188 Mo. App. 328 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is an action for divorce begun in the circuit court of Sullivan county, November 26, 1913.' The petition alleges that the parties were married May 19, 1913, and lived together as husband and wife in Sullivan county until July 13th of that year. The ground on which.a divorce is prayed is that defendant offered plaintiff such indignities as to render his condition intolerable. The nature of the pleaded indignities will he disclosed in the statement of facts.
May 5, 1914, defendant filed an answer and cross-petition in which she prayed for a divorce on the ground of indignities and on the same date filed a motion for alimony pendente lite and suit money. She alleged in the motion that she was destitute of means of support and for the defense of the action and the prosecution of her cross-petition, and that plaintiff owned real and personal property of the value of $3000. It was admitted at the hearing of this motion that plaintiff “had personal property to the amount of $1300 or $1400 and owns eighty acres of land which he had contracted to sell for $4600, there being a loan on it for $1200', ’ ’ and it was shown that defendant was living in Millbank, South Dakota, where she was employed in domestic service at three dollars per week, and that the only property she had was about sixty dollars in money.
The court overruled the motion and proceeded to try the case on the merits. Defendant was not present but was represented by counsel. Her deposition had been taken and was read at the trial as well as on the hearing of the motion. She had also had the deposition
Plaintiff appeared in person and testified and also introduced a number of witnesses. The court rendered a decree in his favor, and dismissed the cross-petition. Defendant appealed and her counsel contend that the court erred both in overruling her motion for temporary alimony and suit money and in rendering judgment for plaintiff on the merits. The material facts in the case are as follows: The parties are Gferman and first were married in Switzerland in 1875. They came to the United States in 1882 and lived two or three •years in Burlington, Iowa, when they moved to Missouri. They reared fourteen children and lived together until 1902 when they separated and defendant procured a divorce. She lived in Switzerland four years and then returned to Missouri and lived with a married daughter at Brookfield. She went from Brook-field to Montana where she lived until 1911 with another married daughter. In July, 1911, she removed to Millbank to serve as housekeeper for J. P. Miller, a retired farmer who was seventy-five years old and single. She remained in his service until the Spring of 1913, when she returned to Brookfield to visit her daughter. While there she- and plaintiff became reconciled and were remarried and resided on his farm in Sullivan county until their final separation, when she returned to Millbank and resumed her old position with Miller. Seven of the married children of this old couple lived in Montana and defendant appears to have been anxious for plaintiff to sell his farm and remove with her to that State, She claimed that its climate agreed with her but that her health was always poor in Missouri. Defendant was trying to sell the farm and we think the testimony of both parties shows they finally agreed that defendant should go to Montana and that plaintiff would remain in Missouri until
Plaintiff testified: “Q. You-promised her, now, if you sold this land to coiné to her? A. Yes. Q. And that was your understanding at the time you took her to the depot? A. Yes. Q. The day she left? A. Yes.” But before defendant departed for the West she went with plaintiff to his lawyer’s office at his request and signed and acknowledged a paper which she states, he represented would pnable him to sell and convey the farm without waiting for her to execute the deed. She testified: “Mr. Speiser made me believe it was an agreement that if he had a chance to sell the farm he would come west.” So that from the testimony of both parties it clearly appears that their mutually expressed intention was that the proposed separation would be but temporary, that it was made for the benefit of her health, and that as soon as the sale of the farm, which appeared imminent, could be effected, he would rejoin her in Montana. But the paper she signed and acknowledged at the lawyer’s office recited that the parties were, at that time, “living separate and apart from each other” and that its object was that “of settling and adjusting our marital rights in all the property now owned by either of us or that we may hereafter acquire, such settlement to include dower, homestead, curtesy and all statutory and legal rights growing out of our marital relation. ’ ’
Then it provided for the release by plaintiff of all his interest in her propetry “including curtesy and all statutory allowances” and followed this with the reciprocal agreement that in consideration of his promise to release and of the sum of one dollar, she released “all her marital rights in all the property real and personal now owned by her said husband or which he may hereafter acquire, including right of dower, homestead, maintenance and support and all statutory and legal rights and . . : that if the said Emma
Defendant admits the lawyer read the paper to her before she signed it but claims she did not comprehend its meaning and thought its sole purpose was to enable plaintiff to sell and convey the land. She states she concluded to visit some German friends in Millbank on her way to Montana but on arriving at Millbank she again entered the service of Miller as housekeeper and ever since has continued in that position.
Early in the following November plaintiff entered into a contract for the sale of the farm and on being required by the purchaser to have defendant join in the execution of the deed, wrote defendant the following letter:
“Loving Emma: I have received your letter and now will send you the deed to fill out them spaces that are marked with a cross. I was in Milan and inquired about that paper which we had written in Green City; they told me it was not guilty; that lawyer that made the paper has no license to do such things so you have to go before á notary public with that title and sign it before their eyes and what it costs I will pay you for. That is not much work for you and it is a great pleasure for me. Louisa and Melvina from Hannibal were here for a week. Louisa had adopted a two-year-old girl. I think you know it already. Emma and her family were here four days. The girls took those things that belong to you with them and I think they will send them to you. Now I have sold the farm for $1800' to S. A. Martin and I will be homeless by the 1st of March.
