Ahrens v. Ahrens

230 S.W.2d 73, 313 Ky. 55, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 795
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 2, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 230 S.W.2d 73 (Ahrens v. Ahrens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahrens v. Ahrens, 230 S.W.2d 73, 313 Ky. 55, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 795 (Ky. 1950).

Opinion

Van Sant, Commissioner

Reversing judgment on original appeal, affirming on cross-appeal.

The action was instituted by appellee, Edward Ahrens, against appellant, Katrine Ahrens, for divorce on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment, subsequently amended to include the ground of five years separation. Appellant joined issue by answer, originally counterclaimed for alimony only, but, by amendment, alleged abandonment and cruel and inhuman treatment and prayed for divorce in addition to alimony. The case was submitted to Honorable Ben F. Ewing, Deputy Commissioner of the Jefferson Circuit Court to hear evidence and report to the Chancellor. The Commissioner found that neither appellant nor appellee was entitled to a divorce on grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment or abandonment, but recommended that divorce be decreed to appellee on the ground of five years separation, appellant not having asserted her right to divorce on this ground. He further recommended a nominal amount to be paid appellee as alimony but made no recommendation in respect to the amount to be allowed appellant’s attorney and taxed as costs against appellee. The exceptions to the Commissioner’s report were overruled except to the extent indicated by the judgment, which granted appellee a divorce on the sole ground of five years separation; and awarded'alimony to appellant in the lump sum of $30,000, to be credited by payments of alimony fixed at the sum of $300 due monthly after the rendition of the judgment and during the pendency of this appeal. In accordance with an *57 agreement of the parties, $3,000 was allowed as a fee to the Commissioner to be taxed as costs. $1,500 was allowed by the court to appellant for her attorneys, likewise to be taxed as costs. Appellee was granted an appeal in the Lower Court but appellant was not; however, appellant was granted an appeal in this Court previous to appellee’s perfection of his appeal.

. In the record of the appeal granted by this Court, appellant filed a printed transcript of the evidence in accordance with section 1.090 of the Buies of the Court of Appeals. Appellee appears to have prosecuted a separate appeal in which he filed the original typewritten transcript of the evidence; however, this appeal actually was filed in the form of a cross-appeal wherein he named his former wife as appellant and himself as appellee. He then moved the court to consolidate the appeals and to strike from the record the printed transcript of the evidence filed by appellant on her appeal. The motion to consolidate was sustained by previous order of this Court, but the motion to strike was passed to the merits and now is overruled. We will treat and refer to Mrs. Ahrens’ appeal as the original and Mr. Ahrens’ as the cross-appeal.

Appellant' complains that the court erred in not granting her a divorce on the ground of abandonment and cruel and inhuman treatment after the abandonment. She asks that the award of alimony to_her be increased to a lump sum award of $175,000 or" monthly payments aggregating $7,500 per year, and that the fee allowed for her attorneys be increased in a reasonable sum.

The printed transcript of evidence contains 1,400 pages and the typewritten transcript is composed of 17 volumes of testimony, one volume of exhibits, and two volumes of the remaining record. We have read and analyzed all the testimony, but will not relate it in detail since such procedure would uselessly extend the opinion.

We agree with the Chancellor that neither party has shown the other to be guilty of any act of cruelty or inhumanity which would justify the granting of a divorce to the other. However, we disagree with him in his finding that appellant was not entitled to a divorce on the ground of abandonment, which requires reversal of the judgment on the original appeal, Doolin v. Doolin, *58 211 Ky. 207, 277 S. W. 243; and because tbe act of abandonment occurred previous to the expiration of the five year separation, we are of the opinion that the court erred in granting appellee a divorce on any ground, but this part of the judgment cannot be reversed. Smith v. Smith, 297 Ky. 395, 180 S. W. 2d 275. It follows, however, that appellant was entitled to alimony as a matter of law. Rayburn v. Rayburn, 300 Ky. 209, 187 S. W. 2d 804. The facts hereinafter disclosed will be sufficient, we think, to explain our decision.

The parties were married in July, 1940, and separated in June, 1942. No child was born of the union. On the morning of June 6, 1942, without any previous intimation of his intent to do so, appellee left the apartment in which he and appellant were residing and returned to his mother’s home. He enlisted in the Armed Forces of the United States in October, 1942, in which service he remained approximately four years, and, upon discharge, again took up his- abode at the home of his mother. During this interim, appellant wrote several letters to him seeking a reconciliation, but all such efforts on her part met with no favorable response. The action for divorce was instituted on March 18, 1943.

The alleged acts of cruel and inhuman treatment now relied on by appellee to reverse the judgment may be classified in his language as follows: “(1) Defendant (appellant), an incurable social climber, was at no pains to conceal, either at home or publicly, her disdain for her husband’s family, friends or activities; (2) Defendant’s subtle threat against her husband’s fife and her possession of a pistol; (3) Defendant was callous, publicly immodest, and had an obsession with sex; (4) Defendant was untruthful to an extreme and an incurable equivocator; and (5) Defendant’s cruel conduct prior to their separation brought on a recurrence of plaintiff’s stammering which, at the time of their marriage, had been cured.”

The matters relied on in support of appellee’s charge that'appellant was an “incurable social climber” and held her husband’s family, friends and activities in disdain seem to be that appellant wanted to join the Country Club and appellee did not, and that appellee was interested in Boy Scout work and in associating with former fellow employees of the American Radiator and *59 Standard Sanitary Corporation in Louisville, in preference to groups of higher income. Appellee contends that appellant was obsessed with family background and social prestige and he proved • beyond doubt that he was possessed of an inferiority complex: He complains that appellant took no interest in his activities in Boy Scout work, although he does not deny that she entertained some of Ms former fellow workmen of the American Radiator and Standard Sanitary Corporation plant. It is hard to determine what activities in respect to the Boy Scouts he expected his wife to engage in, unless it was encouragement and helping to entertain them in social activities, which she claims she did to the extent that conditions rendered it possible. Several pages in appellee’s brief are devoted to comments on appellant’s testimony, wherein she referred to “Cub Scouts” instead of “Boy Scouts,” which infraction is about as important as any other complaint of the husband in respect to' Ms wife’s activities. Appellee’s counsel, with much flourish, points to appellant’s testimony that on a certain occasion “He (Edward) was dressed informally” as exemplary of her obsession in respect to social prestige. This to our minds, is “much ado about nothing.”

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W.2d 73, 313 Ky. 55, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahrens-v-ahrens-kyctapphigh-1950.