136 W. Va. 708 | W. Va. | 1951
This suit in equity was instituted in the Circuit Court ■of Mineral County on October 15, 1948, by the plaintiff, Dorothy R. Rohrbaugh, to obtain a divorce from her husband, the defendant, Claude R. Rohrbaugh, on the ground ■of cruel or inhuman treatment.
Upon the bill of complaint of the plaintiff and upon her motion for alimony and attorney fees, pursuant to notice, the circuit court by decree entered October 28, 1948, required the defendant to support and maintain the plaintiff and her two small children in the home in which the plaintiff and the defendant were -then living, directed the defendant to occupy a separate bedroom from that occupied by the plaintiff, enjoined the defendant from entering the bedroom of the plaintiff and from molesting her in any way, provided that the foregoing conditions of the decree should continue until changed upon the subsequent motion of the plaintiff, and ordered the defendant to pay a fee of $100.00 to the attorney for the plaintiff and $36.50 costs on or before January 15, 1949. The defendant filed an answer to the bill of complaint on January 14, 1949, and on February 17, 1949, after hearing the testimony of several witnesses, upon a second motion of the plaintiff for support and maintenance for herself and
On March 15, 1949, the defendant filed his supplemental answer and cross bill, in which he prayed for a divorce from the plaintiff upon the grounds of adultery and cruel or inhuman treatment. After the entry of the order of March 7, 1949, the plaintiff returned to the home of the defendant, and later, on motion of the defendant, by a •decree entered in vacation on March 26, 1949, she was required to move from his home. After having heard the testimony of a number of witnesses in connection with the various motions of the parties, and after the plaintiff had filed her reply to the answer and the supplemental answer and cross bill of the defendant, ihe court by decree entered July 28, 1949, referred the cause to a commissioner in chancery, who heard additional testimony offered by the parties and filed his report on October 24,. 1949. The findings of the commissioner, among others, were that the plaintiff was not entitled to a divorce, and that the defendant was entitled to a divorce and should be awarded the custody of the children. Exceptions filed by the plaintiff to the report of the commissioner were overruled and by final decree, entered January 21, 1950,. the divorce prayed for by the plaintiff in her bill of complaint was denied and the defendant was granted a divorce from the plaintiff, and awarded the permanent custody Of the two infant children of the planitiff and the defendant. From that decree this appeal was granted by this Court upon the petition of the plaintiff.
After the plaintiff and the defendant were married in Winchester, Virginia, in November, 1945, they returned to the home of the defendant at Wiley Ford in Mineral County. At the time of the institution of this suit the
After the birth of the first child, in May, 1946, the plaintiff and the defendant engaged in frequent quarrels over financial and other matters. She complained that he did not give her sufficient money for clothes and household necessities. He accused her of extravagance and of frequent association and improper conduct with other men. He admits that during their quarrels, in which he says she called him vile names, he cursed her and called her vile names but he says that he did so because of her frequent absence from home until late hours at night during' which she left her children at home with his two daughters, fourteen and sixteen years of age, or at the home of her acquaintances, and because of her neglect of the children and the home. He also admits that upon occasions he told her that he was not the father of their second child. She testifies that he called her a whore and other-vile names and that on one occasion in June, 1947, he-struck her violently and loosened two • or three of her
The evidence shows that the defendant, who is employed by the Western Maryland Railroad Company, earns approximately $300.00 to $325.00 per month; that he is not extravagant; that he owns an automobile and the home in which the plaintiff and the defendant lived before their separation which he valued at $3,500.00; that the plaintiff wasted much of the money which the defendant gave her for living expenses; and that she incurred various store bills beyond his ability to pay them until he stopped her credit at those places. The evidence also shows, and she admits, that she was away from home as many as fifteen nights during the month of December, 1948, and that on some of those occasions she spent some time at night at bowling alleys and places of recreation where drinks were served. The plaintiff was seen by several witnesses in the company of different men at night while riding by automobile or while at the homes of other persons. One witness, an unmarried young man, testified that, not knowing at the time that the plaintiff was married, he rode with her in his automobile late at night and on that occasion she permitted him to feel her breasts but that she refused to engage in sexual intercourse with him. The plaintiff admits that she was with the witness in his automobile but denies that she engaged in the conduct to which he testified. She admitted that, on another occasion while walking along a street with an unmarried man named Kirtley, a bookmaker who lived in Cumberland, Maryland, with whom she was seen by different persons at different times and to whom she talked by telephone frequently, he held her arm but that she permitted him to do so because the street was slippery from snow and ice.
In February or March, 1949, the defendant was inform
A number of witnesses produced by the defendant testified that he was, and that the plaintiff was not, a proper person to have the care and the custody of the children, and several witnesses produced by the plaintiff testified that she was, and that the defendant was not, a proper person to have their care and custody. On that issue, the judge of the circuit court requested and received a report prepared by a welfare worker of the Department of Public Assistance relating to the conduct and the character of the plaintiff and the defendant and the manner in which they treated and cared for their children. The report, which was filed and considered by the circuit court, contained numerous statements which were based on information obtained by the welfare worker from persons other than the plaintiff and the defendant. The person who made the investigation and prepared the report, however, testified as a witness and was examined by counsel for each of the parties with regard to matters set forth in the report.
