NO. COA13-766
NORTH CAROLINA COURT OF APPEALS
Filed: 18 February 2014
ANJELIKA DECHKOVSKAIA,
Plaintiff,
v. Orange County
No. 11-CVD-0472
ALEX DECHKOVSKAIA,
(Male’s Name Spelled Deshkovski)
Defendant.
Appeal by defendant from Orders entered 26 July 2012 by Judge
Beverly A. Scarlett and 3 December 2012 by Judge Joseph M. Buckner
in District Court, Orange County. Heard in the Court of Appeals
12 December 2013.
Sandlin & Davidian, PA, by Lisa Kamarchik, for plaintiff-
appellee.
Wait Law, P.L.L.C., by John L. Wait, for defendant-appellant.
STROUD, Judge.
Alex Deshkovski1 (“defendant”) appeals from an equitable
distribution and alimony order entered 26 July 2012 distributing
property the trial court classified as marital and awarding
1 There is some confusion in the record regarding how to spell
defendant’s last name—the order lists his name both as Dechkovskaia
and Deshkovski, but in various pleadings defendant has spelled his
name Deshkovski, so we will use that spelling.
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Anjelika Dechkovskaia (“plaintiff”) $3,500 per month in alimony
for twelve years. Defendant also appeals from an order entered 3
December 2012 denying his motion for a new trial and for a stay of
proceedings.
I. Background
Plaintiff and defendant were married on 7 July 1990 in the
Soviet Union, in what is now Belarus, separated on or about 25
February 2011, and divorced on 30 April 2012. They have two
children—one born September 1991 and a minor child born December
2004. They are both highly educated and both work in scientific
fields—defendant as a professor and lecturer, and plaintiff as a
researcher. Defendant moved to the United States in 1996 to pursue
his higher education, achieving a master’s degree and two
doctorates. Within a year, plaintiff followed defendant to the
United States and, in 1997, began working as a scientific research
assistant and lab technician.
On 4 March 2011, plaintiff filed a complaint in Orange County
requesting permanent custody of the parties’ minor child, child
support, postseparation support, alimony, and equitable
distribution. Plaintiff alleged in the complaint that defendant
had committed marital misconduct by “engaging in indignities which
have rendered the condition of the plaintiff intolerable and life
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burdensome in that defendant has controlled the plaintiff and the
plaintiff’s life throughout most of the marriage.” Defendant
denied the allegation, but did not allege that plaintiff had
herself engaged in marital misconduct. The trial court awarded
sole legal and physical custody of the parties’ minor child to
plaintiff and visitation for defendant by order entered 15 February
2012.
After a hearing on 30 April 2012, at which plaintiff was
represented by counsel and defendant appeared pro se, the trial
court resolved the equitable distribution and alimony issues by
order entered 25 July 2012. The trial court classified various
pieces of property acquired by the parties as marital property,
including two houses titled in the name of the minor child. The
trial court valued the parties’ total estate at $591,702.00, found
that an equal distribution of property would be equitable, and
distributed the marital property accordingly. The trial court
also found that defendant was a supporting spouse, that plaintiff
was a dependent spouse, that defendant had committed marital
misconduct by offering indignities to plaintiff during the
marriage, and that defendant’s post-separation conduct
corroborated its finding of marital misconduct prior to
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separation. The trial court awarded plaintiff $3,500 per month in
alimony for twelve years and attorney’s fees.
On 13 August 2012, defendant, now represented by counsel,
filed a motion for a new trial and stay of execution under Rules
59 and 62 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. The trial
court denied defendant’s motion by order entered 3 December 2012.
Defendant filed notice of appeal on 2 January 2013 both from the
order denying his post-trial motion and the order addressing
equitable distribution and alimony.2
II. Equitable Distribution
Defendant first argues that the trial court erred in its
valuation of the marital estate because it included two houses in
the estate not owned by either party on the date of separation. We
agree.
[T]he standard of review on appeal from a
judgment entered after a non-jury trial is
whether there is competent evidence to support
the trial court’s findings of fact and whether
the findings support the conclusions of law
and ensuing judgment. The trial court’s
findings of fact are binding on appeal as long
as competent evidence supports them, despite
the existence of evidence to the contrary.
2 Although defendant appealed from both orders, he makes no
argument on appeal regarding the order denying his post-trial
motions. Therefore, any argument concerning that order has been
abandoned. N.C.R. App. P. 28(a).
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The trial court’s findings need only be
supported by substantial evidence to be
binding on appeal. We have defined substantial
evidence as such relevant evidence as a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to
support a conclusion. As to the actual
distribution ordered by the trial court, when
reviewing an equitable distribution order, the
standard of review is limited to a
determination of whether there was a clear
abuse of discretion. A trial court may be
reversed for abuse of discretion only upon a
showing that its actions are manifestly
unsupported by reason.
Peltzer v. Peltzer, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 732 S.E.2d 357, 359-
60 (citations, quotation marks, and brackets omitted), disc. rev.
denied, 366 N.C. 417, 735 S.E.2d 186 (2012).
