329 Mass. 482 | Mass. | 1952
By an earlier decision (Brewer v. Brewer, ante, 205) we retained the case and directed the judge to make a further report of material facts, which he has now done. They are as follows. “For a period of about a year preceding the hearing on the petition the respondent agreed to pay his wife $10 weekly for her personal use. The husband made the payments, not weekly but in periods varying from two to five weeks, and during that period the petitioner was forced to pay for clothing for the children and household expenses which the respondent refused to pay. During the six week period immediately preceding the date of the hearing, which was October 9, 1951, the respondent refused to pay any money to the petitioner although requested to on many occasions. From April, 1951, to the date of the hearing on October 9, 1951, the respondent refused to purchase or pay for any clothing or shoes for either the wife or the children although requested to do so on many occasions. . . . [D]uring this period the wife and children were in need of shoes and clothing. The respondent stopped the wife’s credit in several stores where she had been in the habit of purchasing food and clothing both for herself and the children. . . . [0]n several occasions the husband has refused to pay for repairs on the children’s shoes and the bills for cleansing the children’s clothing, although requested to do so, and on many occasions the wife has borrowed money from relatives to pay for the children’s clothes and expenses. . . . [Wjhile the respondent has supplied the essential foods for his family during this period there were many occasions when he refused his wife’s request for reasonable items of food, and on many occasions refused his wife’s request for special necessary items of food for one of his children who was on a special diet. . . . [T]he respondent, during the year 1951, paid the taxes on the real, estate which the family occupied, amounting to $244.24, and ... he pays $45 monthly on principal and
So ordered.