delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a proceeding in equity under the 'statute for a divorce, for wilful and continued desertion of the wife of complainant. The defendant answered the bill admitting the desertion, but alleging as a justification therefor, the extreme and repeated cruelty, and the absence of the complainant, and his refusal to protect her from the gross and brutal insults of others in his presence. The facts were enquired into by a jury, and the jury found a verdict in favor of th’e complainant, sustaining the charge of desertion ; upon which the Circuit Court entered up the following decree. “ Ordered, that the bands of matrimony heretofore existing in this cause, between the complainant and respondent, be dissolved, and that alimony be allowed to the respondent for her maintenance, and that of her child, the issue of said marriage, and that the amount so to be allowed, be enquired of by evidence to be heard at the next term, until which time the cause is continued.”
At the next term the Circuit Court entered up judgment in the cause for one cent alimony, and decreed that defendant should pay her proportion of the costs on the hearing of the application.
The defendant brought the cause to this Court, and now assigns for error,
1st. That the Court erred in allowing nominal alimony, when it was shown that the complainant, at the time, was possessed of large real and personal estate.
2d. That the Court erred in admitting the same testimony which had been heard on the previous issue of divorce, or suit, at a term subsequent to the time when the jury found the issue, against the objections of the defendant.
3d. That the Court decided that respondent should pay costs.
In deciding upon the grounds of error, it will be proper to look to the decree made in the cause, at the term when the bands of matrimony were dissolved. By the order, the Circuit Court doubtless found itself compelled to award the order for the dissolution of the bands of matrimony; the jury found the fact of wilful and continued desertion ; but at the same time, it appears that it felt itself equally bound to order that sufficient alimony should be awarded to the respondent for her support, and that of her infant child, the issue of the marriage; but deferred the enquiry therein until the next term, when the amount was to be determined by evidence.
This order was doubtless also made in pursuance of the provisions of the 6th section(1) of the act concerning divorces, approved 31st January, 1827, which declares “ That when a divorce shall be decreed, it shall and may be lawful for the Court to make such order touching the alimony and maintenance of the wife, the care, custody, and support of the children, or any of them, as from the circumstances of the parties, and the nature of the case, shall be ñt, reasonable, and just. And in case the wife is complainant, to order the defendant to give reasonable security for the performance of such order; and may, on application, from time to time, make such alterations in the allowance of alimony and maintenance, as shall appear reasonable and proper.”
From the bill of exceptions it appears that the complainant was the owner of considerable real and personal estate, as was proved on the hearing; but it also appears that on this enquiry the Circuit Court permitted the complainant to introduce the same witnesses and prove the same facts which had formerly been proved on the trial of the issue for a divorce, to which the respondent objected and excepted to the opinion of the Court in admitting such testimony.
The first enquiry presented on examining the grounds of error assigned, seems nai-Urally to be, what had the Circuit Court decided, on making the order for the dissolution of the bands of matrimony, pffi decreeing alimony ? Must it not have been that although tiae marriage was dissolved, still under the provisions of the lawythe wife was entitled to a fair and reasonable allowance for thy support of herself and child; and that as it had not then evidence by which it could judge of the means and ability of the conyplainant to afford such support, the cause was continued to th« next term, for the production of such evidence ? It had heard tye merits of complainant’s prayer, and on the trial had heard title whole grounds of the causes of complaint, and of attempted justification for the abandonment charged and not denied; and with the full knowledge necessarily of the whole grounds occupied by the parties, had come to the determination, that although the complainant was entitled to the relief prayed, yet equally so, the wife and child were entitled to a support, which it adjudged the complainant should pay. If this view of the cause thus far, be just, and to it no objection is perceived, then it would seem to follow as a necessary consequence, that the only subject of enquiry, was the condition of the parties in life, and the means and ability of the complainant to pay such allowance as the Court should consider fit, reasonable, and just, and that evidence foreign to such enquiry should be rejected.
