Shore v. Shore
Decision Date | 23 January 1942 |
Docket Number | 684. |
Citation | 18 S.E.2d 353,220 N.C. 802 |
Parties | SHORE v. SHORE. |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Civil action for alimony without divorce.
The facts, necessary to a decision, follow:
1. At the instance of the defendant and on affidavit filed by him 19 May, 1936, the plaintiff was adjudged insane and committed to the State Hospital at Morganton, where she stayed at intervals until 8 June, 1938, when she was released as "improved".
2. The plaintiff and defendant then went to the home of plaintiff's parents, where they lived as man and wife until 29 August, 1938, when they separated under the terms of a written agreement and the defendant went to Thomasville to live, leaving the plaintiff at the home of her parents.
3. This action was instituted 18 April, 1941, for alimony without divorce. An order was entered in the cause at the April Term, 1941, requiring the defendant to pay the plaintiff $35 per month as reasonable subsistence for herself and infant son until the issues in the case could be submitted to a jury.
4. Thereafter, on 14 May, 1941, the defendant filed answer pleaded the 1938 deed of separation in bar of plaintiff's right to recover, and set up a cross-action for divorce on the ground of two years' separation.
5. When the case was called for trial at the May Term, 1941, the plaintiff first interposed a demurrer to the cross-action and moved to dismiss the defendant's counterclaim. Overruled exception.
The jury returned the following verdict:
Judgment on the verdict (1) granting the defendant an absolute divorce, (2) relieving him from any further payments to the plaintiff under the previous order for subsistence, and (3) increasing slightly the allowance for the minor child, from which the plaintiff appeals, assigning errors.
J. F. Spruill, of Lexington, for plaintiff, appellant.
Carl C. Wilson, of Thomasville, and Phillips & Bower, of Lexington, for defendant, appellee.
The first question for decision is whether a husband can set up a cross-action for divorce in a proceeding brought by his wife under C.S. § 1667, Pub. Laws 1923, c. 52, for alimony without divorce. The decisions and provisions of the statute point to a negative answer.
We have held that this section, C.S. § 1667, "only applies to independent suits for alimony", and may not be used by the wife as the basis of a cross-action in a suit for divorce instituted by the husband. Silver v. Silver, 220 N.C. 191, 16 S.E.2d 834, 835; Dawson v. Dawson, 211 N.C. 453, 190 S.E. 749; Adams v. Adams, 212 N.C. 373, 193 S.E. 274; Skittletharpe v. Skittletharpe, 130 N.C. 72, 40 S.E. 851; Reeves v. Reeves, 82 N.C. 348.
It was said in Hooper v. Hooper, 164 N.C. 1, 80 S.E. 64, "The statute is one solely for support". It provides a remedy for an abandoned wife to obtain support from the estate or earnings of her husband. "If any husband shall separate himself from his wife and fail to provide her and the children of the marriage with the necessary subsistence, *** the wife may institute an action in the superior court", etc. In Skittletharpe v. Skittletharpe supra [130 N.C. 72, 40 S.E. 852], the "defendant's reasons and excuses for separating from his wife" were declared to be irrelevant and immaterial to the inquiry. True, this was said prior to the amendment of 1923, Chap. 52, Pub.Laws 1923, making it "competent for the husband to plead the adultery of the wife in bar of her right to such alimony". Price v. Price, 188 N.C. 640, 125 S.E. 264. Later, in Hooper v. Hooper, supra, it was pointed out that in respect of an unfaithful wife, "the defendant may have his remedy in an action for divorce, and, as the judgment in this proceeding is not final, he could then move to modify or set it aside".
To permit the husband to set up a cross-action for divorce in a proceeding brought by his wife under C.S. § 1667 for alimony without divorce, would be to defeat the plaintiff's cause of action at the threshold of the case and remit the parties to whatever rights they may have under the cross-action. If the wife is not allowed to cross complain against her husband for alimony without divorce in the husband's suit for divorce, because of the terms of the statute, and we have so held in a number of cases, by the same token the husband should not be allowed to cross complain against his wife for divorce in her action for alimony without divorce. The plaintiff's action is grounded on the existence of the marriage tie, and presupposes its continuance. The defendant's cross-action admits its existence, and seeks to dissolve it. The issues are contradictory and the remedies inconsistent. See Lykes & Co. v. Grove, 201 N.C. 254, 159 S.E. 360. Moreover, it would seem that in a matter of this kind, the parties should be afforded a modicum of equality in treatment, and the statute apparently so provides "Provided further, that in all applications for alimony under this section it shall be competent for the husband to plead the adultery of the wife in bar of her right to such alimony". ...
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