70 Mo. App. 337 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1897
The plaintiff instituted a suit for a divorce against the defendant in the circuit court of Jefferson county. The answer contained a cross bill in which the defendant prayed for the causes therein stated, to be divorced from the plaintiff. The cross bill charged that the plaintiff had been guilty of adultery with one Harry Woodworth; that, for some time prior to the final separation, to wit, April 17, 1895, she had refused him the privileges of a husband; that she had taught their children to hate him; that she had threatened to poison him; that in 1894 she cut him with a knife; that in 1895 she denounced him (in the presence of others) as “a dog,” “dirty scoundrel,” and “brute,” and that, from February 3, 1893, to the final separation she sought the society of other men and absented herself from home of evenings, and remained away until late hours at night. When the cross bill was filed the plaintiff dismissed her petition and instituted a like action in the circuit court of the
The charges that the plaintiff threatened to poison the defendant and that she denied to him the rights of a husband, we must hold to be unproved. The defendant testified in support of them, and the plaintiff denied them. This was the extent of the proof. The granting of divorces is against the interest of the state and of society, and the courts should see to it that the complainant sustains the charges by a clear preponderance of evidence.
The charge that the plaintiff taught her children to hate their father is likewise unproved. The plaintiff denied it, and two of the daughters, aged respectively thirteen and fifteen years, testified that it was not true. It was supported by the testimony of defendankonly, and what he stated were not facts, but matters of conjecture merely.
In 1894 the plaintiff and defendant had a difficulty in which, according to his testimony, the plaintiff
In 'the summer of 1894, the plaintiff and defendant had a controversy about the refusal of the defendant to give plaintiff money to buy a railroad ticket. The parties differ, of course, as to what took place. The only disinterested witness said that when he stepped into the store the defendant was standing behind the counter at the money drawer; that the plaintiff was present, and that when he entered the store the defendant said “my wife has been trying to rob me several times and wants money now,” and that thereupon the plaintiff called her husband “a mean dutchman,” “a brute,” etc. According to this witness the conduct of plaintiff was reprehensible and unladylike, but who will say that she talked without provocation. Her husband had denounced her as a thief to one of their neighbors.
The record presents other matters of difference between the parties, but a discussion of them would result in no advantage to the defendaht. We have read the evidence carefully and have arrived at the conclusion that both spouses are responsible for their domestic broils. A little forbearance on the part of the wife and some effort on the part of the husband to make