1. The cruel and inhuman treatment of the plaintiff by the defendant.

2. Such conduct, on the part of the defendant toward the plaintiff, as may render it unsafe and improper for the latter to cohabit with the former.

3. The abandonment of the plaintiff by the defendant.

4. When the wife is plaintiff, the neglect or refusal of the defendant to provide for her.

In actions for limited divorce both parties must have been residents of the State when the action was commenced; or when the marriage took place within the State, the plaintiff must have been a resident thereof, when the action was commenced; or when the marriage took place out of the State, the parties must have become residents thereof, and have continued to be such at least one year, and the plaintiff must have been a resident when the action was commenced.

Annulment of Marriage.—An action to procure a decree declaring the marriage contract void and annulling the marriage may be maintained on any of the following grounds:

1. When either party was under the age of legal consent.

2. When either party was an idiot or lunatic.

3. When either party was physically incapable of entering into the marriage state, and such incapacity continues, and is incurable.

4. When the consent of either party was obtained by force, duress or fraud.