The trial court determined that two houses purchased by the
parties during the marriage were marital property despite being
titled in the name of the parties’ minor child. On the date of
separation, neither party owned the houses at issue. The trial
court specifically found that both properties were titled “in the
minor child’s name upon acquisition.” Nevertheless, plaintiff now
argues that even if the houses were titled in the minor child’s
name, defendant had an equitable interest in the property, such as
a constructive trust, with the minor child as trustee.3
3 We note that the property was apparently acquired some time prior
to the child’s seventh birthday.
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“In an equitable distribution proceeding, only marital
property is subject to distribution by the court. G.S. 50–20(a).”
Lawrence v. Lawrence, 100 N.C. App. 1, 16, 394 S.E.2d 267, 275
(1990). For purposes of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20, “marital property”
“means all real and personal property acquired by either spouse or
both spouses during the course of the marriage and before the date
of the separation of the parties, and presently owned . . . .”
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-20(b)(1) (2011). Based upon the unchallenged
finding by the trial court, it appears that the houses were titled
to the minor child when they were purchased, and it is uncontested
that only the parties’ minor child held title to the two contested
houses on the date of separation.
First, we must consider whether this issue has been preserved
for our review. We conclude that it has. As discussed below, the
trial court must join the title owner, in this case the minor
child, as a necessary party to the action in order to adjudicate
ownership of the two houses. “Otherwise the trial court would not
have jurisdiction to enter an order affecting the title to that
property.” Upchurch v. Upchurch, 122 N.C. App. 172, 176, 468 S.E.2d
61, 64, disc. rev. denied, 343 N.C. 517, 472 S.E.2d 26 (1996). Our
review of this issue has not been waived by defendant’s failure to
raise it below. See Kor Xiong v. Marks, 193 N.C. App. 644, 652,
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668 S.E.2d 594, 600 (2008) (“An appellate court has the power to
inquire into jurisdiction in a case before it at any time . . .
.”).
To the extent that plaintiff claims that the minor child holds
the properties only in some sort of constructive trust for the
marital estate, that issue cannot be determined unless the minor
child—who holds title to the property—is made a party to the
action. See Upchurch, 122 N.C. App. at 176, 468 S.E.2d at 63-64
(discussing the classification of property allegedly held in trust
for the marital estate and holding that “when a third party holds
legal title to property which is claimed to be marital property,
that third party is a necessary party to the equitable distribution
proceeding, with their participation limited to the issue of the
ownership of that property.”). Where, as here, a minor child’s
property interests are adverse to that of his parent, the trial
court must appoint a guardian ad litem to represent his interests.4
Kohler v. Kohler, 21 N.C. App. 339, 341, 204 S.E.2d 177, 178 (1974)
(concluding that “an infant must appear by guardian or guardian ad
4 Here, the trial court did appoint a guardian ad litem, but the
order appointing the guardian specifically limited his duties to
investigation of custodial issues and to file a report (“GAL
report”) addressing the parties’ treatment of each other and the
minor child, not to represent the minor’s property interests. The
GAL’s report indicates that he considered only the issues as
directed by the trial court’s order.
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litem” to determine his property interests); Irvin v. Harris, 189
N.C. 465, 468, 127 S.E. 529, 531 (1925) (observing that the better
practice to determine property rights when the parent’s interests
are not identical to that of the minor child owner is to appoint
a guardian ad litem). Without the presence of the minor as a party
to the action, represented by a guardian ad litem or next friend,
the trial court cannot divest him of his ownership interest in the
real property. See Dorton v. Dorton, 77 N.C. App. 667, 676, 336
S.E.2d 415, 421 (1985) (“Defendant’s mother was not a party to
this action, and the trial court cannot deprive her of rights as
a creditor without affording her the due process rights to notice
and an opportunity to be heard.”); Lawrence, 100 N.C. App. at 16,
394 S.E.2d at 274 (holding that the trial court could not order
the minor children of the divorcing parties to pay certain taxes
when they are not parties to the action); Parker v. Moore, 263
N.C. 89, 90-91, 138 S.E.2d 821, 822 (1964) (“Before funds belonging
to infants and incompetents may be taken from them, the law
requires that they be represented by guardian, guardian ad litem,
or next friend as the situation may require.”). Moreover, once
the minor child is made a party to the action, if the trial court
were to determine that the houses were held in a constructive trust
created during the marriage, it must make appropriate findings to
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that effect based on clear and convincing evidence. Glaspy v.
Glaspy, 143 N.C. App. 435, 441, 545 S.E.2d 782, 786 (2001). No
such findings have been made here. Therefore, the trial court
lacked authority to classify the two houses as martial property,
to include them in the valuation of the marital estate, and to
distribute them to defendant.
Defendant also challenges the trial court’s finding that the
parties had stipulated that their marital residence had a net value
of $210,000. He contends, and plaintiff concedes, that they had
actually stipulated that the marital residence was worth $205,000.
The $5,000 difference appears to be simply a typographical error,
and de minimis at best, given that the trial court found the total
marital estate to be worth $591,702. See Cohoon v. Cooper, 186
N.C. 26, 28, 118 S.E. 834, 835 (1923) (declaring that an error of
95 cents out of a $663 verdict would be de minimis). Nevertheless,
since we must remand on the other equitable distribution issue,
the trial court should also correct this finding on remand.
