Anderson v. Anderson

154 S.W. 1, 152 Ky. 773, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 724
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 14, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 1 (Anderson v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Anderson, 154 S.W. 1, 152 Ky. 773, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 724 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

By the judgment complained of in this case the appellee, Maggie W. Anderson, was granted an- absolute divorce from the appellant, Stanley H. Anderson, given the custody of their two infant children, awarded $800.00 alimony, $10.00 per month for the support of the children, and her costs- expended in the action, including an attorney’s fee of $200.00. So much of the judgment as granted alimony, and a subsequent judgment making absolute a rule issued early in the action requiring the payment of a pendente lite allowance by appellant, are appealed from.

We cannot reverse a judgment of divorce, but may review the grounds therefor and evidence supporting same in determining whether alimony allowed the wife is reasonable, or the custody of infant children- of the parties is properly bestowed.

The divorce was asked on three grounds:

(1) Confirmed habit of drunkenness on the part of the applicant of not less than one year’s duration, accompanied with a wasting of his estate, and without any suitable provision for the maintenance of appellee or their children.

(2) That for not less than six months appellant had habitually behaved toward appellee in such a. cruel and inhuman manner as to indicate a settled aversion to her, and to destroy permanently her peace and happiness.

(3) Such cruel beating of and injury to her and attempts to injure her, by appellant, as indicated an outrageous temper in him and probable danger to her life, or great bodily injury, from her remaining with him.

[775]*775.The. appellant by his answer and counterclaim, traversed the averments of the petition and sought’ a divorce for himself on the ground, that appellee, had been guilty of such lewd and lascivious behavior as proved her to be unchaste; The affirmative matter of the answer and counterclaim was controverted by the appellee’s reply. A great many depositions were taken by each party, but it would stretch this opinion to an unnecessary length to comment upon the testimony of the many witnesses in detail. We might rest with saying that the evidence in appellee’s behalf, furnished by the depositions, abundantly sustained each of the three grounds of divorce relied on in the petition. Indeed, it proves more than was charged in the petition, as it not only shows appellant to have been a confirmed drunkard, his cruel and inhuman treatment of appellee and brutal beating of her, during the period preceding the^ institution of her action, alleged, but also that such habit of drunkenness and mistreatment of her had continued many years.

No witness testifying in appellant’s behalf would say that he was not a confirmed drunkard. Among the witnesses introduced by him were his mother, sister and sister-in-law, and even the testimony of these members of - appellant’s family show his neglect of appellee, and failed to refute the charge made by the latter as to his cruel treatment of her; in respect to which, they, in substance, said that if appellant abused, cursed or struck her,. they did not know it.

It seems equally apparent that appellant’s indulgence in intoxicating drinks all these years has been accompanied by a wasting of his estate. He bas not, it is true, disposed of his undivided third i interest in $10,000.00 worth of Louisville real property, in which his mother owns a life estate, but as he is comparatively a young man and has since his marriage jointly occupied with his mother, brother and sister, rent free, the property in which he owns a remainder interest, the inquiry naturally arises, what has he done with the profits made from his business as a brick contractor? which the evidence shows he has conducted in Louisville since his marriage. It does not appear from the evidence that they were all expended in maintaining his wife and children, or that any considerable part of them were applied to the enlargement of his business. On the contrary, the evidence shows that at times at least his family were, poorly sup[776]*776plied with the necessaries of life, and that these times of leanness were coincident with appellant’s protracted indulgence in sprees of intoxication.

T. R. Smith, appellant’s business partner, testified that appellant, at times and when drunk, spent money belonging to the firm, but later repaid it.

It does not appear from the evidence that appellee was wasteful of appellant’s means, or that he supplied her with money, except at times, for the purchase of groceries. In one or two instances, so great was her need of money that she was compelled, with the approval of appellant’s sister-in-law, Mrs. Ernest Anderson, so the latter testified, to take it from his pocket while he was in a drunken stupor.

Manifestly, a husband and father of appellant’s habits of life, with no more property than he possessed, must depend upon his labor, physical or mental, in some line of work or business, to provide means for the support of 'his family; and however great his success in making money, if what he should use of it for .the support and welfare of his wife and children, according to their station in life, is not so applied, but is spent by him in ministering to his confirmed appetite for strong drink or upon his companions in inebriety, or in profligate living'; ¡such use of his property and earnings is a wasting of his estate, to say nothing of the loss resulting to his family from the impairment of his health, earning capacity and manhood, caused by his indulgence in the habit of drunkenness, which also constitute a wasting of his estate in the meaning of the statute.

In McKay v. McKay, 18 B. Monroe, 8, in considering this ground for divorce, we said:

“The legislature did not, in our opinion, intend, by the language used in the foregoing provision, to exclude from its benefit a wife whose husband, at the time of the application, or even before, should be destitute of property. Such construction would operate sorely in cases similar to the present, where the application for divorce has been deferred by the wife with the fond but vain hope of reformation, until, after the entire estate has been squandered, she is constrained, for the protection of herself and children, to ask the protection of the law. The liberal construction directed by the Revised Statutes, 190, should be applied, and the words, “wasting of his estate, ’ ’ where* he has no property, should be deemed to [777]*777apply to and embrace a man’s health, time and labor, all of - which, for the purpose of supporting himself and family, are essentially his estate.”

In Shuck v. Shuck, 7 Bush, 307, the wife sought a divorce upon the statutory ground under consideration. The circuit court refused to grant the divorce. * On appeal, in reversing that judgment, we said, Chief Justice Bobertson writing for the court:

“The testimony preponderates decidedly in support' of the charge of a confirmed habit of drunkenness for more than a year. In like manner, it sufficiently proves' a wasting of his only estate, which consisted of his mental and physical faculties, and of the want also of a suitable provision for such a woman and their only child, a son. about seven years old. The' provision contemplated by the statute is an assured maintenance by the husband’s own means, and not, as in this ease, dependence on a precarious and contingent expectancy from his gen- ’ erous father, or her own father or kindred.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 1, 152 Ky. 773, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-kyctapp-1913.