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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Kinnear v. Kinnear [1882] ScotLR 20_52 (3 November 1882) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1882/20SLR0052.html Cite as: [1882] SLR 20_52, [1882] ScotLR 20_52 |
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[
et e contra.
In an action of divorce raised by a husband on the ground of his wife's wilful and malicious desertion, the Court, on a consideration of the proof, ( dub. Lord Young) repelled a plea to the effect that the wife had reasonable excuse arising out of her husband's cruelty for remaining apart from him, and pronounced decree of divorce; and in a counter action of separation and aliment at the instance of the wife, grounded on averments similar to those which constituted her defence in the action for divorce, dismissed the action on the ground that the alleged cruelty had not been established.
The first of these two actions was an action of divorce raised by Thomas Kinnear, sanitary inspector for the burgh of Dundee, against his wife Helen Leslie or Kinnear, on the ground that she had been guilty of wilful and malicious non-adherence to and desertion of him without a reasonable cause for four years. The defender admitted that she had been absent for more than four years from her husband, but averred that her absence was caused by terror occasioned by the gross cruelty of her husband, which had rendered her afraid to live with him. She condescended on various alleged threats and acts of cruelty on his part towards her.
She pleaded, inter alia—“The pursuer having treated the defender with gross cruelty, and she having left him on that account, the action is groundless and untenable.”
Mrs Kinnear raised a counter action of separation and aliment against her husband, in which she made the same allegations of cruel threatening conduct on the part of her husband which constituted her defence in the action of divorce.
A proof was led in the action of separation and aliment, which by agreement of parties was held as also applicable to the action of divorce. The following facts were elicited by the evidence:—The parties were married in 1865. The husband was at that time a policeman in Dundee, and the parties lived together there, with the exception of certain short absences of the wife in consequence of quarrels between them, till October 1877, when they finally separated as after mentioned. Five children were born during that period. The husband's position in Dundee improved during the subsistence of the marriage, and at the time of these actions he was sanitary inspector of the burgh of Dundee, and had an annual income of about £170. The wife, on the other hand, after the marriage contracted drunken habits, spending the housekeeping money on drink. She also became untidy and lazy, and her husband had frequent occasion to complain of her habit of smoking and use of bad language before her children. The married life of the parties in consequence became unhappy very soon after the marriage, the husband upbraiding the wife, and quarrelling with her on account of her bad habits, and the wife neglecting her husband and her five children. In September 1866, on the occasion of a quarrel about the husband's dinner, she left him, but he induced her shortly after to return to her home. She again left him in 1873 on the occasion of a quarrel about her habits of drinking, but was taken home again the next day. In September 1874 she again left her husband in consequence of a dispute occasioned by her drinking habits, and on this occasion she took away with her the four children then existing of the marriage. She removed with them to Forfar. On this occasion legal proceedings were threatened against her husband for aliment for her and the children. He at once wrote expressing his anxiety to receive home his children, and stating that his wife was also welcome to return. Three of the children were then sent home to him, and after a time Kinnear came to Forfar and took away the youngest also. Thereafter, in consequence of a message from her husband relating to the health of one of her children, Mrs Kinnear returned to her husband's house in Dundee, promising to mend her ways. For a short time matters went well, but afterwards she again fell into bad company, and returned to her drunken habits. In 1877, after aquarrel relating to the pawning of articles by her, and particularly as to some sheets which were amissing, she left him for the last time. He made this note in his diary—“Tuesday, 2d Oct. 1877.—This day my wife deserted me of her own accord.” Two months after he went to Forfar and offered to take her back, but she refused to come. He denied in his evidence that he had ever kicked her or struck her, or had charged her with infidelity, and deponed that he had been always prepared to take her back if she had been willing to come. On this point, however, he deponed in cross-examination as follows:—“I went to Forfar to bring her back two months after she left. She did not give me time to tell her that, because she ran out of the house. When I saw her two months afterwards she was perhaps 8 or 10 yards from me. Since then I have driven through Forfar perhaps three times a-year to see my brother, who lives some distance beyond the town. On these occasions I never called to see my wife. From the reports which I got latterly about her conduct I did not think I would be justified in going to see her. The second time I was at Smith's house I got information concerning a drinking bout which she had had with the foreman-tenter on a Saturday night. I wrote to a friend asking him to make inquiry, and he wrote