To determine ownership of the two houses, the trial court
must join the minor child as a party and appoint a guardian ad
litem to represent his property interests. Because it failed to do
so here, it had no authority to classify the houses as marital
property and distribute them as such. Additionally, it made no
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finding that the houses were held in constructive trust for the
martial estate. Although the findings of fact also do not reveal
the parties’ reasons, if any, for vesting title to real estate in
a young child, the trial court on remand may also consider, as
appropriate and if raised by the parties, whether an unequal
distribution of the marital property may be equitable under N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 50-20(c). Therefore, we must vacate the equitable
distribution order and remand for further proceedings. See Boone
v. Rogers, 210 N.C. App. 269, 272, 708 S.E.2d 103, 106 (2011)
(vacating judgment where the trial court failed to join all
necessary parties); Balawejder v. Balawejder, ___ N.C. App. ___,
___, 721 S.E.2d 679, 691 (2011) (vacating order entered without
jurisdiction).
III. Alimony
Defendant next argues that the trial court abused its
discretion in awarding plaintiff $3,500 per month in alimony and
that its findings relating to marital misconduct are unsupported
by competent evidence. Defendant does not otherwise challenge the
appropriateness of the alimony award or the adequacy of the trial
court’s findings. Nor does defendant challenge the amount or
duration of the alimony award on the basis that it is not supported
by the evidence as to the parties’ incomes, needs, and expenses.
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Therefore, we deem any such arguments abandoned. N.C.R. App. P.
28(a). It is uncontested that plaintiff is a dependent spouse,
that defendant is the supporting spouse, and that plaintiff is
entitled to alimony. Yet it does appear from the findings that
the trial court considered the marital misconduct as a factor in
establishing the amount and term of alimony. The only disagreement
concerns whether the trial court’s findings on the marital
misconduct factor were supported by competent evidence.
Decisions regarding the amount of alimony are
left to the sound discretion of the trial
judge and will not be disturbed on appeal
unless there has been a manifest abuse of that
discretion. When the trial court sits without
a jury, the standard of review on appeal is
whether there was competent evidence to
support the trial court’s findings of fact and
whether its conclusions of law were proper in
light of such facts. An abuse of discretion
has occurred if the decision is manifestly
unsupported by reason or one so arbitrary that
it could not have been the result of a reasoned
decision.
Kelly v. Kelly, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 747 S.E.2d 268, 272-73
(2013) (citations and quotation marks omitted).
One of the factors that a trial court must take into account
in awarding alimony, when relevant, is marital misconduct. N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 50-16.3A(b)(1) (2011). Marital misconduct includes
“[i]ndignities rendering the condition of the other spouse
intolerable and life burdensome” during the marriage and on or
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before the date of separation. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1A(3)(f)
(2011).
Our courts have declined to specifically
define “indignities,” preferring instead to
examine the facts on a case by case basis.
Indignities consist of a course of conduct or
repeated treatment over a period of time
including behavior such as unmerited reproach,
studied neglect, abusive language, and other
manifestations of settled hate and
estrangement.
Evans v. Evans, 169 N.C. App. 358, 363-64, 610 S.E.2d 264, 269
(2005) (citations and quotation marks omitted).5
The trial court found that defendant had engaged in marital
misconduct by offering indignities to plaintiff. Specifically, the
trial court found that defendant had:
a. Refused to live with Plaintiff and the
children in the marital home separate
and apart from his mother;
b. Refused to allow Plaintiff and the
children to associate with others who are
not Russian;
c. Controlled the food eaten by Plaintiff
and the children. Consistently telling
Plaintiff and the children American food
was bad for them and would not let them
eat at public places.
5 See also Barwick v. Barwick, 228 N.C. 109, 112, 44 S.E.2d 597,
599 (1947) (noting the difficulty of creating a clear definition
of indignities); Traywick v. Traywick, 28 N.C. App. 291, 295, 221
S.E.2d 85, 88 (1976) (observing that indignities must consist of
a course of conduct, “repeated and persisted in over a period of
time.” (citation and quotation marks omitted)).
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d. Refused to allow the Parties’ minor son
to attend public school resulting in the
Plaintiff receiving letters from the
Durham County District Attorney’s office
pursuant to the truancy laws of this
State. As a result, Plaintiff sought and
obtained an emergency order which ordered
the minor child attend school.
Additionally, the trial court found that “Defendant has controlled
all the finances during the marriage without giving Plaintiff
access to the bank accounts or PINs for the accounts,” that
“Defendant has engaged in parental alienation prior to the date of
separation and after the date of separation,” and that defendant’s
actions had been intentional and malicious.6
The trial court further found that plaintiff had suffered
emotional abuse from defendant’s control and his attempts to make
plaintiff and their children reliant upon him by isolating them
from the larger community. Finally, it found that defendant’s
post-separation conduct corroborated its finding that defendant
had subjected plaintiff to indignities during the marriage, as
permitted by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.3A(b)(1).
