Court Opinion

ID: 6423414
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:01:52.97696+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:52.704942
License: Public Domain

C. Allen, J.
The libellant seeks a divorce from her husband on the ground that he has been sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor in the state prison at Waupun, Wisconsin, for a term of seven years and six months; and the question presented to us is whether such a sentence passed in another State is a good cause of divorce here. The Pub. Sts. c. 146, § 2, provide that *152a divorce may be decreed “ when either party has been sentenced to confinement at hard labor for life or for five years or more in the state prison, or in a jail or house of correction.” The first statute in this Commonwealth making a sentence to imprisonment a cause of divorce was the Rev. Sts. c. 76, § 5, where the language is substantially the same as that quoted above, except that the term required is seven years or more. Desertion was not made a cause of divorce till afterwards, by the St. of 1838, c. 126, and it is therefore apparent that the sentence to imprisonment was not deemed merely to be substantially equivalent to a desertion. It imported an offence, the nature of which was known to the Legislature. Imprisonment elsewhere might be for a cause punishable here for a less term, or possibly not punishable here at all. The term “ the state prison,” when used without further description in the Revised Statutes, as well as in the more recent legislation, means the state prison of this Commonwealth. Beard v. Boston, ante, 96. No instance to the contrary has been cited to us, and we do not now recall any. If a state prison elsewhere was intended, it would be natural to say so in distinct language, as in the Rev. Sts. c. 144, § 34. A sentence to imprisonment elsewhere is not included as a cause of divorce, within the meaning of the Pub. Sts. c. 146, § 2. Martin v. Martin, 47 N. H. 52, 53.

Libel dismissed.