Court Opinion

ID: 1680224
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 07:06:03.614486+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:45:56.035421
License: Public Domain

348 Mich. 440 (1957)
83 N.W.2d 336
BIERIE
v.
BIERIE.
Docket No. 1, Calendar No. 47,039.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided June 3, 1957.
B. Morris Pelavin, for plaintiff.
McGregor & Traycik (Robert A. Steadman, of counsel), for defendant.
DETHMERS, C.J.
Plaintiff husband appeals from decree of divorce granted defendant on her cross bill.
The wife charged him with constant drunkenness, physical assault upon her, falsely accusing her of infidelity, and use of foul and abusive language toward her. These charges were substantiated by proofs and in a measure admitted by him. We believe them true, as the trial court apparently did, and hold his conduct to constitute extreme and repeated cruelty entitling her to divorce.
*442 Plaintiff claims condonation because defendant continued to live with him during and after his several acts of misconduct until he left her, and because, occasionally, she joined him in the use of intoxicants. The proofs establish drunkenness on his part, but not on hers. Efforts of a wife to get along and live peaceably with her husband do not necessarily give rise to implied condonation of his misconduct. If condonation and forgiveness of his wrongdoings are to be implied from her continued cohabitation with him, they must be held to have been conditioned on nonrepetition of the misconduct by him. Tackaberry v. Tackaberry, 101 Mich. 102; Austin v. Austin, 172 Mich. 620; Bohlka v. Bohlka, 318 Mich. 468; Stewart v. Stewart, 329 Mich. 198; Durham v. Durham, 331 Mich. 668. The proofs establish such repetition until the time of final separation. That strips him of the defense of condonation.
As recrimination, plaintiff charges defendant with improper associations with another man or men. This gives rise to questions of fact and credibility of witnesses. Reading of all the testimony in the case does not convince us of immorality or other impropriety on her part in this connection.
Appeal may have been prompted by language in the trial court's opinion to the effect that the question usually before the court in divorce cases, whether the marriage should be severed, was not present in this case because it had already been severed by 11 years of separation and that, with respect to grounds for divorce, "the parties were fairly equally at blame," but that, because suit had been started by the husband and she apparently suffered from an incurable illness, she was, as a matter of justice, entitled to a divorce. Recognizing the validity of plaintiff's contentions that divorce may not be granted where parties are equally to blame or guilty of like misconduct, nor merely because of long separation, *443 nor on grounds of public policy, nor because both parties desire divorce, nonetheless, hearing the case de novo, as we do in chancery, we are satisfied that defendant has established her charges of extreme cruelty, that plaintiff did not establish his recrimination or claim of condonation, and that defendant is therefore entitled to divorce. Under such circumstances, inadvertencies in the trial court's opinion and award of decree, possibly on grounds not legally tenable, constitute no barrier to our affirmance on grounds which are. Draws v. Levin, 332 Mich. 447, and cases therein cited.
Affirmed, with costs to defendant.
SHARPE, SMITH, EDWARDS, VOELKER, KELLY, CARR, and BLACK, JJ., concurred.