6 The trial court included these findings in its section on post-
separation conduct, but taken in context, the plain language of
the findings indicates that the trial court found that defendant
had engaged in this conduct prior to separation.
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Defendant argues that these findings are unsupported by the
evidence. First, we note that defendant concedes that several of
the challenged findings may be supported by the GAL report, but
argues that the report was inadmissible for purposes of alimony.
Defendant did not object to the trial court’s consideration of
this report in considering alimony, so any objection thereto has
not been preserved. N.C.R. App. P. 10(a)(1).
The GAL report does in fact fully support all of the trial
court’s relevant findings and supports its ultimate finding that
defendant offered indignities to plaintiff. It paints a picture
of defendant as controlling and verbally abusive, and describes a
pattern of isolating plaintiff and the parties’ children from
broader society.7 This type of overwhelming control and attempted
isolation supports the trial court’s findings on indignities,
especially considering that plaintiff was a relatively recent
immigrant to this country. See Barwick, 228 N.C. at 112, 44 S.E.2d
at 599 (noting that indignities are not specifically defined in
part because “[t]he station in life, the temperament, state of
health, habits and feelings” of the persons concerned can be quite
varied). Moreover, despite defendant’s arguments to the contrary,
7 We are only describing the GAL report in general terms because
it remains under seal by stipulation of the parties and order of
the trial court.
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the findings show that these indignities were part of a long-
standing course of conduct and not an isolated incident. Therefore,
we hold that there was evidence to support the trial court’s
finding of marital misconduct by defendant.
Defendant further argues that the trial court failed to find
that the indignities he offered to plaintiff were “without adequate
provocation.” Defendant has not alleged that plaintiff provoked
the indignities found by the trial court, nor even argued on appeal
that there was evidence which could support such a finding. Indeed,
the argument that a spouse—of either sex—could legally justify
emotional or verbal abuse of the nature found by the trial court
by some sort of “provocation” strains credulity, at least based
upon modern sensibilities and values.8 N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1A
does not mention the word “provocation” and we have found no case
decided under that statute requiring that the trial court
explicitly find an absence of provocation to find that one of the
spouses had offered indignities to the other. It is not entirely
clear that such a finding is required at all, although as we will
discuss below, there is case law to support this argument.
8 Such justification was accepted by our Supreme Court as early as
the 1800s and as recently as 1955, as we will discuss more fully
below.
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Many of the old cases discussing indignities under the former
statutes on fault-based divorce and divorce from bed and board did
require a very specific factual allegation that there was no
provocation for the indignities offered. Although the words
“without provocation” have been repeated and cited since the early
1800s in North Carolina and they continue to be used, an
examination of the old cases where the phrase originated reveals
that these cases are based not only on antiquated beliefs about
the roles of husband and wife, but also upon specific statutes and
rules of pleading which existed at that time but have long since
been changed by amendments to the relevant substantive statutes
and adoption of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.
One early and enlightening example is Joyner v. Joyner, 59
N.C. (6 Jones Eq.) 322 (1862). The wife brought a claim against
the husband for divorce from bed and board and alimony and was
awarded alimony pendente lite, from which the husband appealed.
Joyner, 59 N.C. (6 Jones Eq.) at 322. The wife alleged that the
husband had
manifested great coarseness and brutality,
“and even inflicted the most severe corporal
punishment. This he did on two different
occasions, once with a horse-whip, and once
with a switch, leaving several bruises on her
person.” “He used towards her abusive and
insulting language, accused her of carrying
away articles of property from his premises to
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her daughter by a former husband; refused to
let said child live with her; has frequently
at night, after she had retired, driven her
from bed, saying that it was not hers, and
that she should not sleep upon it. He has also
forbade her sitting down to his table in
company with his family,” and that “by such
like acts of violence and indignity has forced
her to leave his house, and that she is now
residing with her friends and relatives,
having no means of support for herself and an
infant son born within the four past weeks.”
Id. She further alleged that during her entire marriage to
defendant she had “been a dutiful, faithful and affectionate wife.”
Id.
The Supreme Court first addressed the specific requirements
of the statute regarding the grounds upon which divorces may be
granted and the pleading requirements for these grounds, noting
that
as a check or restraint on applications for
divorces, and to guard against abuses, it is
provided that the cause or ground on which the
divorce is asked for shall be set forth in the
petition “particularly and specially.” It is
settled by the decisions of this Court that
this provision of the statute must be strictly
observed, and the cause or causes for which
the divorce is prayed must be set forth so
“particularly and specially,” as to enable the
Court to see on the face of the petition, that
if the facts alleged are true the divorce
ought to be granted . . . .
Id. at 323.
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At that time, “[b]y the rules of pleading in actions at the
common law, every allegation of fact, [had to] be accompanied by
an allegation of ‘time and place.’” Id. at 324. Yet the Supreme
Court held that the wife’s claim was not defeated by her failure
to allege “time and place” of her physical abuse, since those facts
were not “material.” Id.9 Instead, the wife’s fatal pleading error
was that she failed to allege what she had done to induce the
husband to beat her—apparently based upon the unstated assumption
that she clearly did something, and the relevant question would be
whether what she did justified the husband’s actions. Id. The
Supreme Court held that she must allege
the circumstances under which the blow with
the horse-whip and the blows with the switch
were given; for instance, what was the conduct
of the petitioner; what had she done, or said
to induce such violence on the part of the
husband? . . . . [T]here was an obvious
necessity for some explanation, and the cause
of divorce could not be set forth
“particularly and specially,” without stating
the circumstances which gave rise to the
alleged grievances.