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back that the circumstances were very suspicious. I did not pursue the matter further. I was somewhat doubtful about it, but latterly I have been convinced that there was not only a drunken bout, but that there was a little more.” Two witnesses, Mr and Mrs Smith, who resided in Dundee, but had visited the Kinnears in Dundee, and whose evidence is referred to in the note of the Lord Ordinary, infra, deponed to one occasion on which they had seen the husband strike his wife, and one of these witnesses also deponed that during Mrs Kinnear's last absence from Forfar Kinnear said to him with reference to his wife that he hoped “the b—— would be dead before the witness returned to Forfar, and if she were dead he would get a wife with a great deal of money.” The evidence of the husband as to the wife's bad habits being the reason of the quarrels between the spouses, and as to his not having treated the wife with harshness or cruelty, was corroborated by that of the two eldest children of the marriage, and that of certain neighbours, and of a woman named Dollon, referred to in the opinion of Lord Craighill. On the other hand, Mrs Kinnear deponed that she was compelled to leave her husband on account of his violent and cruel treatment of her by striking and kicking her, and the insufficiency of the money given her for housekeeping. Her evidence was to the effect that she had left her husband's house in 1877 on the occasion of the quarrel about the missing sheets above referred to, because from his violent conduct she was in terror of her life. She also deponed that her husband had never asked her to return, and that she felt deeply the separation from her children. A number of witnesses deponed to having heard her complain of her husband's cruelty, but the only evidence of such violence consisted in that of the two witnesses above referred to. It was proved that Mrs Kinnear had never seen her children since her departure from her husband's house in 1877, although she was during the period of her absence engaged in a factory in Forfar, while the children were all the time residing with their father in Dundee.
The Lord Ordinary ( Adam) in the action of divorce at the husband's instance gave decree of divorce. He dismissed the action of separation and aliment.
He added this note to his interlocutor in the action of divorce:—“At the conclusion of the proof the Lord Ordinary was of the opinion that the defender had failed to prove that she had reasonable cause for leaving her husband in October 1877, or for her continued non-adherence since, and further consideration has only strengthened that opinion. The only witnesses who speak to having seen any personal violence used by the pursuer to his wife are James Smith and his wife, who speak to something of that kind having taken place in Park Terrace about the New Year of 1875. From the manner in which Smith showed in the witness-box what the pursuer did to his wife on that occasion it was quite clear that the pursuer did not intend to hurt, and did not do so. It would be an abuse of language to say that he acted cruelly or violently towards her.
“The rest of her case consists of evidence of complaints of her husband's cruelty, alleged to have been made by her to some of her friends and neighbours, and now repeated by them. The Lord Ordinary has only to say that he places no reliance on the statements of the defender, whether now made by herself or reported by her witnesses.
The pursuer appeared to the Lord Ordinary to be quite a respectable and trustworthy man, and the Lord Ordinary believes that he has given a substantially true account of their married life. The truth of the case appears to be that it is more in consonance with the defender's tastes and habits to live independently as a factory worker than under, it may be, the somewhat strict control of her husband. That she had no particular affection for her children, which might have kept her in her husband's house, is plain enough, because although living at no great distance from them she has never seen them, or apparently desired to see them, since she left them in October 1877.”
Mrs Kinnear reclaimed.
At advising—
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The Court adhered to the interlocutors of the Lord Ordinary in both actions.
Counsel for Reclaimer (Mrs Kinnear)— Campbell Smith— Rhind. Agent— W. Officer, S.S.C.
Counsel for Respondent— J. P. B. Robertson— Watt. Agents— Fyfe, Miller, Fyfe, & Ireland, S.S.C.