88 Mo. App. 530 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1901
Plaintiff sued the defendant for a divorce on the ground that she had absented herself from him for one year without reasonable cause. The plaintiff’s own evidence establishes that his wife desired to visit some relatives in Pendleton, Oregon. It appears she had a son living there and a brother-in-law. This visit was agreeable to the plaintiff, so on the fourth day of July, 1899, he drove his wife-to a landing on the Mississippi river, where she took a steamboat to St. Louis. Their parting was friendly, even affectionate, and with no expectation on the part of either, apparently, that it was to be final. She remained in St. Louis with friends until the twenty-eighth day of July, when she departed for Oregon. While in
We can not support this judgment. It is impossible to conclude from reading the evidence that the defendant had the purpose of desertion in her heart when she left home or even when she arrived in Oregon. In fact, the tone of the correspondence, her conduct and her behavior when they parted, are convincing that she never has abandoned him. But by the most favorable construction for him that can be put on her actions, we are unable to find the slightest proof that a desertion had taken place one year before the suit was begun; for it was certainly understood and agreed to by the defendant that she should make a visit of considerable length, while to make up the statutory year the entire period of her absence must be counted against her, which would clearly be unjust. The plaintiff evidently had a divorce in his mind for some purpose, laudable or base, sometime before he began this action. One letter written to him by his wife from Oregon shows that he had broached the matter to her. In this class of cases we may review and weigh the testimony. Griesedieck v. Griesedieck, 56
The judgment is reversed.