Bailey v. Bailey

6 Tenn. App. 272, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 272 (Bailey v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Bailey, 6 Tenn. App. 272, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 139 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

Appellant filed his original bill in the chanceiy court of Shelby county, Tennessee, against the defendant seeking an absolute divorce. The bill alleged that the defendant had been guilty of willful, malicious desertion and absence without a reasonable cause for more than two whole years before the filing of the bill.

The defendant filed an answer and cross-bill, in which she denied the material allegations in the bill, and denied that she had willfully or maliciously deserted the defendant without reasonable cause. By way of cross-bill she alleges that the cross-defendant had been guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment so as to render it unsafe and improper for her to cohabit with him and be under his dominion and control. She sets out in the cross-bill, and details the acts and conduct of the defendant in the cross-bill, and his treatment of her, and upon which she bases the charge of cruel and inhuman treatment entitling her to a divorce, and also attorney’s fees and alimony,permanent and pendente lite. The cross-defendant filed an answer to the cross-bill in which he denied the material allegations of the cross-bill.

On January 29, 1927, there was a consent decree entered in the cause, after the same had first been submitted to the Chancellor and approved by the Chancellor fixing the amount of alimony, permanent and pendente lite, and attorney’s fees, the alimony being fixed at $1500 and solicitors fees at $200.

"When the cause came on to be heard on June 1, 1927, the Chancellor dismissed the original bill, and also the crossrbill, and taxed original complainant (appellant) with the costs. From this decree original complainant prayed and was granted an appeal to this court, which appeal has been duly perfected, and errors assigned.

By the several assignments of error it is insisted; First, that the Chancellor erred in refusing to enter a decree in favor of complainant and against the defendant for an absolute divorce. Second,' that the Chancellor erred in holding that in order to maintain his bill *274 for divorce, it was necessary for complainant to establish malice on the part of the defendant. Third, the Chancellor erred in holding that it was necessary for complainant to show an effort to effect a reconciliation, or induce defendant to return to him after the separation. Fourth, that the Chancellor erred in refusing to exclude, on motion of complainant, the testimony of Mrs. S. 0. Bassett, “but 1 have always thought she loved him and that she would have gone back if she had a chance.” This evidence being excepted to at the time offered.

The Chancellor did not file a finding of facts with the record, but the final decree recites that the court finds that the cross-complainant had abandoned the cross-bill, and that the allegations of the original bill are not sustained by the proof. However, in the bill of exceptions it appears that after the complainant had put on his proof, several witnesses having testified, including the complainant, and the complainant had rested his case upon the evidence offered, the Chancellor stated that he was not satisfied, and desired that the divorce proctor subpoena the defendant, Mrs. Mable Johnson Bailey, to appear at a subsequent date to testify, and continued the case to a subsequent date, at which time the defendant, Mrs. Bailey, appeared and testified in the case. It also appears from the bill of exceptions that the Chancellor stated, “He was not satisfied with the showing made by the complainant’s proof because it did not seem to him that the desertion by the defendant had any elements of malice, and that the proof should make out a case of willful and malicious desertion. ’ ’ The Chancellor further said “that there was no evidence in the record of any effort by the complainant to effect a reconciliation or induce the defendant to return to him after the separation and that it appeared from the testimony of Mrs. Bassett that she believed Mrs. Mable Bailey would be willing to return to the doctor.”

It also appears from the record that when the case was called for trial, the defendant and cross-complainant, Mrs. Bailey, was not present, and it was announced that she would not be present, the Chancellor made the statement that the $1500 previously decreed as permanent alimony had satisfied her, and-in substance, that it looked, to him as if complainant had purchased for $1500 the defendant’s acquiescence to his obtaining a divorce decree. This appears in the bill of exceptions. To this statement, complainant’s solicitor replied that no such agreement had been made, and called to the attention of the court that the decree for alimony had been regularly entered in the cause and had been duly approved by the Chancellor.

It also appears from the bill of exceptions that at the conclusion of all the evidence, and after Mrs. Bailey had been brought into court and had testified, the Chancellor asked the divorce proctor for his opinion about the case, and the divorce proctor replied that he thought *275 Dr. Bailey bad made out a case and that he was entitled to a decree for a divorce, and the divorce proctor further stated that if the charges contained in the cross-bill were true, they would not, in his opinion, constitute grounds for a divorce, or grounds that justified Mrs. Bailey’s separation. The Chancellor stated that he did not agree with the divorce proctor, and stated that he did not believe that the desertion had been willful and malicious and without reasonable cause. These matters are all set out in the bill of exceptions.

Hour witnesses testified in behalf of complainant, including the complainant, Mrs. Sarah D. Bailey, the mother of the complainant; Mrs. S. C. Bassett, and Mrs. John C. Ballew. From this evidence it appears that the parties were married on November 23, 1923. The complainant testified that previous to the final separation, about May, 1924, the defendant, after a quarrel between her and his mother, left his home, and remained away several days; that he went to see her, and she agreed to and did return, and continued to live with him until November, 1924, when she again left without any cause and had remained away from him ever since, except that she did return a day or two later for her clothes, and that she never communicated with him in any way since. He denied the allegations of the cross-bill to the effect that he had been unkind to her, or that he had required her to work and do the housekeeping when she was physically unable, or that he had cursed her. He admitted that when Mrs. Bailey asked him if he was going to take her to a party which her mother was giving at her home in Memphis, Tennessee, and after there had been some discussion between them relative to the party, and when she insisted upon a final statement from him, that he said “You are damned right, I am not going to take you.” He stated that while he used the language quoted, and said it with firmness and decision, he was not angry, and used no other harsh language, and that he had never at any time used any stronger language to her during the time they were married. This seems to have occurred on Fiiday morning. He stated that on Sunday she went to her mother’s home with her brother, and on the following Tuesday returned for her clothes, which she took with her and that thereafter she had never returned to his home nor communicated with him in any way. He also stated that he had always supported Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 272, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-bailey-tennctapp-1927.