Loving Emma do that favor to me. Fix this paper so everything will be all right. Send the title back as soon as possible and let me know how much it has cost you and I will send it back to you.
With love and honor, J. J. Speiser.”
“Loving Emma: That is not no fake in this title. Everything has to go as the law. fit just takes you five minutes in Millbank to go to a notary public and get that paper fixed. You know that a notary public must put his stamp on that paper which we made in Green City, otherwise it would be no good. Loving Emma, I have got a good price for my farm and I would be sorry if the sale goes back I wish you would help me. It takes just your name and a few minutes time. I hope you do the favor to me.
Friendly, J. J. Speiser.”
Defendant Avrote (the letter is not in evidence) asking for half of the proceeds of the farm ($2400) for the execution of the deed. In his reply, plaintiff addressed her merely as “Emma,” declined her offer, accused her of illicit relations Avith her employer and informed her that he would proceed at once to obtain a divorce. Plaintiff testified on cross-examination: “My wife and I were always on good terms until the last minute. The reason why I brought this suit for divorce is because she would not sign the deed. That is the reason; if she would sign the deed we never would have a divorce.”
On re-direct he repeated that they “were on good terms the two months we lived together” and added “I was on good terms with her but she wrote to me (from Dakota) she didn’t want me to come up there.” From other parts of plaintiff’s testimony and from the testimony of defendnt it appears that their second marital experience was not happy. Defendant admits that she received one letter from Miller of an innocent and merely friendly character, but the evidence of plaintiff tends to show that they carried on a rather active correspondence of an amatory nature. None of
Sometime after‘she arrived at Millbank, she wrote him: ££I cannot think that you are very much interested in my welfare. I stayed with you two months, you never offered me a cent. I was sick when I left you. Now, about living there, there cannot be no such a thing after you threw up those letters to me. I will stay where I am now. Send me that hat in that box where the other hat came in. ’ ’ And in her deposition she stated she would not live with him again because of his charges implying infidelity on her part. Miller testified that no improper relations had existed between him and defendant and that he wrote her in a frendly way, not knowing of her remarriage, with the purpose of inducing her to resume her service as housekeeper for him.
Plaintiff testified that in one of the letters defendant received from Miller which he intercepted and read, Miller besought her to come and live with him, promising to give her a furnished house and to bequeath to her $2000 in his will, and that when plaintiff reproached defendant she said Miller had .been better to her than her old father and she would like to go back to him. This is denied by defendant and since the letter was not produced the question of whether or not it was received by defendant is one of veracity between the parties.
We have stated enough of plaintiff’s testimony to show-how confused and self-contradictory it is. In one breath he pictures their brief marital relation as happy, and in the next, as being marred by his wife’s guilty correspondence with a man with whom he implies she had sustained improper relations. In the very midst of his denunciation of her conduct he pauses
But if the Miller correspondence was of the guilty character described by plaintiff, he condoned her offense in continuing to cohabit with her with full knowledge of the fact and in agreeing to continue such co
The fact is apparent that plaintiff secretly resolved to get rid of his wife, schemed to strip her of her marital rights in his property while professing fidelity to her and pretending to comply with her wish that he dispose of his property and establish a home with her in Montana. The court should have dismissed the petition on the ground that he was not an innocent but a guilty party.
We approve the action of the court in dismissing the cross-petition. Defendant committed a serious breach of marital duty in going to Millbank and reentering the service of Miller, knowing, as she did, how offensive such conduct would be to her husband whose jealousy already had been aroused. A wife may preserve her chastity and still be guilty of a grave indignity to her husband if she persist in having relations with another man in defiance of her husband’s wishes ; and the same would be said in the characterization of
The case on the merits may be summed up in the statement that both parties being guilty of grave breaches of their respective marital duties neither is entitled to a divorce.
The court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for temporary alimony and suit money, since it clearly appears that she was destitute and without means of support, or for the defense of the action or the prosecution of her cross action and that plaintiff has real and personal property of the net value of about $5000'.
The contract of separation, even if defendant had understood its contents when she signed it, was against public policy and void, for two reasons, viz., first, it was not made as falsely stated on its face, pursuant to a separation of the parties or in contemplation of an immediate separation, but at a time when they were living together with the avowed intention of continuing to live together as husband and wife, and, second, because the contract was not fair and reasonable, but undertook to divest the wife of all interest in her husband’s property of the value of $5000', without giving her a penny in return—even the nominal consideration of one dollar was not. paid.
While agreements for separation and for the settlement of property interests between a discordant husband and wife, when fair and reasonable are upheld by the courts, if made in prospect of an immediate separation, such agreements between parties living together amicably and without a present intention to
In the contract under consideration the release of defendant’s interest in the property of plaintiff and of her rights to support and maintenance had no consideration of any value to support it and the contract was most inequitable and unjust.
Defendant is entitled to a suitable allowance for suit money and alimony pendente lite. We would remand the. case for a-new trial on the merits on the ground that the court in overruling her motion had not given her a fair opportunity to present her side of the case, if it were-not for the fact that her own testimony shows she is not entitled to a divorce and in reversing the decree rendered in favor of plaintiff we have given her all the relief on the merits she could possibly be entitled to.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the court to make a suitable allowance to defendant of suit money and temporary alimony and to dismiss the petition and cross-petition.