Court Opinion

ID: 4892118
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:51:38.567422+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:09:43.613607
License: Public Domain

Devine, Associate Justice.
— The plaintiff in error brought a suit in the District Court of Victoria county to *114obtain a divorce from defendant in error, on the alleged ground of cruel treatment. A verdict was rendered, and judgment entered decreeing a divorce in her favor, and alloting to her certain property in Victoria county, from which judgment she has sued out a* writ of error to this court. The defendant, John F. Stafford, has likewise assigned errors.
It is not necessary, so far as plaintiff’s rights are concerned, to notice her exceptions taken or assignment of errors, as it is admitted that her whole cause of complaint is embraced in the following statement contained in her counsel’s brief: “The plaintiff filed a motion to correct and reform the decree, so as to assign to her the real estate to which she held the title. This motion was overruled. Plaintiff excepted, and now brings the decree to this court to be revised and corrected in regard to this property question alone;” and this is substantially set forth in plaintiff’s assignments of error, numbered 3 and 4.
The court, in the charge to the jury, directed them to inquire and state whether the deed conveying certain property to plaintiff by her husband, the defendant, was intended as an absolute gift or donation, and if not, for •what purpose was it executed ?
The jury, after finding the alleged cruelties on the part of the husband, as regarded intoxication and other matters, replied to the charge respecting the execution of the deeds, that “ all the deeds executed by the defendant of property mentioned in defendant’s answer, were for the purpose of preventing said property from being taken for the liquidation of defendant’s debts.” The jury further found that the real estate embraced in the deeds from defendant to plaintiff “ was separate property.” The court, however, decreed to defendant the property found by the jury to be separate property, although the execution, acknowledgment, delivery, and registration of the deeds conveying this property in consideration of love and af*115faction and one dollar received, was in evidence before the court. The finding of the jury, with this evidence before it, could only have meant that it was the separate property of plaintiff, and as such it was error in the court to adjudge it to defendant. The finding of the jury, that this property was conveyed to plaintiff for the purpose of preventing creditors from seizing it, places defendant in no better position than when the deeds were executed and delivered to his wife.
It is contended by counsel for defendant in error that this property, being acquired during the coverture, became by reason thereof community property. We do not so consider it in the present case. It was a gift or donation to the wife, and as such is excepted out of that clause of the statute which declares all property acquired by either husband or wife during the marriage community property. It is competent for a husband to make a gift or conveyance to his wife, and the wife can take and hold it against the husband or his heirs. The error of the court, in holding that this was either community property, or that the husband by his deeds had not parted with his interest in it, and decreeing of the same to the defendant, is alone sufficient to require a reversal of the judgment. The defendant, however, has assigned errors which will be noticed in the order presented, so far as they may be considered necessary. The first assignment is: “The court erred in admitting the testimony of the plaintiff herself to go to the jury in regard to matters affecting the divorce.” To determine the question included in this assignment of error, it is necessary to refer to the law of 19th of May, 1871, (Pas. Dig., art. 6826,) and compare its provisions with the act of June Q, 1841, (Pas. Dig., art. 3452.) The section of this latter act is as follows: “In all suits and proceedings for divorce from the bonds of matrimony, the defendant shall not be compelled to answer upon oath, nor the petition be taken for confessed for want of an *116answer; but the decree of the court shall be rendered upon full and satisfactory evidence, independent of the admissions or confessions of either party.” Here we find an absolute prohibition and a negation of any implied proof or confession of the cause of action, by the failure of defendant to answer, wholly unknown to any other proceeding in our courts. In all civil suits a party to the suit may be called on to answer, under oath, interrogatories propounded, and a failure or refusal so to answer will operate to his loss or damage in the suit pending. In all other suits, save divorce, the confessions or admissions of a party may furnish the evidence on which a verdict and judgment are rendered that may deprive him of property, liberty, character, or life; while in a suit for divorce, under this law, no verdict will stand and no judgment can be rendered but “upon full and satisfactory evidence, independent of the confessions or admissions of either party.”
