Burnard v. Burnard
Burnard v. Burnard
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The grounds for the divorce are cruel and barbarous treatment, endangering the life of the libellant, and indignities to the person such as to render her condition intolerable and life burdensome, and thereby compelling her to. withdraw from his home.
The parties lived together from July 2d to October 20th, a little more than three and one-half months. The testimony shows that four days after the marriage the husband expressed regret to his wife that he had previously sustained relations with another woman. Occasionally thereafter he would refer to the subject and sought to give his wife the impression that he still loved his former companion more than he did his wife, and that he desired to go back to his prior attachment. His sole purpose appears to have been to play on the feelings of his wife, in order that she might be willing to separate from him. There is no proof that the woman he spoke about had any existence; she disappears from the narrative on August 19th and does not figure after that date.
Other testimony in the case in support of the libel is that the husband offered slights to his wife on several occasions and did not give her the notice she deserved as his wife. It amounts to nothing. The same may be said of the testimony in regard to the physical violence. The proceedings were entirely ex parte. There was no attempt made to show that the course of treatment com’ plained of was continuous and we may infer there were intervals when the relations between the parties were normal. It is very evident that the husband soon tired of his wife and tried to get rid of her and that she had no objection to his doing so1. As was said by the learned
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.