Id.
9 The reason they were not material is not—as we today might think—
because there simply is no proper time or place to horse-whip your
wife, but because she did not allege some time or place-sensitive
abuse, such as that she was pregnant while he was beating her, or
that he had beat her in a public place. Id.
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The Court explained that such “discipline” would be justified
in certain circumstances for two reasons. The first reason is the
husband’s role as set forth in Genesis 3:16: “Thy desire shall be
to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.” Id. at 325. The Court
reasoned that “It follows that the law gives the husband power to
use such a degree of force as is necessary to make the wife behave
herself and know her place.” Id. Second, the Court noted that the
husband is legally responsible for the wife’s behavior “under the
principles of the common law,” noting that a husband is responsible
to pay damages if “a wife slanders or assaults and beats a
neighbor” and that a wife is not responsible for commission of “a
criminal offense, less than felony, in the presence of her
husband.” Id. The Court also noted that the wife “cannot make a
will disposing of her land” and “cannot sell her land without a
privy examination, separate and apart from her husband.” Id. For
these reasons, the Court concluded that the law must give “this
power to the husband over the person of the wife, and has adopted
proper safe-guards to prevent an abuse of it.” Id.
The Supreme Court then helpfully discussed some hypothetical
situations in which a husband might be justified in horse-whipping
his wife:
It is sufficient for our purpose to state that
there may be circumstances which will
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mitigate, excuse, and so far justify the
husband in striking the wife “with a horse-
whip on one occasion and with a switch on
another, leaving several bruises on the
person,” so as not to give her a right to
abandon him and claim to be divorced. For
instance: suppose a husband comes home and
his wife abuses him in the strongest terms—
calls him a scoundrel, and repeatedly
expresses a wish that he was dead and in
torment! and being thus provoked in the furor
brevis, he strikes her with the horse-whip,
which he happens to have in his hands, but is
afterwards willing to apologise, and expresses
regret for having struck her: or suppose a man
and his wife get into a discussion and have a
difference of opinion as to a matter of fact,
she becomes furious and gives way to her
temper, so far as to tell him he lies, and
upon being admonished not to repeat the word,
nevertheless does so, and the husband taking
up a switch, tells her if she repeat it again,
he will strike her, and after this notice, she
again repeats the insulting words, and he
thereupon strikes her several blows; these are
cases, in which, in our opinion, the
circumstances attending the act, and giving
rise to it, so far justify the conduct of the
husband as to take from the wife any ground of
divorce for that cause, and authorise the
Court to dismiss her petition, with the
admonition, “if you will amend your manners,
you may expect better treatment;” see Shelford
on Divorce. So that there are circumstances,
under which a husband may strike his wife with
a horse-whip, or may strike her several times
with a switch, so hard as to leave marks on
her person, and these acts do not furnish
sufficient ground for a divorce.
Id. at 325-26.
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Thus the Supreme Court held that mere verbal statements by
the wife—calling her husband a “scoundrel” or “liar” or wishing
him dead—would legally justify his striking her with a horsewhip
(if he then apologizes) or striking her “several times with a
switch, so hard as to leave marks on her person.” Id.10
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1A(3)(f) does not mention lack of
provocation as an element of “indignities.” It simply states that
one form of marital misconduct consists of “[i]ndignities
rendering the condition of the other spouse intolerable and life
burdensome.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1A(3)(f). Yet it is also
true that the definition of indignities under N.C. Gen. Stat. §
50-16.1A(2)(f) is the same as it is under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-7,
and as it was under the repealed § 50-16.1 and the repealed § 50-
16, for which the courts of this state have required an allegation
10Just a few years later, in State v. Oliver, 70 N.C. 60 (1874),
a criminal case, the Supreme Court rejected the prior cases which
allowed a husband to whip his wife “provided he used a switch no
larger than his thumb,” stating that this “is not law in North
Carolina. Indeed, the Courts have advanced from that barbarism
until they have reached the position, that the husband has no right
to chastise his wife, under any circumstances.” Oliver, 70 N.C. at
61. Yet the Court still recognized that not all physical abuse
would be worthy of intervention by the courts: “But from motives
of public policy,—in order to preserve the sanctity of the domestic
circle, the Courts will not listen to trivial complaints. If no
permanent injury has been inflicted, nor malice, cruelty nor
dangerous violence shown by the husband, it is better to draw the
curtain, shut out the public gaze, and leave the parties to forget
and forgive.” Id. at 61-62.
