Judges: Beck, Fish
Filed Date: 11/17/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/7/2024
Mrs. Ida Ford brought a libel for divorce against her husband, Iverson L. Ford. 'There was also a prayer for permanent alimony. The jury upon the trial returned a verdict granting a total divorce and awarding permanent alimony in the sum of $7,500. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled.
1. The plaintiff in error insists that the general grounds of his motion for a new trial should be sustained and that the verdict should be set aside because of a lack of evidence to support it. With this contention we can not agree. The libellant bases her suit and her right to a total divorce upon certain alleged acts of cruel treatment, and there was evidence submitted from which the jury were authorized to find that the allegations of cruel treatment were sustained. In case of cruel treatment by either husband or wife, the jury in their discretion may grant either a total or partial divorce. Civil Code, § 2946. Cruel treatment, within the meaning of this section is the willful infliction of pain, bodily or mental, upon the complaining party, such as reasonably justifies an apprehension of danger to life, limb, or health. Stoner v. Stoner, 134 Ga. 368 (67 S. E. 1030). In the case of Ring v. Ring, 118 Ga. 183 (44 S. E. 861, 62 L. R. A. 878), Candler, J., in a full discussion and clear analysis of the prior decisions of this court, defined the expression “cruel treatment,” giving substantially the definition employed in the later case of Stoner v. Stoner, supra, and disapproving the ruling upon this subject in the ease of Myrick v. Myrick, 67 Ga. 771. And when we hold in this case that the allegations of cruel treatment are supported by the evidence, we are applying the sound rule laid down in the case of Ring v. Ring and the earlier eases cited and quoted in support of the Ring case. In substance, the testimony of the plaintiff, who appeared as a witness on her own behalf, showed that before the happening of the occurrence which caused the final separation, the husband and wife had become estranged. He had plainly intimated, if he had not directly charged, in remarks made to the wife a few weeks before the final separation, that she was taking certain trips away from home to meet other men, and that her relations with other men had become improper. Mrs. Ford had then separated from her husband and begun to occupy a different room, but yielded to his entreaties and returned to him.- But in November, 1913, a
We will not stop to inquire whether the two or three blows inflicted by the husband upon the face of the wife required a finding that the husband was guilty of such cruel treatment as the statute provides may give the right to a total divorce; or whether the jury might not have found that the striking of these blows, under the circumstances narrated, was the mere result of a temporary ebullience of temper, and that they were not sufficient to, and did not, jeopardize the life or limb or health of the wife or create a reasonable apprehension on her part that her body or health was in danger. But we are fully persuaded that the jury were authorized to'find that, all the circumstances being considered, the conduct of the husband on the occasion to which we are referring amounted to
2, 3. The rulings made in headnotes two and three require no elaboration.
Judgment affirmed.