84 Wash. 240 | Wash. | 1915
This is an action for divorce. The complaint embodies three grounds of action, namely, cruel treatment, abandonment for more than a year, and personal indignities rendering the plaintiff’s life burdensome. The facts relied upon were all set out with much particularity and detail. The prayer was for a decree of absolute divorce, for custody of the minor child, and for an award of so much of defendant’s property as the court should find the plaintiff entitled to for the support of herself and the child. The answer denied generally all of these allegations of fact and interposed a cross-complaint averring cruelty and personal indignities towards the defendant on the plaintiff’s part, and prayed that the plaintiff’s complaint be dismissed, that a divorce be granted to the defendant, and that the court make such order for the care, custody and support of the child as might to it seem just and proper.
The parties were married in the city of Seattle on January 4, 1911. They have one child, a boy born October 10, 1911. They lived together until April 6, 1912, when the plaintiff, with defendant’s consent and on his agreement to pay her $40 a month for the support of herself and the child, returned to her mother’s home in Seattle, where she and the child have since remained. The evidence shows that, at the time of the marriage, the defendant owned as his separate property, real estate in and near Tacoma, Washington, and at Cordova and Fairbanks, Alaska, of an estimated value of something near $60,000; that it is largely unimproved and unproductive, and it's ultimate value will be dependent upon judicious management. Some of the property is incumbered. There is no satisfactory evidence that the property has been materially increased since the marriage.
In October, 1911, the defendant with one Boone incorporated the Willsonia Investment Company as a holding corporation for the defendant’s property, with a capitalization of $100,000, consisting of 1,000 shares of a par value of $100 each. The defendant conveyed to this corporation all
The court found specifically nearly all of the facts as alleged in the complaint in support of the charges of cruelty and abandonment against the defendant, made no finding touching the charge of personal indignities, dismissed the defendant’s cross-complaint, and concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to a decree of divorce, that she was entitled to the custody and care of the child, subject to the right of the defendant to visit it at the home of her brother in the city of Seattle twice each month, that she was entitled to one-half of all of the property, both real and personal, belonging to the defendant, and to $1,000 to be paid to her attorneys for their services in the action. The decree went accordingly and, in addition, reserved to the court continued jurisdiction over all of the property with the right to make “such supplemental decree as shall be necessary in the premises for the proper husbanding, protection and distribution of the same.” The defendant appealed.
Synthetically stated, the appellant’s contentions are:
(1) That the findings of cruelty and desertion were not supported by the evidence; (2) That the division of the property was inequitable, not for the best interest of either of the parties, and that the court had no power to continue its
I. Touching the grounds of divorce, the evidence is voluminous. The abstract of record comprises almost four hundred pages of printed matter. It presents a tale of mutual fault finding, disagreements and bickerings, a review of which would lengthen this opinion to no useful end.
The findings of fact are much more denunciatory of appellant’s conduct than is warranted by the evidence, and find many specific incidents of cruelty, some of them upon meager evidence. We are, nevertheless, clear that the finding to the effect that the appellant is a man of ungovernable temper and often applied to respondent language and epithets to which no woman ought to be subjected, was sustained by a fair preponderance of the evidence. We cannot say that the finding to the effect that the appellant while in anger had more than once threatened physical violence was not fairly established, though we do not believe that he ever committed actual violence, as found by the trial court. The evidence was sharply conflicting on all of these matters, but a careful consideration of the whole of it leaves the distinct impression that the appellant from the start took a domineering and uncompromising attitude towards the respondent and has displayed little tact or consideration in his relations to her. The evidence makes it equally clear that the respondent was not wholly free from fault. Her condition during most of the short period while the parties lived together offers some excuse for petulance and discontent, and should have moved the appellant to the exercise of a kindness and forbearance which the record fails to disclose. Upon the entire record, we cannot say that the respondent is not entitled to a decree of divorce upon the grounds of cruelty, and to the care and custody of the child. We are of the opinion that the appellant’s cross-bill was properly dismissed for lack of sufficient sustaining evidence. In these matters the decree must be affirmed.
Some of the assets of the corporation are incumbered. Part of the stock has been pledged for debts and advances. We are satisfied that it cannot be divided without loss. The case is here for trial de novo. The evidence is all before us for a review. We are of the opinion that the decree should be modified so as to give to the respondent a judgment against the appellant for $10,000, payable $2,000 in three months from the entry of the decree, $3,000 in six months after the first payment, and $5,000 in six months after the' second
The cause is remanded with direction that the decree be modified to conform to this opinion.
Crow, Mount, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.