
    Merrimack
    June, 1894
    Burns v. Burns.
    Admissible evidence, which was found insufficient to prove the commission of adultery on a certain day, is not thereby rendered incompetent in the trial of a subsequent libel for divorce to prove the offence on another day.
    A decree in a divorce proceeding, adverse to an allegation of adultery committe 1 on a certain day and on divers other days, is not necessarily an adjudication covering the whole time alleged. On the trial of a like allegation in a subsequent libel, evidence of the issue actually tried in the former case may be admissible.
    Libel for Divorce. The cause alleged is the wife’s adultery ■with one S., on or about April 1, 1890. The defendant filed an answer denying the charge and averring that the question of her adultery before October 28, 1891, had been adjudicated in her favor. On that date she filed a petition against her husband for separate maintenance, alleging non-support. At the April term, 1892, the cause was tried. The husband admitted that he had refused to support his wife, but alleged in justification that she had committed adultery with S., “on or about February 1,1891, and on divers days and times between that date and the date of the filing of the petition, to wit, October 28, 1891.” A decree was entered in favor of the wife. In the present suit the defendant excepted to the ruling allowing the introduction of evidence tending to prove adultery before October 28, 1891. The plaintiff excepted to the ruling that he should be confined to evidence as to acts of adultery committed since that date, and to acts of adultery, if any, committed before that date, as to which no evidence was offered on the former trial. The defendant also excepted to the last part of this ruling. The trial was suspended pending a decision on the exceptions,
    
      
      Albín $ Martin, for the plaintiff.
    
      Sargent ‡ Hollis, for the defendant.
   Per Curiam.

Though it may be an adjudicated fact that the defendant did not commit adultery with S. on the first day of February; 1891, and on divers subsequent days before -October 28, 1891, it does not follow that the evidence, which was found to be insufficient to prove the allegation, cannot be received upon the question whether adultery was afterwards committed by the same parties. The issue presented is not the same in both cases; and while all the competent evidence offered in the former case did not prove the affirmative of the issue then tried, it cannot be said that no part of it is admissible upon the issue raised in this case. Acts of familiarity, the inclinations and purposes of the parties, and a great variety of facts competent to be considered as tending to prove adultery on a particular day, are not rendered incompetent upon the issue of adultery on a subsequent day, by the circumstance that the first allegation was not proved. The competency of the evidence may be the same in both cases, though its probative force may differ’.

It is not deemed expedient to consider the exceptions taken to the last ruling of the court. They suggest questions which'may not arise on a trial of the case, or which may be presented in forms materially modified by circumstances not now apparent. The exact form of the question of adultery tried in -the former case, and the'precise terms of the i’ecord relating to the times of the alleged adulterous intercourse, if they are matters of record, may be material. The actual issue tried in that case does not appear. The wife was charged with the commission of the crime on or about February 1, 1891, and on divers days and times between that date and the date of the filing of the petition, to wit, October 28, 1891.” The husband may have introduced evidence bearing upon the question of her chastity during the whole of this period, or he may have confined his testimony relating to that subject to a particular day or other portion of the time alleged. In the absence of more definite evidence of what was in fact tried, it cannot be held that the issue determined was as broad as the allegation. Morgan v. Burr, 58 N. H. 470. A further finding of facts is essential to a satisfactory consideration of the question presented.

Case discharged.

Smith, J., did not sit: the others concurred. 
      
       See foot-note on page 22.
     