Barbo v. Rider

31 N.W. 155, 67 Wis. 598, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 256
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 155 (Barbo v. Rider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbo v. Rider, 31 N.W. 155, 67 Wis. 598, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 256 (Wis. 1887).

Opinion

LyoN, J.

Lars Barbo, the appellant, was married to his present wife about the year 1860, in Norway, of which country both are natives. Twelve years later they emigrated to this state, and have since resided here. They havé ten children. The appellant owns an improved farm of 180 acres in the town of Baldwin, St. Oroix county, [600]*600upon which he, with his family, resided nine or ten years, and upon which his family still reside. He also owns stock and other personal property on the farm of the value of $1,200 to $1,500.

The evidence tends to show, and the court and jury might properly have found therefrom, the following facts: Lars Barbo is an intemperate man,— a heavy drinker,— and has been such for many years. lie frequently became intoxicated. Until about the year 1882 his relations with his wife and children, except when he was drunk, were agreeable, and he was uniformly kind and pleasant to his family. He was industrious and took great interest in his farm and business. For some time before that year his health became poor. He took much medicine for his ailments, and did but little work.

About the year 1882 he conceived the idea that his wife had been and was untrue to him, and from that time an entire change took place in his character and conduct, which became very marked in 1883 and afterwards. He denied that he was the father of three or more of the children his wife had borne to him, and expressed doubts of the paternity of all but one of them. lie charged six or more different men, most of them his neighbors, some of whom were never intimate with his family, with criminal intercourse with his wife, and designated two of the children as having been begotten by two of the men so charged. He wrote a letter to each of those men charging him with the crime. He also wrote a long, rambling, indecent letter to the wife of one of those men, making the same chai-ge against her husband. Portions of this letter are almost or quite incoherent. It bears date' December 4, 1884. The other letters above mentioned were probably written a short time before. He told the story of the alleged infidelity and shame of his wife to all who would listen to him, even to three of his young sons, and he did this persistently for two years or [601]*601more. Iiis sons indignantly denied the truth of these foul aspersions upon the character of their mother, and many others to whom he made the charges against her expressed to him their disbelief of the truth of them. But still, with perhaps some few brief intermissions, he persisted in spreading the scandal which involved his own dishonor and the disgrace of his family as well as the ruin of his wife, until about the time this proceeding was commenced.

In the spring of 1883, the change in his character and conduct became more marked and observable. From being-pleasant and talkative in his family and elsewhere, he became silent, sullen, and morose. He ceased to take any interest in his family or business, and threatened to leave his home. He importuned his family for a division of his property, seeming to be unable to comprehend — what they and others often told him — that it all belonged to him, and that he could do with it as he pleased, with, perhaps, the exception of the homestead. About this time his son Ole, the petitioner, found him one evening walking rapidly and aimlessly up and down a field. Ole went to him, and succeeded with difficulty in getting him into the house. He then wanted to go away, and, the door being closed to keep him, he opened a window and escaped through it. He was finally prevailed upon to return to the house. A few days later he left without the knowledge of his family. Soon after, one of his sons received a letter from him, mailed in Dakota, expressing a desire to return home if his family' would forgive his conduct. His son sent him money, and he returned. For a time he seemed better. This was in the summer of 1883. Until the following spring he was more like his former self. Then he refused to take medicine for his ailments as he had previously been doing, intimating that his family were trying to poison him. He became again sullen and morose, would not speak even when spoken to, or answer questions, but wandered about [602]*602the neighborhood or fields, keeping away from his house, and growing continually worse, until November, 1884, when he again left his home and family and took up his abode elsewhere. The testimony discloses many other eccentricities of conduct on the part of Barbo, from and after 1882, which it is unnecessary to state.

If Lars Barbo had no grounds for believing his wife unchaste, we have no doubt that he was the victim of -insane delusion. Even- if he had some gro'unds for suspecting that she was unchaste, his conduct was so violent, extravagant, and unnatural it would almost seem that he had brooded over the subject until it unsettled his mind and left him a prey to every wild vagary which his diseased fancy might generate.

Had Barbo any reason for believing his wife unchaste when he first conceived that idea in 1882? The learned circuit judge properly excluded all testimony of the general reputation of Mrs. Barbo, but admitted all testimony offered of everything her husband knew or had ever heard concerning her chastity. This testimony may be briefly stated. Thirteen years before the trial, the Barbo family lived in two rooms in Menomonie. During a certain night Mrs. Barbo left the room which she and her husband usually occupied, and went into the other room where her children were sleeping, and remained there until morning. Two other men were sleeping in the room with her husband, and two young men and a young woman were in the room with her children, neither of whom were undressed. They all lay on bedding spread about the floor. The sole witness to this transaction is one Sever Sten, who was one of the young men mentioned. Without testifying directly to the fact, he evidently desired to have it believed that he, and perhaps the other young man, had sexual intercourse there with both the women. On cross-examination, however, he magnanimously admits that he did not see Mrs. Barbo do [603]*603anything out of the way that night. Sten then goes on to say that he talked with Barbo about this occurrence two years later, and Barbo complained of it and felt bad about it. Yet on his cross-examination he says Barbo never told him that he knew of this occurrence! Sten also says that, about twelve years before the trial, he told Barbo that his wife had a bad reputation in Norway.

If there is a class of men who would commit perjury rather than have it doubted that they had been the recipients of unlawful sexual favors, it,is not difficult to believe, after reading his testimony, that this witness Sten belongs to that class. Probably the jury gave no weight to his testimony. Certainly we do not. If Sten made any such disclosures to Barbo, they evidently made no impression upon his mind; for neither Sten nor his male companion figured in Barbó’s list of adulterers, and no word or act of his, for many years after, shows that he was at all disquieted by the occurrence or attached any significance to it.

About six years before the trial two friends of Barbo, one of them his relative, went to Barbo’s house. One of them went to the field where Barbo was, and the other, the relative, remained at the house with Mrs. Barbo, who had only one small child with her. He returned from the field two or three hours later with Barbo,

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 155, 67 Wis. 598, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbo-v-rider-wis-1887.