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that the indignities were offered without provocation. See, e.g.,
Puett v. Puett, 75 N.C. App. 554, 557, 331 S.E.2d 287, 290 (1985),
Vandiver v. Vandiver, 50 N.C. App. 319, 328, 274 S.E.2d 243, 249
(1981), and Cushing v. Cushing, 263 N.C. 181, 187, 139 S.E.2d 217,
222 (1964). Indeed, this same language can be found in every
version of the North Carolina divorce and alimony statutes from
1814 onward. See 2 Laws of the State of North Carolina 1292, 1294
(Raleigh, Henry Potter 1821). The requirement of a lack of
provocation has simply been a judicial gloss on this simple
language, added generations ago in cases like Joyner and repeated
over the years, usually without any consideration of its origins.
In considering how this ancient rule applies to the modern
alimony statute, we cannot ignore the substantial changes in
procedural law, substantive family law, or “the vast changes in
the status of woman—the extension of her rights and correlative
duties—whereby a wife’s legal submission to her husband has been
wholly wiped out, not only in the English-speaking world generally
but emphatically so in this country.” State v. Stroud, 147 N.C.
App. 549, 560, 557 S.E.2d 544, 551 (2001) (quoting United States
v. Dege, 364 U.S. 51, 54, 4 L.Ed.2d 1563, 1565 (1960)), cert.
denied, 356 N.C. 623, 575 S.E.2d 758 (2002).
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First, since this doctrine was created, there have been vast
changes in the pleading requirements and procedural law applicable
in domestic cases. See Shingledecker v. Shingledecker, 103 N.C.
App. 783, 786, 407 S.E.2d 589, 591 (1991) (noting that the
“defendant’s contention [that the plaintiff’s complaint was
fatally deficient in that it failed to allege lack of provocation
of the indignities alleged] was supported by cases decided prior
to the enactment of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure at
G.S. § 1A-1,” but holding that that issue is not reviewable after
a motion to dismiss is denied by the trial court). In addition, a
dependent spouse no longer has to plead fault in order to receive
a divorce or alimony from a supporting spouse. See N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 50-6.; N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.3A(a).
Second, the substantive changes to North Carolina family law
severely undermine the rationale for the provocation rule. It
appears to us that, to the extent this rule is relevant at all,
the old consideration of provocation may now be addressed under
the various statutory forms of marital misconduct, which the trial
court now weighs with other factors in considering the amount of
alimony. See Romulus v. Romulus, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 715 S.E.2d
308, 325 (2011) (explaining that for all forms of marital
misconduct other than “illicit sexual behavior,” “the trial court
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has the discretion to weigh all of the other forms of “marital
misconduct” and to determine what effect, if any, the misconduct
should have upon the alimony award.”). For instance, if a husband
excessively uses alcohol “so as to render the condition of the
other spouse intolerable,” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1A(3)(h), while
his wife constantly verbally abused him, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-
16.1A(3)(f), a trial court might justifiably find that both parties
had engaged in marital misconduct but could still award alimony,
after weighing their misconduct in light of the other alimony
factors to determine the equitable amount of alimony. See Romulus,
___ N.C. App. at ___, 715 S.E.2d at 325. Looking back to the
ancient cases on “provocation,” perhaps a less enlightened way of
looking at this would be to say that the wife must prove that if
she verbally abused the husband, she did so only because her
husband’s excessive drinking “provoked” her to do so, and not that
she had driven her husband to drink by her incessant nagging.
But this sort of reasoning as to provocation seems
inconsistent with the factor analysis now required by N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 50-16.3A, as it would require the complaining spouse to
prove a negative—that she did not “provoke” the misconduct of the
other spouse—before the trial court may consider the misconduct as
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a factor supporting an award of alimony.11 Our Supreme Court has
recognized that “[t]o require the complaining party to allege and
prove lack of provocation at first blush may seem illogical and
out of place.” Allen v. Allen, 244 N.C. 446, 450, 94 S.E.2d 325,
329 (1956). It justified such a seemingly illogical pleading
requirement on the basis that it would allow the courts to ensure
“that the assistance of the law in breaking up the family is used
for the benefit of the injured party only.” Id. at 451, 94 S.E.2d
at 329. This rationale no longer applies. Unlike under the former
fault-based divorce statutes, a dependent spouse seeking alimony
does not have to show that the supporting spouse offered her
indignities for the trial court to award the relief she seeks, see
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.3A, and, as a result, has no bearing on
the state’s interest in stable family units.
Finally, it is clear that there have been vast societal
changes since the Supreme Court created the provocation rule. In
1920, women obtained the right to vote by the 19th Amendment to
the United States Constitution. Husbands are no longer legally
responsible for a wife’s slander or assault of a neighbor; wives
are now responsible for their own criminal offenses of all sorts,
11Of course, fault is no longer required for an award of alimony;
it is simply a factor which may be considered if raised by the
parties. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.3A.
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felony or misdemeanor. Women can now own and convey property
separate and apart from their husbands. Women are now competent to
testify against their husbands as to a criminal charge of “assault
and battery” even if it does not “inflict[] or threaten[] a lasting
injury or great bodily harm.”12 N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-57 (b)(2)
(2013). Husbands and wives are now considered separate legal
persons capable of criminal conspiracy between themselves. Stroud,
147 N.C. App. at 561, 557 S.E.2d at 551. Beating your wife with a
horsewhip, switch, or any other weapon, for that matter, is now
both a crime and grounds for entry of a Domestic Violence
Protective Order, and the fact that the wife may have verbally
“abuse[d] him in the strongest terms,” even by calling him a
scoundrel and wishing him dead is no defense. See N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 14-33(c)(2) (assault on a female) (2013); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50B-
2 (2013) (providing for legal relief from domestic violence).
