Opinion
(December Term, 1829.)
1. For adultery, the court may divorce a vinculo matrimonii, but is not bound to do so. It will, in its discretion, either dissolve the marriage or decree a separation of the parties.
2. Where a husband admits his wife to conjugal embraces with knowledge that she hath committed adultery, he may, notwithstanding, seek a divorce for her subsequent misconduct.
From ORANGE. Petition for divorce. The petitioner stated that he intermarried with the defendant in 1824, and that about a year afterwards she yielded to illicit solicitations, and had adulterous intercourse with several persons; that the petitioner, unwilling to abandon his wife, had removed from the village in which they first resided, into the country, and had used every affectionate method to reclaim her, but the petition charged that she continued her former habits, and was then living in adultery.
Winston for petitioner.
The cause was heard below at September Term, 1829, before NORWOOD, J., when the jury found that the defendant had committed adultery since her intermarriage with the petitioner, had borne a child, the fruit of her crime, and was still living in adultery.
Upon this finding, the petitioner's counsel moved for a divorce from the bonds of matrimony, which the judge refused, and pronounced a decree of separation from bed and board, upon which the (353) petitioner appealed.
Before the act of 1814 (Rev., ch. 869) applications for divorce could only be made to the Legislature, and it was competent for them to divorce either from bed and board or from the bonds of matrimony, at their discretion, without regard to the law as it then stood. But if jurisdiction had been transferred to the courts on subjects of divorce, they must have decided according to the existing law.
But the Legislature transferred full jurisdiction to the courts in that year, in each case of impotency, or living in adultery, to divorce either from bed and board, or from the bonds of matrimony, at their discretion. As the law stood, all cases of living in adultery were treated in the same way, but no doubt the Legislature considered that extraordinary cases of this kind might occur, attended with such circumstances that sentence of separation from the bonds of matrimony would be both just and proper. The present case seems not to be one of that description, particularly when the circumstance is adverted to that the petitioner took the defendant back again after her first transgression. Indeed, this circumstance has been the ground of some doubt whether the prayer of the petition ought to be granted, but it has been overcome by considering that the third section of the act, which declares that "In case the husband has admitted the wife into conjugal society, etc., after he knew of the criminal act, it shall be a perpetual bar," to mean that it shall be a bar to a divorce for that criminal fact, but not to one of a similar kind of which she may afterwards be guilty.
From the facts set forth in the record sent here, I see no reason why the judgment given in the Superior Court should be (354) disturbed.
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.