Boger v. Boger

Decision Date06 March 1958
Docket NumberNo. 9801,9801
Citation139 A.2d 147,87 R.I. 172
PartiesJohanna P. BOGER v. Edwin A. BOGER. Ex.
CourtRhode Island Supreme Court

Jacob J. Alprin, Providence, for petitioner.

Coffey, Ward, Hoban & McGovern, Matthew E. Ward, Providence, for respondent.

CONDON, Chief Justice.

This is a petition for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. The case is here on the petitioner's bill of exceptions to the decision of the superior court denying and dismissing the petition. The exceptions are substantially to the effect that the decision is against the law, the evidence, the law and the evidence and the weight thereof.

After a lengthy trial the trial justice reviewed the evidence in considerable detail and commented on certain characteristics of each party. From his analysis of both parties and their testimony he concluded in effect that the parties were incompatible and that such incompatibility led them to the several altercations and physical encounters which constitute petitioner's sole evidence of extreme cruelty. As to those encounters, he expressed the opinion that there was no clear and convincing evidence which established that in any instance they resulted in physical acts of the requisite force and violence to amount to extreme cruelty. He also carefully considered the evidence with reference to the further claim of petitioner that respondent's course of conduct toward her was intended to and did impair her health, and he concluded that such evidence was too meager to support such claim.

In weighing the evidence as to what we may briefly term physical and mental cruelty, he relied upon the law as this court has declared it in an unbroken line of cases beginning with Grant v. Grant, 44 R.I. 169, 116 A. 481, and Borda v. Borda, 44 R.I. 337, 117 A. 362, and continuing down through Bastien v. Bastien, 57 R.I. 176, 189 A. 37; Salvatore v. Salvatore, 61 R.I. 109, 200 A. 438; and Emirzian v. Emirzian, 67 R.I. 55, 20 A.2d 530. The trial justice recognized that there could be extreme cruelty justifying a decree of divorce without evidence of physical violence and he correctly appreciated the quantum and quality of the evidence which was necessary to prove extreme cruelty in the absence of such physical acts.

The next question is whether he was clearly wrong in his findings of fact from the evidence before him. We shall not relate here the evidence upon which petitioner relies for proof of her charge of extreme cruelty. Suffice it to say that we...

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3 cases
  • Petition of Smith
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • April 25, 1966
    ...to say that in our judgment the pertinent findings are not clearly wrong and hence will not be disturbed by this court. Boger v. Boger, 87 R.I. 172, 139 A.2d 147. Paragraph numbered 1, subpar. c, of the decree also provides that the father's 'right to visitation outside of the State of Rhod......
  • Feuti v. Feuti
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • February 16, 1961
    ...proceeding is entitled to great weight and that such decision will not be disturbed by us unless it was clearly wrong, Boger v. Boger, 87 R.I. 172, 139 A.2d 147, because in such cases the justice presiding at the trial had an opportunity to see and hear the witnesses, to observe the manner ......
  • Wolf v. Wolf
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • March 13, 1975
    ...his findings of fact carry great weight with this court and will not be distrubed by us unless they are clearly wrong. Boger v. Boger, 87 R.I. 172, 139 A.2d 147 (1958); Castelli v. Castelli, 82 R.I. 232, 107 A.2d 284 The petitioner's appeal is denied and dismissed, and the judgment appealed......

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