Despite these changes in law and society, as well as many
others, our courts have continued on occasion to cite the language
12Cf. State v. Hussey, 44 N.C. (Busb.) 123, 127 (1852) (“The rule,
as we gather it from authority and reason, is, that a wife may be
a witness against her husband from felonies perpetrated, or
attempted to be perpetrated on her, and we would say for an assault
and battery which inflicted or threatened a lasting injury or great
bodily harm; but in all cases of a minor grade she is not. In this
case, there is no pretence that any lasting injury was inflicted;
on the contrary, the case states that the injury was temporary.”).
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of these old cases. See, e.g., Ollis v. Ollis, 241 N.C. 709, 711,
86 S.E.2d 420, 421-22 (1955) (“It is not enough for the wife to
allege the husband has been abusive and violent toward her, . . .
. but also she must set forth what, if anything, she did to start
or feed the fire of discord so that the court may determine whether
she provoked the difficulty.”). This rule required such an
allegation despite a similar absence of any such language in the
relevant statutes.13 Even fifty years ago, our Supreme Court stated
that this “lack of provocation” rule is one of “debatable” benefits
that is “so very old that the years have barnacled it in numberless
cases upon our practice,” Cushing, 263 N.C. at 187, 139 S.E.2d at
222, but the Court did not go so far as to overrule these cases.
As discussed above, the rule appears to stem from an ancient
understanding of marriage which required that a wife show adequate
13See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-7 (1984); Puett, 75 N.C. App. at 557,
331 S.E.2d at 290 (“We agree that in North Carolina a party relying
on G.S. 50-7(4) must not have provoked the ‘indignities’ of which
he complains.” (citations omitted)); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1
(1978); Vandiver, 50 N.C. App. at 328, 274 S.E.2d at 249 (under
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1, approving of jury instructions that
required the jury to decide whether the indignities were offered
“without provocation”); N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16 (1966); Cushing,
263 N.C. at 187, 139 S.E.2d at 222 (holding that under N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 50-7, “which G.S. § 50-16 incorporates,” a wife seeking to
prove indignities “is required, therefore, not only to set out
with particularity those of her husband’s acts which she contends
constituted such indignities as to render her condition
intolerable and her life burdensome but also to show that those
acts were without adequate provocation on her part.”).
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cause to leave her “proper place” and that she would be unable to
procure a divorce if she “provoked” the indignities of which she
complained.14 This Court has previously noted that “[t]hese
notions no longer accurately represent the society in which we
live, and our laws have changed to reflect this fact.” Vann v.
Vann, 128 N.C. App. 516, 518, 495 S.E.2d 370, 372 (1998) (citation
and quotation marks omitted).
“It is revolting to have no better reason for a rule of law
than that so it was laid down in the time of Henry IV. It is still
more revolting if the grounds upon which it was laid down have
vanished long since, and the rule simply persists from blind
imitation of the past.” Stroud, 147 N.C. App. at 561, 557 S.E.2d
at 551 (quoting Dege, 364 U.S. at 53-54, 4 L.Ed.2d at 1565). In
1912, Chief Justice Clark presciently observed that
14 See Wilcox v. Wilcox, 36 N.C. (1 Ired.Eq.) 36, 42-43 (1840)
(“[I]t cannot for a moment be pretended, that every act of improper
conduct, on the part of a husband, will authorise a wife to leave
her proper place--his side, and his home--and if she alleges that
he has been guilty of such gross misconduct as to justify this
seeming revolt from her duty, she must so charge the misconduct,
that it may be judicially seen, when the fact is ascertained,
whether it be of that character which induces a forfeiture of his
right to her society, and that he may have a full opportunity of
answering distinctly to the misconduct charged, and of explaining
or disproving it.”); Foy v. Foy, 35 N.C. (13 Ired.) 90, 96 (1851)
(“If a wife leave a husband, and refuses to live with him, without
sufficient cause, and he afterwards lives in adultery, this is no
cause of divorce; for, the consequence may be ascribed to her prior
violation of the duty of a wife.”).
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Even statutes have been held obsolete and
unenforcible [sic] because of changed
conditions and the long lapse of time.
Certainly this ought to be true of decisions
which rest upon no statute and which are now
contrary to every sense of right and opposed
to the spirit of our Constitution and of the
age in which we live.
The “common law” has been praised because of
the very fact that, being “judge-made,” it was
flexible and could be molded from time to time
to fit the changing conditions of society. But
it loses this sole excellence when it is used
to thwart beneficial statutes, expressing the
demand of the age for more just and benign
laws, by construing them according to the
darkened and narrow views of the judges of the
fourteenth century, and not according to the
intendment of legislators imbued with the
enlightened ideas of the twentieth century. .
