Axton v. Axton

213 S.W. 548, 184 Ky. 615, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 17, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 548 (Axton v. Axton) 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
Axton v. Axton, 213 S.W. 548, 184 Ky. 615, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 140 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Response by

Judge Sampson

to Petition eor Rehearing — Overruling petition and extending opinion.

The petition for rehearing is long, and assails the opinion delivered November, 1918, for inaccuracy in statement of facts as well as the application of the law.

A re-examination of the record on appeal confirms us in the belief that the appellee, Mrs. Axton, was not entitled to a judgment of divorce nor to the allowance of alimony made by the learned chancellor. The evidence is too long — 2100 typewritten pages — to review in whole, but we will examine it briefly, taking its salient parts, that the reasons for our conclusions may more fully appear.

Woodford F. Axton and Miss Jessie Jolly, now Mrs. Axton, were reared in the same town. Just when they became acquainted does not clearly appear, but some two [616]*616years before their marriage on July 24,1915, they began to occupy the relation of sweethearts. At this time Mr. Axton lived in Louisville, while Miss Jolly resided with her father in Owensboro. He.was about forty-two' or forty-three years of age, and she was about, thirty-seven. Occasionally he went to Owensboro to call on her, and she was in Louisville on a few occasions, and he saw her there. It appears that Mr. Axton fell desperately in love with Miss Jolly and proposed marriage to her soon after they began to associate together. She at first did not give her consent to marry him, but later did do so, and a wedding date was fixed, whether by Mr. Axton only or by both is disputed, but at least appellant suggested a day for the wedding and made arrangements accordingly. But as the time approached Miss Jolly postponed the wedding over the protest of Mr. Axton. "When asked in her deposition when she first became engaged to marry Mr. Axton, appellee says: “Well, I was never definitely engaged to marry him; it was-postponed from time to time, because I felt all along that I did not know him, and had not known him well, and I would not call it a definite engagement any time along this time.at all.”

“Q. When did you become engaged at all; how soon after that? A. The next spring after I came home from Leavenworth. Q. Never was engaged before that? A. He understood at any time I said I would marry, and I said I thought we had better wait, and I was not sure about it at all. There was nothing specifically definite about it. Q. Didn’t you fix a definite date in November, 1914, in which to marry? A. He did. He all along would set days, and he would say we would mari:j so and so. In fact he said we would marry in September, and I said no, and he said October, and I said no, and finally I said suppose we say November 7th. It was my mother’s birthday and I had that idea in my mind that if I did marry, I would rather marry on that time. That was the' most definite thing-that was said about it. Q. What was the reason you did not marry on November 7th? A. I preferred not to.”

About this time Miss Jolly went to Leavenworth, Kansas, for a rest of some weeks.

On September 14,1914, she wrote the appellant in part as follows:

[617]*617“Yes, dear, I hope we are intended for each other. It seems very strange doesn’t it that you and I, after all the years we’ve seen and known each other should suddenly fall in love and marry. It does seem like fate — as though it had been intended. ’ ’

The answers to this and other letters written by Miss Jolly are not in the record, for she says she destroyed them because, as she insists, she did not find them of interest.

;On September 22, she again wrote Mr. Axton:

“Don’t you ever talk that way again about not being worthy and thinking me such a prize for I am very like all other women — only a little more human perhaps and possessed of even more weaknesses and faults. . . . 1 know, dear, you are not unkind, but on the other hand kindness itself, and I am also sure I’ll have no regrets. . . . As you doubtless have observed I am impulsive — ■ somewhat hot-headed and wilful. I often act on impluse and envy you who can sanely think things over and act accordingly, but I act and think afterwards — often when it is too late. ... I have been in school so long and never rested any until I am all in and you will fino me nervous tho not naturally so and I’ll get over it I am sure in short while as I’ve never been sick any in all my life. When you consider how old I am that is some record, don’t you think?”

In a letter of May 28th, she wrote:

“No, I have not reconsidered nor changed my mind either. I am only slowly realizing and trying to readjust myself to the new order of things. Guess I am just ‘plum curious, ’ but I can’t help it — it’s my misfortune not my fault. Now that I am away from you there are so many things I think of I’d like to say and they sound foolish-put down on paper. We can talk better when we see each other again.”

When asked if this paragraph from her letter referred to her engagement to Mr. Axton she said:

“Yes, because the way I remember it I had said that all along, I had hesitated. He knows that when I talked to bi-m I would say that possibly we had better wait, and not tell anybody, and I would rather it was not talked about because something might happen. He said had I changed my mind, and I said I had not reconsidered nor changed my mind, but I was trying to readjust [618]*618myself, or something to that effect. That is what it refers to, of course, the engagement. When I say ‘I am just plum curious, ’ he would say that it was all right, and it was just I, and I would say perhaps I was just curious. That is what that means.”

Answering a letter from Axton she wrote of date September 30th:

“You are the craziest fellow I ever saw. Why of-course we can’t marry in September. ... I know and appreciate how you feel but I also understand just how cross I can be. Yon better not have to experience it for yourself. . . . About the ring, I’d rather you’d wait until after I resign. . . .”

She wrote him again as follows:

“Believe I’ll just come on up to Louisville and marry you right away — do you want me now — .right this minute ? All joking aside I do think it saves lots of talk and unnecessary gossip- to just marry some day without even knowing yourself a half hour ahead. ’ ’

That she had not overlooked his ability as a business man or the money he had made and was making, the next letter clearly demonstrates:

“I am so glad, Wood, your business is good and the time may come when you won’t have to work. Then you and I will have one big time living easy won’t we? We can travel — go and come when you please, can’t we? You still remain a wonder in my eyes when I think how young — subtle flattery — you are and how you’ve accomplished so much in a short while. But somehow, dear, when I think of you I am proud not for what you have done but because you have it in your character to do-things.”

Following this we learn from another letter that she has again broken the -engagement. The letter says, in part:

“Say, Wood, I know I am crazy and act like an imbecile, but you must make allowances for am all in just, now.

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Related

Axton v. Vance
269 S.W. 534 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1925)
Lone Star Gas Co. v. McCullough
220 S.W. 1114 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1920)

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213 S.W. 548, 184 Ky. 615, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/axton-v-axton-kyctapp-1919.