Galland v. Galland

Cbookett, J., delivered the opinion of the Court:

The question presented on this appeal is, whether or not a wife, who, without cause or provocation, is driven from her husband’s house with her infant child, and is wholly without the means of support, can maintain an action against the husband for a reasonable allowance, for the maintenance of herself and child, unless she couples with the application a prayer for a divorce ?

In the early days of English jurisprudence, the rights of the wife, as against the husband or his estate, were extremely limited. The theory was, that her separate entity was merged in his; that she was to be so completely under his dominion and control as to entitle, him to administer reasonable personal chastisement for her offences ; that she had no control over his estate, and could maintain no action against him for any cause whatsoever. A system so utterly inconsistent with a just and enlightened view of the marriage relation could not long withstand the advancing march of civilization. Gradually, but steadily, these stringent rules were relaxed in favor of the wife, until finally marriage came to be regarded in law as simply a civil contract between persons capable of contracting, and in which the parties were reciprocally entitled to certain reasonable rights, which the law would protect. Amongst other rights secured to the wife, is the right to be suitably supported and maintained by the husband, according to his means and station. If he fails or refuses to provide such support for her, the law authorizes her to purchase from others, on the credit of her husband, whatever is necessary for her maintenance and suitable to her station in life. There can be no diversity of opinion on this point, which is thoroughly well settled. But is this the only remedy for a deserted and dependent wife, who either has no subsisting cause for divorce, or who, having just grounds for dissolving the marriage, hopes for a reformation in her husband, and therefore does not desire a divorce? The purchasing from others, on the husband’s credit, the necessaries for her support, affords, at best, a most humiliating, unreliable and precarious means of subsistence. If the *267credit and pecuniary responsibility of the husband be unquestionable, the tradesman dealing with the wife takes the risk whether the articles furnished are really necessaries suitable to her condition; and he sells to her in view of a strong probability that his demand may be disputed by the husband, and will not be paid, except after an expensive litigation. But he may be wholly ignorant of the husband’s pecuniary condition; or the husband, though rich, may have no visible, tangible property subject to be seized in execution; and in all or either of these contingencies, it is evident the wife of a wealthy husband might starve for lack of the necessaries of life, because of her inability to procure them on the husband’s credit. If this resource fail her, how is she to obtain relief, if she either has no grounds for divorce, or does not desire a divorce ? Is the law so deplorably deficient as to afford no remedy to a deserted and starving wife under these circumstances? If so, it is a reproach to the civilization of the age, and the law-making power should promptly correct the evil. But the law, in my opinion, is not amenable to this reproach and affords an appropriate remedy.

The statute of this State regulating divorce and alimony, entitles the wife to a divorce if the husband has deserted her for two years; and on filing her complaint, the Court is authorized to grant her alimony, pendente lite—and permanent alimony, if she obtains the divorce. But there is no provision of the statute which authorizes an application for alimony, except in connection with a prayer for divorce; and it is claimed on- behalf of the defendant, that, inasmuch as provision is made for the allowance of alimony only on an application for divorce, it was the intention of the Legislature to limit the power of the Court to grant alimony to that class of cases. The maxim “expressio unius est exclusio alterius” is invoked as applicable to this proposition. But, in my opinion, it has no application to the case. The main subject-matter of the statute was the regulation of divorce; and only as incidental to that subject the statute prescribes the power of the Court in respect to alimony in that class of cases. The Legislature was not dealing with the general *268subject of alimony, as an independent subject-matter of legislation; but, only, as one of the incidents of an application for divorce. It saw fit to define the power of the Court over the allowance of alimony on an application for divorce; but was not considering the subject of alimony in any other class of cases. If it had provided that a writ of ne exeat or distringas might issue against a defendant in an action for divorce, it would scarcely be claimed by any one that this was equivalent to a declaration that such writs should not issue in any other class of actions. For the same reason, a provision for alimony in a suit for divorce is not to be considered as a declaration that alimony shall not be allowed in other actions. The maxim which is invoked has no application to this class of cases.