. .
There are of course principles of the common
law which are eternally just and which will
survive throughout the ages. But this is not
because they are found in a mass of error or
were enunciated by judges in an ignorant age,
but because they are right in themselves and
are approved, not disapproved as much of the
common law must be, by the intelligence of
today.
As, however, common-law views as to the status
of women still survive among a few and are
still urged as law, it would not be amiss
should the General Assembly make such
enactment in this regard as that body may deem
just and proper. Every age should have laws
based upon its own intelligence and expressing
its own ideas of right and wrong. Progress and
betterment should not be denied us by the dead
hand of the Past. The decisions of the courts
-30-
should always be in accord with the spirit of
the legislation of to-day [sic] . . . .
Price v. Charlotte Electric Ry. Co., 160 N.C. 450, 456-57, 76 S.E.
502, 504-05 (1912) (Clark, C.J., concurring).
Nevertheless, we cannot overrule our Supreme Court’s opinions
or those issued by other panels of this Court simply because the
rule they recite is old and developed under statutes repealed long
ago. See Andrews ex rel. Andrews v. Haygood, 188 N.C. App. 244,
248, 655 S.E.2d 440, 443 (2008) (“[T]his Court has no authority to
overrule decisions of our Supreme Court and we have the
responsibility to follow those decisions until otherwise ordered
by our Supreme Court.” (citation, quotation marks, brackets, and
ellipses omitted)); In re Appeal from Civil Penalty, 324 N.C. 373,
384, 379 S.E.2d 30, 37 (1989) (holding that one panel of the Court
of Appeals cannot overrule another). The State of North Carolina,
its families, and its courts could benefit from the Supreme Court’s
reconsideration of this ancient doctrine that appears to be
inconsistent with our existing statutory scheme of post-separation
support and alimony and “inconsistent with the marked trend in
this jurisdiction toward gender neutrality in the family law area.”
Vann, 128 N.C. App. at 519, 495 S.E.2d at 372.15
15 Although the concept is technically “gender neutral” as it is
now applied to both husbands and wives, it is clear that in the
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Here, even assuming the rule as to provocation does apply,
defendant did not raise plaintiff’s failure to allege a “lack of
provocation” below and did not present any evidence which could
sustain a finding of “provocation” on plaintiff’s part. The trial
court is not normally required to make findings on issues not
raised by the evidence. See Friend-Novorska v. Novorska, 143 N.C.
App. 387, 395 n.3, 545 S.E.2d 788, 794 n.3 (2001) (“The ultimate
facts at issue in the case are facts relating to the factors set
forth in section 50-16.3A(b) for which evidence is presented at
trial.”). Moreover, the trial court’s findings, taken as a whole,
make clear that plaintiff did nothing that could be considered
“adequate provocation” of defendant’s abuse. Therefore, even
assuming that a “want of provocation” is still an element of
indignities under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.1A, the trial court here
did not err in finding that defendant had subjected plaintiff to
indignities constituting marital misconduct.
As noted above, defendant only argues that the trial court
abused its discretion in awarding plaintiff $3,500 per month in
alimony for twelve years because its findings on marital misconduct
past the rule was often used in practice as a means for a husband
to justify his refusal to continue to support, or even to justify
his physical abuse of, a wife who had failed to fulfill her proper
role as a wife and mother, and the cases all reflect this
background.
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are unsupported by the evidence. Defendant does not otherwise
challenge the alimony order or the trial court’s consideration of
other alimony factors. Therefore, any such arguments have been
abandoned. N.C.R. App. P. 28(a). There was sufficient evidence to
support the trial court’s findings on marital misconduct, and
defendant has shown no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
consideration of this misconduct in setting the amount and term of
the alimony award.
Yet our ruling cannot end here, since we realize that the
alimony award was made in conjunction with the equitable
distribution award, and the trial court may need to reconsider the
alimony amount in light of any changes to the property
distribution. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-16.3A(a); Lamb v. Lamb,
103 N.C. App. 541, 547, 406 S.E.2d 622, 625 (1991). Therefore, we
remand the alimony award only so that the trial court may
reconsider the amount and term of alimony based upon the new
equitable distribution determination.
This opinion does not permit the parties to revisit the issue
of marital misconduct on remand, as we have found that the trial
court did not err as to this issue, and this opinion does not
dictate that the trial court should or should not change the
alimony award on remand; we merely permit the trial court to
-33-
exercise its discretion on remand to reconsider the alimony amount
and term, as the trial court must have the ability to consider the
alimony award in light of the new equitable distribution award
entered on remand, since they were considered together in the prior
trial and order.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the portion of the trial
court’s order concerning equitable distribution and remand for the
trial court to appoint a GAL, or expand the existing GAL’s
responsibilities, to represent the property interests of the minor
child, who is the uncontested holder of legal title to the two
houses distributed to defendant. We remand the portion of the trial
court’s order concerning alimony only for the limited purpose of
reconsideration of the amount and term based upon the ultimate
equitable distribution award.
VACATED in part and REMANDED.
Judge DILLON concurs.
Judge HUNTER, JR., Robert N. concurs in the result only.