DocketNumber: No. 17,024
Judges: Fawcett, Reese, Rose
Filed Date: 11/27/1912
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The parties are husband and wife. The husband is plaintiff, and the trial court granted him a divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. The wife appeals, and insists that under the evidence the divorce should not have been granted.
They were married September 18, 1906, and the suit was commenced June 20, 1910. The intervening time was full of sensation and scandal. Both had been previously married and divorced. They lived in Omaha. Evidence relating to what occurred after they became husband and wife fairly establishes the following facts: Defendant accused her husband of marital infidelity, and at the trial was unable to prove her charges, though she had previously given them wide publicity. She clandestinely took his watch and other articles of personal property and pawned them to secure money for herself. She accepted from her husband money and transportation for a trip to Virginia to visit her relatives, and consented to his going to California at the same time to visit his children by a former wife. After he left Omaha pursuant to this understanding, slie secretly followed him and spied upon him
Defendant offered a vast amount of testimony to establish condonation. If full credence could be given to the witnesses Who testified in favor of defendant on that issue, the defense might be established, but the trial court, under all the circumstances, properly disbelieved their testimony on material matters. After the alleged condonation, defendant’s conduct was -more cruel than before. A careful consideration of the entire record leads to the conclusion that, the findings below were right and that the divorce was properly granted. An analysis of the evidence would not benefit the parties nor improve the litera
Affirmed.