170 Wis. 322 | Wis. | 1919
The plaintiff assails that part of the judgment which awards a division and distribution of his estate. An absolute divorce was granted upon the plaintiff’s complaint on the ground that defendant had treated plaintiff cruelly and inhumanly _ for a period exceeding four years immediately preceding the trial of the action. The court found that the plaintiff’s separate property amounted to $19,400 and that defendant’s separate estate was of the value of $15,000; that the plaintiff had debts and liabilities aggregating $2,350, and. that defendant’s property is subject to a mortgage of $1,150. Deducting the liabilities of the parties respectively from the value of their separate estates as found by the court, the husband’s estate has a net value of $17,050 and the wife’s $13,850. An examination of 'the record has led us to conclude that these valuations as found by the court cannot be disturbed and must be adhered to in determining a just and equitable division and .distribution of property between the parties. The plaintiff contends that the trial court in making this distribution disregarded the equitable rights of the plaintiff to such parts-of defendant’s property as she derived from him, and the character and situation of the parties, and the plaintiff’s impaired ability and health resulting from defendant’s cruel and inhuman treatment. As appears in the foregoing statement, the parties had lived together as husband and wife for nearly twenty-four years at the time the decree of divorce was granted. Plaintiff was fifty-nine years of age and his health was impaired; defendant was forty-three years of age and in good health. At the time o'f their marriage neither one had any separate estate. Plaintiff, after their marriage, continued to work in a flour mill for a year, and thereafter he was employed in a pea-canning factory, of which he became. general manager and superintendent
The evidence amply sustains the findings of the court that defendant treated plaintiff in a cruel and inhuman manner and that she was guilty of such wilful misconduct as to show a reckless disregard of her marriage vows. The facts showing how the property of the parties was accumulated during their married life and that the value of the wife’s estate was the result of the husband’s labor and industry, considered in the light of her conduct which calls for the dissolution of the bonds of matrimony, present a case which requires that her estate so acquired must be considered in connection with the plaintiff’s estate in making a final division and distribution between them in this action. We are persuaded that the trial court did not give “due regard to the legal and equitable rights of each party, the ability of the husband, the special estate of the wife, the
By the Court. — It is so ordered.