If alimony can be granted without an application for divorce, it can only be because it comes within the general powers of a Court of Equity, independently of the statute. In England, the decisions on this point have been by no means uniform. In some, the power has been maintained by eminent judges; in others, it has been doubted; and in a few, it has been denied. In America, there has been a similar diversity of opinion. The power of a Court of Equity to decree alimony, where no other relief was asked, has been upheld, in well considered cases, by the Supreme Courts of Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina and Alabama. In Butler v. Butler (4 Littell, Ky. R. 202), the question was elaborately reviewed by Judge Mills—one of the most eminent jurists of that State—and his reasoning is so convincing as to commend itself to every impartial mind. He says : “Suppose the case of abandonment by a husband, and that the separation is complete, without any sentence, and that the wife is left to the humanity of the world, without support, has the Chancellor, without the statute, or in cases not embraced by it, no authority to direct a portion of the husband’s estate to be set apart for the support of the wife, leaving the marriage contract as obligatory as ever? This is a question different from the power of separation, and deserves separate consideration. It is true that the Courts of Chancery would always grant *269this after the spiritual Court had acted as to the separation, and before, when there had been an agreement (to separate) ; but without such previous sentence or agreement, could it never interfere ? On this point, the English authorities are contradictory, and, indeed, somewhat irreconcilable. Cases, during the usurpation, went that far; but, in answer to these, it is said that the jurisdiction was expressly given, and that such doubts afterwards existed of the validity of these decrees, that they were confirmed by Parliament. * * * Besides, in the cases of Lashbrook v. Tyler (1 Ch. R. 24), Williams v. Callow (2 Vern. 752), Watkins v. Watkins (2 Atkin, 97), alimony was decreed where there appears no sentence of separation or agreement; and in at least two of these cases, it certainly appears there was neither. In some other cases, where the existence of an agreement was relied on, the Court only used it as a pretext for jurisdiction, and did not confine itself to the terms of the agreement, but departed from it in making such allowance as was equitable. Between such conflicting authorities, we consider ourselves at liberty to chose and decide according to the principles of equity and reason of the case. It is clear that strong moral obligations must lie on any husband, who has abandoned his wife, to support her. The marriage contract, and every principle, bind him to this. To fail to do it, is a wrong acknowledged at common law—though that law knows no remedy, because there the wife cannot sue the husband. But in equity, the wife can sue the husband ; and it is the province of a Court of Equity to afford a remedy where conscience and law acknowledge a right, but know no remedy. Why, then, should the Chancellor shrink at this case and refuse a remedy? It is evident that this arose in England, for fear of intruding upon the ground occupied by the Ecclesiastical Courts. These Courts were incorporated with their government, and as much composed a part of the civil organization of that country as our County Courts do here, and their sentence on subjects within their jurisdiction Avas as obligatory, and as much noticed in their civil Courts, as the decisions of other Courts; and, indeed, they kept and held jurisdiction of some matters strictly *270temporal. It became necessary to draw the line of demarcation around them, and restrain other tribunals from occupying the same ground, and to refuse to entertain concurrent jurisdiction, leaving the party to apply there for his or her remedy. But, in this country, we have no such Courts or boundaries around them to notice. The reason, then, for refusing the jurisdiction of such cases as are peculiarly temporal-—-and especially this case, which lies within the compass of the general grant to the Chancellor—has here ceased and does not exist. And grievous wrongs might exist, without remedy, until the Legislature interfered— which is against a well known principle, ripened into a maxim. Indeed, probable cases might be supposed and known, where, in one year, absolute starvation might be the consequence of abandonment and withdrawing the means of support, if the Chancellor has no power to interpose. We therefore conceive that the Chancellor before the statute, and since, in eases not embraced by it, which have strong moral claims, had and has jurisdiction to decree alimony, leaving the matrimonial chain untouched; and that these authorities, which decide in favor of such jurisdiction, ought to prevail. ”

I can hope to add nothing to the cogency of this reasoning, which appears to me to admit of no satisfactory answer.

