129 Mo. App. 175 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
The action is for divorce. The grounds alleged are indignities such as to make life intolerable, indefinitely stated as¡ consisting in false charges of infidelity, unfounded jealousy, ill-temper, quarreling, threatening to fight and fighting, use of opprobrious epithets to plaintiff and about plaintiff’s mother, want of affection, etc. Defendant was personally served with process but made default. The evidence shows that the parties' were married on March 10, 1902, and lived together at De Soto, Missouri, until June 12, 1905, boarding or keeping house according to defendant’s whim. Plaintiff is a railroad brakeman and during the period of cohabitation with defendant was employed by the Iron Mountain Railroad Company and earned about $75 per month. His mother lives in the State of Ohio and he in part contributes to her support. Plaintiff’s evidence is that after he and defendant had been married about three months, she
“Q. I will ask you to state to the court what language she used toward your mother when this matter Avas made known to her, that you had contributed to your mother’s support. A. She talked in plain Avo-rds; she called her a ‘Damned Old Bitch’ and such names as that.
“Q. She had never seen your mother. A. Never saw her in her li fe.
“Q. What did you do then? A. I told her if she had nothing more to say for her than that, that it would be the last chance she Avould get to curse her to me. I had taken about two years of such talk and I couldn’t stand it any more.”
Plaintiff testified that he then left defendant and understood she had gone to St. Louis and was at work in some department store. The evidence shows plaintiff to be a peaceable, well-behaved, sober, industrious, honest man and that he treated his wife well, paid all her bills
Mr. C. P. Hughes testified as follows:
“Q. What was her conduct • toward him? A. I remember of one occasion when they were at a social gathering at my house, and we were playing ‘Flinch’ and she and her partner lost all the games and I think Mr. Eose won some of them and she got angry at him and abused him, but I don’t recollect the exact words she used then. She abused him shamefully and treated him very mean and we all felt ashamed of her.
“Q. Would you say that her conduct was such that it would render his life miserable and make him ashamed of her before his neighbors and friends? A. Yes, sir. He never scolded her or anything of that kind.
“Q. About when was that? A. I suppose that was’ a year after they were married.-
“Q Did she use any' unbecoming language in her tirade on him? A. It was very abusive. I don’t know as she used any profane language.”
The above witness also testified that after the separation he saw defendant in St. Louis and she said to him that “she had been going under an assumed name so he (defendant) couldn’t find her up- there. She said no one but her sister knew her address. I was in Penny & Gentles’ store and I saw her in there. She told me she understood that Mr. Eose wanted a divorce and she didn’t care if he got one, because she was afraid he would see her with some young man when she was out in company with them and it kept her uneasy all the time; that if she was free from him she would not be under that cloud.”
Plaintiff - and defendant lived for a time at the house of one Mrs. Evans, who was introduced as a witness for plaintiff; her testimony corroborates that of
“Q. I will ask you if you ever saw her in one of these tirades of abuse on him. A. Yes, sir, I did.
“Q. Tell the court where that was. A. Weil, it was in her dining room. We were having a social flinch game and she got angry at him when he spoke about dancing.
“Q. Who was present? A. My stepson, myself, Mr. and Mrs. Rose. He spoke of dancing and I spoke something about it and she said she didn’t have any use for dancing and that she didn’t have any use for any one that did dance and she asked me if I did and I told her I did and I asked Mr. Rose if he liked to dance and he said, Wes, but the old woman’ wouldn’t alloAV him to dance.
“Q. What else did she say, if anything? A. She got through with the cards and commenced to kick him and she knocked his pipe out of his mouth and then he went to get up and she made a grab- at him like that (Avitness illustrating) and he sat her down in the chair. He didn’t get angry or provoked. If he did, he didn’t say anything.
“Q. What else did she state? A. She said she was going to bloAV his brains out and she got so mad she Avent to hunt for the poker and she went into my dining room, but she didn’t get anything.
“Q. Did you ever hear him discussed by her, when he was out at his work? A. Yes, sir, I have.
“Q. What was the tenor of her discussion? A. She always made remarks about- him and said she didn’t care anything for him only for the clothes and money he gave her.”
The circuit court refused to grant plaintiff a divorce on this evidence and dismissed his bill. This was palpable error. Unfounded charges of infidelity may constitute indignities authorizing a divorce, especially when they are often repeated and wholly unfounded. [Lewis v. Lewis, 5 Mo. 278; Griesedieck v. Griesedieck, 56 Mo. App. 94; Clinton v. Clinton, 60 Mo. App. 296; Ashburn v. Ashburn, 101 Mo. App. 365, 74 S. W. 394.] So will vile and abusive language frequently indulged in. [Schweikert v. Schweikert, 108 Mo. App. 477, 83 S. W. 1095.] So will unmerited contemptuous, uncivil, or insulting language, amounting to a species of cruelty. [Lynch v. Lynch, 87 Mo. App. 32.] All of which was abundantly established by plaintiff’s evidence. While we think the petition is sufficient to support a judgment of divorce, it should change with more particularity and greater amplitude the indignities shown by the evidence. Defendant, having been personally served with process, plaintiff is entitled to amend his petition to conform to the proof. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with leave to plaintiff to amend his petition to conform to the proof, and the court is directed on the filing of such amended petition to render a judgment divorcing plaintiff from the bonds of matrimony heretofore contracted with defendant.