Ames v. Ames

284 S.W.2d 888, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 239
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1955
DocketNo. 22300
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 284 S.W.2d 888 (Ames v. Ames) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Ames, 284 S.W.2d 888, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 239 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

BOUR, Commissioner.

This is a divorce case. The defendant husband filed an answer and cross-petition. Both parties relied upon alleged intolerable indignities as grounds for divorce. Plaintiff dismissed her action before trial. The trial resulted in a judgment denying the defendant a divorce on his cross-petition, and he has appealed.

Plaintiff and defendant were married on February 13, 1920. After the marriage they lived on a farm in Sullivan county,, Missouri, until the spring of 1923, when they moved to Kirksville, Missouri, where-they lived together until the separation. Their only child, Donald, was 18 years of age at the time of the trial. Defendant left the plaintiff on January 24, 1954;. plaintiff filed her petition for divorce on. April 2, 1954; defendant filed his answer and cross-petition on May 18, 1954; plaintiff was allowed to dismiss her petition on November 12, 1954, and on the same day the case went to trial on defendant’s cross-petition.

The evidence showed that at the time of their marriage neither plaintiff nor defendant owned any property, and that when they left the farm in 1923 they had “nothing but some debts”. Since that time defendant has never been unemployed. He worked for the Douglas Motor Company in Kirksville about three years. From 1925-to 1942 he worked for the State Highway Department. From 1942 until 1945 he worked five days each week as assistant [889]*889foreman of the ordnance shop at Fort Leonard Wood. During that period he returned to his home in Kirksville every Friday night, and by working at the Hayward Motor Company on Saturdays he earned about $4,600 a year. From 1945 to 1950 he worked as a mechanic in Kirksville; and from 1950 to 1952 he worked at Fort Leonard Wood. At the time of the trial, and for about two years prior thereto, he was maintenance engineer at the Laughlin Hospital in Kirksville and was earning $3,600 a year.

It appeared that plaintiff worked during most of her married life. Defendant testified that plaintiff taught in a rural school for one year, and that after they moved to Kirksville “she kept roomers and boarders”. In 1925, plaintiff enrolled as a student in the Northeast Missouri State Teachers College at Kirksville. She testified that she finished Tier college work in three years by attending summer sessions, and continued: “But during all that time I worked. I kept roomers and boarders and I did teach for two quarters at the Teachers College.” From September 1928 until the spring of 1933 she was a member of the faculty at Senior High School in Kirksville and earned $150 to $155 a month. She testified: “In 1933 we were laid off. Most of the married teachers were laid off in that year.” Thereafter, plaintiff gave dancing lessons and worked as a recreational playground director in the summertime. In 1936 she accepted a position in Kirksville with the Girl Scouts, at a salary of $25 a month. Her salary was increased from time to time, and in 1948 she was promoted to an administrative position and her salary increased to $200 a month. She was so employed by the Girl Scouts at the time of the trial. Plaintiff also did certain research work for the University of Michigan, which paid her $300 to $700 a year. It appeared that she had been doing such work since 1945. Plaintiff testified: “(H)e always felt that I should work and he thought it was my responsibility to help pay the debts and I was very willing to do that.” Defendant said he “didn’t want her to work”.

In 1932 the parties bought two houses in Kirksville for $6,500 and plaintiff made a down payment of $250. They gave a deed of trust to secure the payment of the balance of the purchase price. Defendant testified: “Now then, who made the payments on those houses as they became due? A. I paid a hundred dollars a month and she (plaintiff) paid some extra. Sometimes we would pay $200 and she would put in a hundred of her money.” One house was sold in 1941 for $4,750 and the other in 1952 for $7,260. Defendant testified that the sum of $4,750 “was used to pay off what we hadn’t already paid off, except about a thousand dollars * * * and that was paid off” at a later date. In 1946 the parties acquired a five-acre tract in Kirksville. The deed to this land was taken in the names of plaintiff and defendant as tenants by the entirety. In 1948 they had a contractor build a six-room house on this land. Plaintiff and defendant did part of the work. In order to build the house they obtained a loan from the Kirksville Building and Loan Company. At the time of the trial the unpaid balance of that loan was $2,000. The parties and their son were living in this house at the time of the separation in January, 1954, and plaintiff and the son were living there at the time of the trial. Plaintiff testified: “ * * * the acreage bought was $950 that was furnished by me and then I borrowed $300 from my folks to finish out the payment * * *, and then when we started building in 1948 I happened to have enough money in the bank to take care of — oh, getting the thing started, * * * and since then I have made the monthly payments at the Building and Loan, and each year I have figured about six hundred dollars out of my income went into the place.” She testified that the sum of $7,260 which the parties received for the house sold in 1952 was deposited in her separate checking account; that she paid $3,000 of that amount to the Building and Loan Company ; and that she paid the balance due on a note held by a bank. She further testified that she bought a stove, a refrigerator, and a living room suite with her own money.

[890]*890The evidence showed that defendant had maintained a checking account with the National Bank of Kirksville for about thirty years; that he deposited most of his earnings in this account; that plaintiff was authorized to draw checks against this account; and that after plaintiff became employed she maintained a separate checking account with the same bank.

Defendant testified that he always tried to treat plaintiff “as good as (he) could” and do whatever she wanted done; that when they built the house in 1948, he “hauled all the sand and gravel for it”; that after working all day in a garage he would work on the new house until nine or ten o’clock at night; that his son had two or three cows; and that he, the defendant, milked the cows twice a day and paid for their feed. He admitted on cross-examination that plaintiff worked on the house; that “she painted on the house” and “did other physical labor connected with it”; that when he “went there and worked, she did the same”; and that on one occasion plaintiff paid for twenty bales of hay.

Defendant testified that his marital difficulties began about the time the new house was completed, and “then just kept getting worse”; that he couldn’t do anything to please the plaintiff; that she was quarrelsome and had “mad fits”; that on several occasions she refused to prepare his meals; that she would get mad at him and “go to fighting”, throw things at him, and hit him “with anything she could get hold of”; that on one occasion she knocked his glasses off and broke them. He continued: “Q. How many times, within the year before you left home, did occurrences of that kind happen? A. Oh, there were five or six of them.” He complained that she was extravagant, but admitted on cross-examination that she was a good housekeeper, that she did not spend money on liquor, that she always wore inexpensive clothing, that she did not spend money “on extravagant eating” or give parties, and that she worked most of the time. He said that she “wanted to buy stuff at times” that they did not need.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W.2d 888, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-ames-moctapp-1955.