It will be perceived that in determining that alimony should be allowed, the Court had necessarily passed on the conduct of the wife, and had by such order necessarily decided that she had not, let her conduct have been what it might, forfeited her right to that protection and support which the law allowed, and which the Court had most undoubtedly considered her entitled to ; but the measure or extent of the allowance was to be ascertained by evidence of the capacity of the complainant to answer,
The testimony, then, which was admitted relating to the original grounds of divorce, and which had been given on the issue of desertion, must have been irrelevant to an enquiry on the question of allowance of alimony. It must, I again repeat, be borne in mind, that the conduct of the wife had already been placed before the Court on the first enquiry before the Court and jury, and could not have been the subject of a second enquiry, because it was by no means necessary to a decision of the question as to the allowance of alimony. What would be a proper allowance to a person in her situation in life, and how much it would take to afford her and her child a reasonable support, and the ability of the complainant to pay that sum, or as near to it as his means would enable him, were surely the only questions in a case like the present. The amount to enable her to procure the necessary food and clothing for her child, could not be made to depend on her previous conduct, after it had been -decided, that to such support and clothing she was entitled ; for that, would be, to make the amount of the necessaries of life requisite-ior her support, depend on her personal conduct before the dis'sdJution of the marriage, and not the extent of those means, indispensable for existence. Whether this view be correct or not, still there is a reason equally forcible, indeed more so, which shows the\injustice of the admission of the testimony objected to. \
I think it but rational to suppose that ~the introduction of\the evidence was not only calculated to take the party by surpr~e, but that it must have had that effect. In an enquiry of the kin~, could it have occurred to the party that all the former causes oit~ complaint were to be again heard? I should greatly doubt\ whether the most intelligent mind would have supposed that the desertion, with all the accompanying acts, would be again a matter of investigQtion and decision. If not, how would the party be prepared to introduce rebutting and explanatory testimony? And would not the introduction of such evidence, uncontradic and unexplained, have had a most unfavorable effect on the mh. of the judge deciding the case of alimony, if he had never hearL the whole evidence on the trial before the Court and jury, for the divorce, as seems to have been the fact in the present case? Its consequences cannot be calculated, and it must be owing to this cause, that the order for an allowance of bne cent was made; it can in my judgment be accounted for from no other cause. It is not intended to say that the whole conduct of the wife, is not to be taken into consideration on determining the question of an allowance of alimony, but I intend to say, that when that conduct has once been the subject of an examination, and an order made to merely ascertain the condition of the husband and his pecuniary ability to afford the wife a maintenance, if is erroneous and improper to receive again testimony which necessarily must be in the nature of ex parte proof. Suppose the Court had ordered a master to have reported the amount of the complainant’s real and personal estate, would he have for a moment felt himself justified in receiving evidence that the wife had deserted, or done any other act charged in the bill? Unquestionably not; and yet this interlocutory order of the Circuit Court meant no more, in my judgment, than such an order. Shall, then, the modes of arriving at the intended result, change the character of the evidence to be adduced? It cannot be; and hence, I arrive at the conclusion that it was improperly received. But is there nothing in this nominal allowance of alimony, which at once shows that it was a virtual rescinding of the judgment of the Circuit Court? Did the Circuit Court, when it made that order, intend to keep the word of promise to the respondent’s ear, and break it to her hopes ? Did it intend to trifle with the justice and equity of the laws of the country, and make its own decrees a mere phantom, which should elude the grasp of the respondent, and prove an idle and delusive dream ? If words are not mere empty sounds, if they mean any thing, then surely in the words of the decree, the respondent was to be allowed a sum sufficient for the support and maintenance of herself and child, if on proof of the ability of the complainant, he had the property out of which such an allowance as was fit, reasonable, and just, could be made. That he had such means abundantly appears from the proof, and why that allowance was not made, can only be inferred from the introduction of the testimony objected to by the respondent. This order allowing one cent, is most unjust in its consequences, because it deprives the infant child of the protection and nurture intended to be given under the decree. This part of the case must certainly have escaped the observation of the Court, or it would not certainly, I presume, have made an order, from which such consequences must inevitably flow. The order, then, for this reason alone, was an entire departure from the former adjudication of the Court, and directly repugnant thereto, and necessarily annulled, for every practical purpose, the judgment of the Court. The order decreeing costs against the wife, was also clearly erroneous. I can see no view in which the case can be examined, that does not show the entire incorrectness of the final judgment on the allowance of alimony. It should have been a yearly allowance commensurate to the support of the wife and child, in proportion to the ability of the husband and her condition in life; what that ability and condition might be, would be subject of enquiry by evidence, and when ascertained, should be so declared.
I am of opinion that the judgment of the Circuit Court should be reversed with costs, and the cause remanded to that Court with instructions to proceed in the cause, and allow yearly such alimony for the support of the respondent and her child, as shall, from the evidence to be adduced, and the circumstances of the parties, be fit, reasonable, and just.
Judgment reversed.
R. L. 234; Gale’s Stat. 251.