The same proposition is maintained in Purcell v. Purcell (4 Hen. & Mun. 507) ; Almond v. Almond, (4 Randolph, 662) ; Logan v. Logan (2 B. Hon. 142) ; Prather v. Prather (4 Desasséur, 33); Rhame v. Rhame (1 McCord, Ch. R. 197); Glover v. Glover (16 Ala. R. 446.)

It has been the constant practice of Courts of Equity, not only to enforce agreements for separation and a separate maintenance of the wife, where a divorce was not asked for or decreed, but in such cases, as remarked by Judge Mills, in Butler v. Butler (supra), “where the existence of an agreement (to separate) was relied on, the Court only used it as a pretext for jurisdiction, and did not confine itself to the terms of the agreement, but departed from it in making such allowance as was equitable.’' If the Court would entertain jurisdiction to enforce an agreement for separation, *271and then felt itself at liberty to depart from the terms of the agreement in awarding an allowance to the wife, it is difficult to discern, on any principle of reason or justice, why it should refuse to take jurisdiction, when the husband simply turns his wife out of doors, without cause, and refuses to support her. We do not perceive on what ground, a wife who agrees to separate from her husband, should stand on a more favored footing than one who clings to him in spite of his ill-usage, until she is driven from his house, and forbidden thereafter to speak to him. It is better, in our opinion, to abandon the subterfuge, to which Courts have sometimes resorted in such cases, “as a pretext for jurisdiction,” and administer the appropriate relief without the “pretext.”

At common law, the wife had no interest except her right of dower in the estate of the husband, acquired either before or after the marriage. The right of dower depended on the fact, whether or not she survived the husband. Even her own estate, unless settled to her sole use, became, to a great degree, merged in his. But under the laws of this State, the wife not only retains her separate property, but that which is earned during the marriage, becomes the common property of the husband and wife; and though it is subject to his control, as the head of the family, whilst the marriage continues, yet, if the wife survives him, or if the marriage relation be dissolved by a decree of the Court, except for the adultery or extreme cruelty of the wife, she is entitled to one half of the common property then remaining. The theory on which this right is founded is, that the common property was acquired by the joint efforts of the husband and wife, and should be divided between them, if the marriage tie is dissolved either by the death of the husband, or by the decree of the Court, unless the wife shall have forfeited her right by committing an act of adultery, or extreme cruelty; and even then, the Court pronouncing the decree is authorized to apportion the property at its discretion. With these liberal provisions for the wife, who has a joint and equal interest with the husband in all property acquired during the marriage, it would present an anomaly in jurisprudence if the husband, without cause, could drive his wife *272from his house without any provision for her support, and appropriate the entire common property and its income to his own use, whilst the Courts would be powerless to compel him to set apart a portion of the property for her support, unless she coupled with her application a prayer for a divorce; and if she had no lawful ground for a divorce, or was unwilling to assert it, she would remain utterly without redress from the Courts, and might starve for lack of the necessaries of life, unless she could persuade some reluctant tradesman to furnish them on the credit of her husband. Whatever reason' may have prevailed at common law, to induce the Courts to withhold their aid from the wife under these circumstances, none exists in this State, why a Court of Equity should refuse to compel an offending husband to provide out of their common property, for the support of an ill-used wife, who has been forced to seek protection elsewhere than under her husband’s roof.

It is urged, however, in argument, that if this be our ruling, it will tend to breed discord in families, and to encourage discontented wives to abandon their husbands on frivolous pretexts of ill-usage, relying on the Courts to compel the husbands to support them. On the other hand, however, it might be urged with even more force, that if such redress be denied to the wife in proper cases, dissolute and unprincipled husbands would be encouraged to abuse their wives, by a consciousness that any ill-treatment which stopped short of a lawful ground for divorce, was without redress in the Courts. The Courts must deal with human nature as they find it; and no system of jurisprudence can be so administered as to avoid possible abuses in exceptionable cases.

On the whole case, we think the demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled, and that the judgment ought to be affirmed, and it is so ordered.