100 Kan. 585 | Kan. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought by George W-McCormick to obtain a divorce from Theodora B. McCormick. The divorce was refused, and the court proceeded to make an equitable division of the property, awarding the defendant the sum of $1200 and requiring the plaintiff to pay the costs
The grounds for divorce stated in the petition were gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. The defendant denied the averments of the petition and further alleged condonation of the wrongs alleged by plaintiff. There was much conflict in the testimony, and the main contention is that it does not sustain the findings and judgment of the court. Plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that the defendant/ was of a jealous disposition, was unjustly suspicious of him and had charged him with dishonesty and infidelity. There was testimony that she was quarrelsome and had nagged and harassed him as to his property, going so far as to attempt to obtain a portion of it. Defendant offered testimony to the effect that she was required to live in a single room in a hotel when she very much desired and had been promised a home; that plaintiff had left her alone and had spent a great part of his time in a village in Missouri, where he entered into some kind of a business relation with a woman of that place. The testimony is that defendant reproached him for leaving her and his regular place of business, and in view of the testimony in the case it is not surprising that she was jealous nor that she should use strong language in complaining of his conduct. Accord-* ing to some of the testimony, things were said and done by each of the parties that were far from creditable. After reviewing the testimony at length, the court concluded that the plaintiff was not entitled to a divorce, and the decision appears to have sufficient support in the evidence. The complaint that the statements and findings of the court betrayed a prejudice against the plaintiff is not sustained. The court found, and apparently upon sufficient testimony, that after plaintiff had filed his petition asking for a divorce the plaintiff and defendant resumed marital relations, having on diverse occasions lived and co-' habited together as man and wife. Under the circumstances the court was warranted in refusing the divorce.
It is contended that the court was not warranted in ordering a division of the property between the parties as no demand was made in the pleadings for= such division. The code does not require an allegation as to property rights nor that a demand for a division of the property shall be included in the
In Bowers v. Bowers, 70 Kan. 164, 78 Pac. 430, there was an application for a division of property in connection with a demand for a divorce, but in the cases of Van Brunt v. Van Brunt, 52 Kan. 380, 34 Pae. 1117; Rullman v. Rullman, 80 Kan. 691, 102 Pac. 1102; and Danielson v. Danielson, 99 Kan. 222, 161 Pac. 623, it does not appear that a division of the property was mentioned in the pleadings, and in the view of the court a demand in the pleadings for a division is not essential to the making of an order when a divorce is refused.
We find no substantial error in the record, and the judgment of the court is affirmed.