Anderson v. Anderson

195 P.2d 642, 31 Wash. 2d 79, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 249
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1948
DocketNo. 30574.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 P.2d 642 (Anderson v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Anderson, 195 P.2d 642, 31 Wash. 2d 79, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 249 (Wash. 1948).

Opinion

*80 Jeffers, J.

— This is an appeal from an interlocutory order of divorce. The action was instituted by Hazel Anderson against her husband, Ed A. Anderson, in the superior court for Snohomish county, on or about June 18, 1947. The basis of the complaint is the alleged cruel treatment of plaintiff by defendant.

The defendant, by his answer, denied the allegations of cruelty, and by way of cross-complaint, alleged that plaintiff had been guilty of acts of cruelty towards him and asked that he be awarded an interlocutory order of divorce.

The cause came on for hearing before the court on October 8, 1947. Plaintiff called nine witnesses, among whom were her three daughters and her son-in-law, Eugene Wright. Plaintiff herself testified at length. Defendant, in addition to testifying himself, called one witness. It is evident from the testimony of all the witnesses that the trouble between the parties has been caused by defendant’s excessive use of intoxicating liquor.

Mr. and Mrs. Anderson were married in 1924. They have three daughters: Marilyn, who at the time of the trial was twenty-two years of age, and married to Eugene Wright; Margaret, twenty years of age, and married to a Mr. Nash; and Joan, who at the time of the trial was seventeen years of age, becoming eighteen in February, 1948.

For a good many years during the married life of these parties, defendant worked for the Golden West Dairy, a part of the time as a driver of one of their milk trucks, and a part of the time as manager of their milk station at Snohomish. Defendant, for a good many years, worked for what would now be considered the relatively small salary of ninety dollars per month, but, for some time before the creamery in Snohomish was closed, in December, 1946, he was earning about two hundred dollars a month. Since December, 1946, defendant has had no steady employment.

The testimony conclusively shows that for at least the last ten years of their married life, there has been trouble between the parties, caused by defendant’s excessive drinking, and that they have separated three times; that because of defendant’s excessive use of liquor and his actions in and *81 around the home, plaintiff, in the early part of 1947, started an action for divorce, which was dismissed upon defendant’s promise that he would discontinue the excessive use of liquor. It was after the divorce action last mentioned was started that defendant came to plaintiff, and, in addition to making the above promise, agreed to deed to plaintiff his interest in their home and did execute and deliver to plaintiff such a deed.

After the execution and delivery of the above deed, plaintiff borrowed eight hundred dollars from Earl Lee, giving Mr. Lee a mortgage on the place to secure the loan. Plaintiff stated that she borrowed the money to pay some back taxes against the property, and to fix the roof of the house, which was leaking. At the time of the trial, she still had about six hundred dollars of this money in her possession.

The testimony conclusively shows that for the last two years defendant’s use of liquor has been so excessive that he was described by some of the witnesses as a common drunkard.

While all three of the daughters were called and testified in their mother’s behalf, there was no particular bitterness displayed in their testimony. Their testimony, like that of plaintiff, indicated that all the members of the family had tried in every way through the years to get defendant to stop drinking, or at least not to drink to excess. Defendant would make promises, but, except for short periods, would not keep them. The testimony of the daughters gives a clear picture, not only of what plaintiff has had to contend with through the years, but also what the entire family has endured, in the hope that the father would change his ways.

It also appears that a brother of defendant attempted to get defendant to take the cure, and offered to furnish the money for such treatments, but defendant refused.

At the time of the first hearing of the instant case, in October, 1947, defendant, came into the court room in a condition which would not have been tolerated by many judges. He continuously interrupted and made remarks to plaintiff’s witnesses, and was in such a state of intoxication *82 that, at the close of plaintiff’s case, at the suggestion of the court and on the application of counsel for defendant, the case was continued, in order that defendant might “sober up,” to use a slang expression, and be in a condition to present his side of the cáse.

The memorandum opinion of the trial judge, given at the close of the case, gives a picture of the situation more clearly than we could express it. We quote from the memorandum opinion:

“The Court: No one will ever read this record of testimony and evidence in this cause with fairmindedness but be convinced beyond every possible doubt that this plaintiff wife is entitled to an interlocutory order for divorce on the grounds that she alleges, among any other things, and most of all that the defendant husband has become, and is, and has been for years past an habitual drunkard, in that he has the fixed habit of frequently becoming drunk.
“Just how this woman has had affection enough for him, ■ or even for her daughters, to bear this cross as long and as far as she has is almost beyond my understanding. I have never in all my experience here been able to understand how a woman could have that affection, or that sense of duty to a husband, which would require her every day of her life to be with a man so drunk he hardly knew what he was doing. And he is here insisting that he should have had the right to sleep in the same bed with her, when she might as well have slept with a beer keg or a wine barrel.
“The man is lost, unless he shall find within himself a greater strength than he has yet evinced himself to have.
“On the day of his last previous appearance in this court in this divorce case on the 8th day of October, 1947, he was so far in a state of intoxication that some judges at least would have not had patience and sufferance enough with him to have prevented them from sending him to jail.
“As I said the day the continuance was granted, in order that there might be afforded him the opportunity to come here and present his defense, if he had any, and that his counsel might do that which his counsel faithfully has tried to do today, he was hardly fit to be in a court room much less to take a witness stand. He is so far that victim that even this morning he is telling us he could quit any day he wants to, — any hour. Well, when men tell me that I know from experience and observation, and from teaching, that they are the most complete victims of that habit.”

*83 It does not require any imagination to understand what plaintiff has suffered and endured through the years in an endeavor to keep a home and hold this family together, in the hope that defendant would keep his promises and refrain from the excessive use of liquor.

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Related

Traverso v. Traverso
210 P.2d 410 (Washington Supreme Court, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
195 P.2d 642, 31 Wash. 2d 79, 1948 Wash. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-wash-1948.