DocketNumber: Gen. No. 22,299
Citation Numbers: 201 Ill. App. 595
Judges: Holdom
Filed Date: 10/30/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/26/2022
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant filed his bill for divorce from appellee, alleging a marriage between them on the 19th of December, 1907, also cohabitation from the time of the marriage until the 4th of December, 1915, and the birth of a son, George Louis Paul, as the fruit of said marriage, of the age of seven years at the time the bill was filed. Appellant in the bill charged his wife' with adultery and prayed for a divorce. Defendant answered, admitting the marriage and the birth of the son George, but denying the adultery charged. Appellee then filed her cross-bill, averring the marriage, the cohabitation, the birth of George, and charging the defendant with being guilty of extreme and repeated cruelty towards her and also with adultery and drunkenness. In this cross-bill she prayed for a divorce, the custody of the son born of the marriage, and for alimony both pendente lite and permanent. On motion of appellee the court entered an order that appellant pay appellee six dollars a week alimony and twenty-five dollars for solicitor’s fees pendente lite. From that order appellant prosecutes this appeal.
The bill of appellant and his answer to the cross-bill are both verified by appellant’s oath. In his answer to appellee’s cross-bill appellant denies the marriage, although admitting the cohabitation and the birth of the child as the result thereof. Appellant now contends that as the marriage between himself and his wife is disputed, the order for alimony and solicitor’s fees is erroneous and that no such order can be entered until it is judicially determined that the marriage relation existed between the parties. It is quite true that until the marriage is established the court is without jurisdiction to decree alimony or solicitor’s fees to the wife. McKenna v. McKenna, 70 Ill. App. 340.
The sworn hill of appellant averring the marriage, the answer of appellee admitting such marriage, the cross-bill of appellee again averring the marriage, were, we think, sufficient proof to warrant the chancellor in holding that the relation of husband and wife between the parties was proven. A fact averred by a complainant and admitted by the defendant needs no further proof. Furthermore, a court of chancery is a court of conscience, and it is not the policy of equity jurisprudence to allow a. party to sear his conscience by denying facts averred under oath, in order to escape a financial obligation which arises in law from such averment. The oath of appellant to his bill averring a marriage with particularity, and his denial of such marriage in his sworn answer to his wife’s cross-bill, savor of perjury. '
Appellant is estopped by the averments of his sworn bill averring the marriage from denying the truth of such averment on a motion for solicitor’s fees and alimony pendente lite. While appellant’s bill averring the marriage and appellee’s answer admitting such marriage remain in the record, no proof is admissible either to maintain or rebut such averment.
The order of the Circuit Court appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.