The law of 19th May, 1871, reads: “ That in the courts of this State there shall be no exclusion of any witness on account of color, nor in civil actions because he is a party to or interested in the issue tried.”
This, we are of opinion, cannot be construed as repealing the law prohibiting parties from giving evidence in suits for divorce.
It is, however, contended by plaintiff in error that the prohibition in art. 3452 does not relate to parties to the suit giving evidence in the cause on their own behalf; that it was only intended to guard against collusive proceedings, and prevent the admission of the statements or confessions of either party, and as a protection to a defendant against his being compelled to answer under oath, and that that law grew out of divorce being a proceeding “ sui generis.” The reason is no stronger against receiving the confessions or admissions of a party -in the suit than exists, and always will exist, against permitting husband *117and wife to come into court and testify against each other. The law changing the common-law rule of evidence in permitting parties in interest to testify in a suit does not and was not intended to still further alter the common law, and permit the husband or wife to testify against each other in the matters of divorce. With the question of community property it may be otherwise. The marriage contract or relation, while classed in its legal acceptation as a civil contract between the parties to it, “yet it is said to be more than a contract, and to differ from all other contracts,” and has interests and legal consequences connected with and resulting from it that make it the most important to society of all human transactions. Its importance is fully appreciated by all civilized nations. It is perhaps the only civil contract, however, which the parties to it cannot at pleasure annul, and cannot in any instance annul save through the medium of the courts, and upon full and satisfactory proof, independent of the confessions or admissions of either party. The statute regulating divorce has remained during the thirty-three years from its enactment to the present time without any alteration or amendment. It has been during that time administered according to its terms without complaint as to any of its provisions, and no desire has existed or effort been made to alter it in any material features. Can it be supposed, under all the circumstances connected with or consequences flowing from a permission to the parties in interest to testify in divorce suits, that the Legislature, in the act of May, 1871, intended to repeal the prohibitions of the law of 1841, (art. 3452) ? To do so would be to admit that the Legislature intended to remove all legal restraint against divorce, and enable the parties seeking or desiring a divorce to do indirectly what the law was designed to prevent. Great stress has been laid on the fact that the law of 1871 permits parties in interest to testify in civil suits, and that a suit for divorce is “ a civil suit.” The statement is plausible, but *118not sound, and it fails to meet or embrace the whole question. While the suit for a divorce is in its form a civil proceeding, it has widely different features and incidents connected with it. In all divorce suits the defendant is charged with a breach of a solemn contract; in many cases with disgraceful and brutal conduct; in others with offenses that are known to the law either as a misdemeanor or felony. ' Again, no judgment of divorce- can be rendered byT agreement or consent; none by confession or admission of either party; neither can a judgment be rendered by default, and, as in criminal cases, the defendant cannot be compelled to criminate himself by answering or testifying under oath. These facts show that it is in its nature a quasi criminal proceeding, although not presented in the name of the State, nor punished by fine or imprisonment. To allow the husband and wife to give evidence in their divorce suit would not only loosen, weaken, and most injuriously affect the marriage tie, but would greatly tend to destroy or impair that unreserved confidence which exists between husband and wife, and which the wisdom of centuries has sought to preserve by preventing them from testifying, against each other, (save a limited exception.) It cannot be assumed that the Legislature, in giving parties in interest a right to testify, intended at the same time to alter the rule of evidence which prohibits the husband and wife from testifying against each other, and in effect repeal one of the most important sections of the act regulating divorce. “A construction which repeals former statutes or laws by implication, and divests long-approved remedies, is not to be favored in any case.” (3 Hill, 472.)
The court erred in admitting the plaintiff to testify against the defendant, her husband, and should have granted defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The failure of the court to present the question of marriage in its special issues to the jury, and the failure to find in their verdict the fact of a marriage, as also the questions *119of alimony and the disposition made by the court of the community property, need not be further noticed than to observe that on a second trial these questions are hot likely to be again presented. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and Remanded.