154 Mo. App. 6 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is a suit for divorce. Defendant, though duly summoned, did not appear. Upon hearing plaintiff’s proof, the court dismissed the bill and the appeal is prosecuted ffom that judgment. The grounds of divorce set forth in the petition per
It appears the parties were married in 1885' and continued to live together until 1902, when plaintiff separated from her husband because of his conduct, which is set forth as the indignities complained of. At the time the parties were married, defendant was engag’ed as a city salesman for a drug company and received a salary of about $1000“ or $1200 per year for his services. It appears plaintiff’s father was a man of some means and presented her with a home in the city of St. Louis at the time of her marriage. The parties resided in this home and defendant pursued his occupation for a time but afterwards quit it for the reason his wife had some means from her father. For a time they lived with the father’s family at his home and it seems plaintiff furnished money to her husband, for he was unemployed. Upon the death of her father, she came into a considerable estate and defendant remained unemployed as before. Th'e testimony goes to the effect that both plaintiff and defendant are good people; that is to say, they enjoy the esteem of their neighbors and conduct themselves in all respects' according to the proprieties incident to a respectable life, but the complaint as to defendant is that he was jealous of his wife without cause and somewhat selfish, in that he objected to her having company at home or going out frequently with others. While it appears plaintiff at all times treated her husband with kindness and affection and deported herself as a good wife should, she says her husband was sullen and disagreeable when there was any one in the house, as he did not care for company. Plaintiff says that her husband was not a “drinking man,” that his habits were good, and it appears he never struck her, nor was he unduly harsh in his conduct. But he was sour
But it is said the proof is conclusive that defendant omitted to support his wife for several years and instead enjoyed his living at her expense. Mere nonsupport alone is not a, statutory ground for divorce nor is it relied upon here as such but it is put forward only as an indignity. As to this, the trial court expressed the view that defendant’s failure to support his wife when she had ample means and he had none does not amount to an indignity, under the statute, which operated to render her condition intolerable. The proposition is supported by a decision directly in point and it will not be further discussed. [Freeman v. Freeman, 94 Mo. App. 504, 68 S. W. 389; see, also, Gallemore v. Gallemore, 115 Mo. App. 179, 91 S. W. 406.]
The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.