a man of good disposition, a good citizen, and truthful: Held, that in view of the provocation, the acts of the husband were not such extreme cruelty as to entitle the wife to a divorce, or justify her abandonment of her husband. 4. Adultery—proof of. A husband, after his wife left him, employed a widow woman to keep house for him, and, to avoid scandal, kept during the time a hired girl in the house, and it appeared that such help was necessary to enable him to carry on his farm. The wife, in a suit for divorce, attempted to prove that the widow’s character for chastity was bad, to show that her husband was guilty of adultery with this woman, but no improper acts between them were proved : Held, that evidence of the general character of such widow was inadmissible to prove adultery ; and that if her character had been shown to be bad, her employment, under the circumstances, was no evidence of adultery on the part of the husband. 5. The fact that the husband, after his wife left him, employed a man and his wife to come and stay at his house for a few days, although the character of the man’s wife, for virtue, may not have been good, does not prove the husband’s adultery, unless it is also shown that they were employed for improper purposes. 6. Adtjlteby. The charge of adultery must be shown by proof of acts and circumstances that convinces the mind by a preponderance of its weight, and not by mere suspicion or conjecture from vague or indefinite circumstances pointing to no specific time, place, or act. Hence, evidence that defendant’s character for virtue was not good, is not admissible on a charge of adultery. Nor is hearsay, or neighborhood rumor and gossip. 7. Same. The fact that a husband, during his wife’s absence, visited, on one or two occasions, female friends, and at one or more times was seen riding in a carriage with females, when the attendant circumstances failed to show that he acted improperly on such occasions, does not prove his adultery. 8. Same —proof of. When immorality or wrong is imputed, such as adultery, it must be established by at least a preponderance of proof; and when the facts or circumstances relied upon to establish the same, may as well import innocence as guilt, they must be held to import innocence. 9. Divorce—desertion, instruction. On the trial of the issues in a suit by a husband for divorce, on the ground of the wife’s desertion, the court, at the instance of the wife, instructed the jury that they should determine, from all the facts and circumstances, what constituted a reasonable cause of abandonment: Held, that although the court, in other instructions, properly stated what acts of the husband would constitute reasonable cause, the court erred in giving this, as it was uncertain which the jury followed.