19 Ohio App. 257 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1924
The plaintiff, Ruby E. Kimmel, is the divorced wife of the defendant Clyde Dorshimer, the divorce having been granted in November, 1912. 'Since that date each of the parties has remarried. The divorce was granted to the husband by reason of the aggression of the wife, and by the judgment of the court the custody of the two minor children was given to the husband, with no order respecting maintenance, and the wife was enjoined from interfering with that custody. One of the children is Rowena Dorshimer, who at the time of the divorce was aged about five years, and
Counsel for plaintiff rely very largely on the case of Pretzinger v. Pretzinger, 45 Ohio St., 452, while counsel for defendant rely on Fulton v. Fulton, 52 Ohio St., 229. The latter case reviews and distinguishes the holding of the Supreme Court in the former case, and points out the difference between the two cases. That difference consists almost wholly in the fact that in the Pretzinger ease the divorce resulted from the misconduct of the husband, while in the Fulton case, as in the case at bar, the divorce resulted from the aggression of the wife. The conclusion reached by the Supreme Court in the Pretzinger ease is based , upon the principle that the husband and father cannot, by his own misconduct, shift onto another his primary liability to support his minor child. This rule of law, while well-recognized, had no place in the Fulton ease, and has none in this case, for the manifest reason that in these latter eases the father in each case has been guilty of no misconduct.
Since the decision of the Supreme Court in Fulton v. Fulton, supra, it is settled in Ohio that where a divorce is granted on account of the aggression of the wife, and the minor children are awarded to
It is urged, however, that the bill of exceptions contains evidence showing that the father abandoned the child and declined and refused to pro-’ vide maintenance, and that therefore the necessity was cast upon the mother to furnish the sup port. No evidence was offered along that line except a very little which came from the child, Rowena Dorshimer, who, at the time she testified, was seventeen years of age. The record discloses that the child had been living with the mother with the knowledge and consent of the father, and had occasionally visited the father, who lived in the-country some five miles from Montpelier, where the mother and child resided. On such occasions
All of the parties resided in Williams county, and it would have been entirely proper for the mother, if she wished the custody of the child, and was expecting to demand compensation for main-' tenance, to have applied to the court which granted the divorce for a modification of the order. This was not done. We cannot resist the conclusion
We find no prejudicial error in the record.
Judgment affirmed.