Adams v. Adams

1911 OK 455, 120 P. 566, 30 Okla. 327, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
Docket1103
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1911 OK 455 (Adams v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Adams, 1911 OK 455, 120 P. 566, 30 Okla. 327, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 462 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

*328 Opinion by

BREWER, C.

This was a suit for divorce, filed on the 30th day of January, 1907, in the United States Court for the Southern District of the Indian Territory, sitting at Purcell. It was pending at the time of statehood, and was thereafter tried in the district court of the county of McClain on the 13th day of February, 1909.

The court found generally for the defendant in error, L. C. Adams, plaintiff below, who will be hereafter called plaintiff, and against plaintiff in error, John C. Adams, defendant below, who will hereafter be called defendant.

The plaintiff in her complaint alleged, by proper averments, the following ground under the Arkansas law, in force in Indian Territory, for her cause of action: The defendant had been guilty of cruel and barbarous treatment, such as to endanger plaintiff’s life, and the offering of such indignities to the person of plaintiff as to render her condition intolerable.

The defendant filed answer, consisting of a general and specific denial, and for cross-bill alleged that the plaintiff had been, guilty of such cruel and barbarous treatment as to endanger his life, and had offered such indignities to his person as to render his condition intolerable.

The court found that all the material allegations of plaintiff’s complaint had been fully sustained by the evidence; that plaintiff was without fault in the premises; and that she is entitled to divorce as prayed for and to reasonable alimony. After dissolving the marriage relation, in the decree adjudging the question of alimony, the following appears :

“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that defendant, John C. Adams, pay to the plaintiff, L. C. Adams, as her reasonable alimony, the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000), payable as follows: $30 on the 15th day of each and every succeeding month, until the sum of $1,000 is paid in full, but defendant may fully pay off and discharge said entire sum at any time within 60 days of date hereof; that until the said judgment of alimony is paid off and fully discharged the same shall be a lien upon the real estate of defendant, John C. Adams, situated within McClain county, Oklahoma.”

*329 Upon the rendition of the decree for plaintiff for divorce and alimony as above stated, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial, and set up the following grounds: (1) “Because the finding of the court is not supported by the testimony adduced.” (2) “Because the allowance of alimony is contrary to law and well-established precedent of equity.” The motion for a new-trial was overruled, exceptions were saved, and defendant below, as plaintiff in error, brings this cause to this court for review.

We will dispose of the questions raised in the order in which they appear in the motion for a new trial, and in discussing the first proposition, that the finding of the court is not supported by the testimony, we find that the evidence fairly presents the following state of facts: The parties were married in 1896. At the time of the marriage, defendant owned four or five head of horses- and about $200. The plaintiff, Mrs. Adams, was an Indian woman, with two Indian children. She and the children appear to have owned and were in possession of several large Canadian River bottom land farms. The home place had a large two-story residence on it, itsed as a home by Mrs. Adams and her children. Mr. Adams, after the marriage, resided with his wife on the home farm. One of the children lived with them most of the time; the other part of the time. The defendant took charge of the home farm generally, and there is conflict in the evidence about his connection with the farms that were after-wards allotted to the children. It seems pretty fairly established that he got some revenue from these' farms. By his marriage, he became entitled to be, and was enrolled, as an Indian citizen. He took his allotment out of the lands held by his wife and her children, as Indian citizens, at the time of the marriage. He improved it while living with the plaintiff. The plaintiff took the old home place as her allotment. These parties lived together from tlie time of marriage in 1896 to the 25th of March, 1904. They seem to have improved both allotments out of the general revenues from both farms; no separate account of same being kept. On March 25, 1904, defendant left plaintiff and moved *330 away. Pie left her very little personal property, if any. Plaintiff testified: “Pie left me two old horses I had when we were married. He never left me a cow nor a hog.” The home place (allotment of plaintiff) is shown to be worth six to eight thousand dollars. Defendant is shown by the proof to be worth between ten and twelve thousand dollars.

There is evidence on the part of plaintiff that defendant was cross, ill-natured, fault-finding, of high temper that he did not make much effort to control; that he habitually used profane language about the house in the presence of plaintiff; that, on account of his failure to make settlement of funds claimed to be in his hands, trouble arose between him and plaintiff’s children; that defendant was often angry, and spoke crossly -and in an abusive manner towards plaintiff; that he absented himself for considerable periods of time, extending into weeks, without communicating with plaintiff; that defendant was jealous, and in effect accused plaintiff of improper conduct toward other men, at least by insinuation. There was evidence on part of defendant to disprove all this, which, if true, would entirely exonerate him from blame. The evidence being quite voluminous, it is difficult to pick out, and impracticable to insert here the evidence at length.

It was conflicting, and, taken as a whole, is not very satisfactory, and it is more than likely that, as usual in such cases, both were more or less to blame. That the constant quarreling, bickering, and strife between these parties, extending over several years, has produced a condition that renders it impossible that these parties ever live together is freely admitted by both; and the court who saw the parties and all the witnesses, and heard their statements, and saw their demeanor, during the lengthy trial, has weighed the evidence and concluded therefrom that the plaintiff has sustained the allegation of her complaint, and that she was without fault, regarding the marital unhappiness -between them, and we cannot, upon a careful examination of the evidence, say that it is not sufficient to support the findings of the court. There is no suggestion of collusion in the case; in fact, *331 the contest was waged with a vigor almost amounting to bitterness. The only thing, perhaps, upon which there is agreement, is that it would be utterly impossible for them to ever again live together as man and wife with any degree of concord.

The second proposition, that the court erred in allowing alimony, is argued by the plaintiff in error upon a false premise. To quote from the beginning of his argument:

“Under the proof, a divorce should have been granted to the defendant on his cross-bill, and then the question in the case arises: The alimony may not be granted, except when the wife is without, fault.”

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Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 455, 120 P. 566, 30 Okla. 327, 1911 Okla. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-adams-okla-1911.