In seeking reversal by this Court of the final decree of the circuit court the plaintiff assigns numerous errors. The assignments of error which merit consideration are, in substance: (1) The report of the welfare worker and the testimony of the witness that the plaintiff had told his wife that the plaintiff had had intercourse with Kirt-ley, being hearsay, were inadmissible, and the action of the court in admitting them constitutes reversible error; (2) the inequitable conduct of the defendant bars him of his right to relief in this suit; and (3) the evidence is not sufficient to show that the plaintiff committed any act of adultery.
The acts and the conduct of the defendant, which the plaintiff contends constitute inequitable conduct, barring him from relief in this suit, do not amount to conduct of that character. Though the defendant admits that he engaged in frequent quarrels with the plaintiff, during which he called her vile names, this conduct upon his part was on numerous occasions provoked by the financial waste and extravagance of the plaintiff, her frequent absences from her home late at night, and her association with other men. The evidence clearly shows that the name calling engaged in and the abusive language employed by the parties during their quarrels were mutual. The acts of the defendant, as disclosed by the evidence in this case, did not induce, or were not, in any substantial degree, responsible for, the misconduct of the plaintiff, and they in no wise resemble the inequitable conduct of the plaintiffs in the cases of Harbert v. Harbert, 130 W. Va. 704, 45 S. E. 2d 15; Wolfe v. Wolfe, 120 W. Va. 389, 198 S. E. 209; Mohr v. Mohr, 119 W. Va. 253, 193 S. E. 121; and Edwards v. Edwards, 106 W. Va. 446, 145 S. E. 813, cited and relied upon by the plaintiff, or in the cases of Cottle v. Cottle, 129 W. Va. 344, 40 S. E. 2d 863; and Myers v. Myers, 127 W. Va. 551, 33 S. E. 2d 897. In consequence,
The contention of the plaintiff that the evidence is not sufficient to convict her of adultery as charged is wholly
The evidence of the guilt of the plaintiff,- direct and circumstantial, satisfies every requisite of sufficient proof. She and her male companion were found together in the home of a man and his wife, who had been her friends and acquaintances, where she and he, their neighbor whom they had also known for several years, had frequently been present together. Her association with him, at different times and places on the numerous occasions
In Harper v. Harper, 128 W. Va. 10, 35 S. E. 2d 356, this Court held that the testimony of witnesses that they saw the defendant and a man not her husband seated on a bed in a hotel room, about two thirty o’clock in the morning, after she had been registered as his wife, that the defendant closed the door, and that when the witnesses re
Evidence that a husband about midnight, with a male companion, visited a house that had the reputation'of a house of ill fame, remained for about an hour, and upon leaving with his companion was accosted by his wife and by her accused of adulterous conduct to which he made no answer and gave no explanation of his visit to the house, and that his wife had previously heard him tell his companion: “We will run down over the creek and look the janes over and pick out a couple”, and had subsequently heard him say, in response to the inquiry of his companion: “Hen, how in hell do you suppose your wife knew where we were going, when we didn’t know it five minutes before ourselves” that “She must be very clever” and that “it would have been too damn bad if they had caught us while we were in their”, has been held sufficient to establish adultery upon the part of the husband. Shook v. Shook, 111 W. Va. 284, 161 S. E. 235.
When adultery is relied upon as a ground of divorce, evidence which is sufficiently strong, clear and convincing to carry conviction of guilt to the judicial mind will warrant a decree of divorce on that ground.
The denial by the plaintiff of her guilt of the act of adultery charged against her and of other portions of the testimony introduced in behalf of the defendant, and the different statements and opinions of the numerous witnesses who testified to the unfitness of the plaintiff, and the fitness of the defendant, to have the custody of their infant children, create a conflict in the evidence in this case. It is obvious, however, that notwithstanding such 'conflict, the clear preponderance of the evidence is in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff on the issues of her guilt of adultery, and of her unfitness, and
Section 15, Article 2, Chapter 48, Code, 1931, as amended, in part provides that “Upon decreeing a divorce, * * *, the court may make such further decree as it shall deem expedient, concerning the care, custody, education and maintenance of the minor children, and may determine with which of the parents the children, or any of them, may remain; * * This provision vests discretion in the trial chancellor with respect to the custody of the minor children of the parties to a suit for divorce, Finnegan v. Finnegan, 134 W. Va. 94, 58 S. E. 2d 594; Bailey v. Bailey, 127 W. Va. 826, 35 S. E. 2d 81; Settle v. Settle, 117 W. Va. 476, 185 S. E. 859; White v. White, 106 W. Va. 680, 146 S. E. 720; Buseman v. Buseman, 83 W. Va. 496, 98 S.
No reversible error appearing in the case, the final decree of the Circuit Court of Mineral Comity is affirmed.
Affirmed.