Bartlow v. Bartlow

114 Ill. App. 604, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 469
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 28, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 Ill. App. 604 (Bartlow v. Bartlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlow v. Bartlow, 114 Ill. App. 604, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 469 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gest

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill by appellant, complainant below, against her husband, the appellee, for separate maintenance. Upon a hearing the court found that the complainant was living separate and apart from her husband, but not without her fault, and dismissed the bill.

The parties were married February 15, 1896. Complainant then was thirty-nine years of age and defendant was sixty-three. Both had been married before. By his first marriage defendant had nine children. Complainant had one son by her first marriage. Mo children were born of the second marriage.

Complainant owned substantially no property at the time of her marriage to defendant. Defendant testifies that she had two beds and bedsteads and an account or note for some amount not stated. Defendant owned, and still owns, a farm in Schuyler county of 270 acres, of the value of $11,500, as he says, a house and lot in Kushville of the value of $2,000, $900 in money loaned bn interest at six per cent, and his household goods and personal effects in and about the Kushville house and lot. Upon their marriage they occupied the Kushville house, and the family consisted of complainant and defendant, Carl, a son of complainant, then sixteen years of age, and Bruce, a son of defendant, then nineteen years of age. Bruce lived in the family about a year. Carl lived there most of the time till the fall of 1902, paying his board to defendant at the price of one dollar a week as agreed upon between them, but as the defendant testified, still owes four dollars on that account. Defendant left his home and the complainant on the twenty-ninth day of December, 1902; he remained absent until the seventh of February, 1903, when he returned, and' he and complainant thereafter lived together as man and wife for two weeks, when he left her again and since has not returned. The question is: Is the complainant living separate and apart from her husband without her fault ? Otherwise put, the question is : Did the defendant desert his wife wilfully, and without any reasonáble cause? There is no question that he left her wilfully, that is, knowingly and with the intent to remain absent, so that the material inquiry is : Did he desert her without reasonable cause ? Ordinarily, in suits under the statute providing for separate maintenance, the wife leaves the husband, and the burden is cast upon her of showing that she had reasonable ground for leaving him. In this case the husband leaves the wife, and while the burden is still upon her to show that she is living separate and apart from her husband without her fault, yet it is of a negative character. The most that she can be expected to show in the first instance is that she reasonably performed her duty as a wife, and then the burden is cast upon the husband to show that he had reasonable ground to leave her, and upon the whole case presented the question is : Is the wife living separate and apart from her husband without her fault? It may be reasonably taken for true that the defendant would state his case as favorably to himself as the truth would allow. What is his testimony ? He sa\7s : “-My wife and I got along first rate for a while, just as good as I could ask, for as much as three years.” One of his first troubles with her was that she pouted when he blamed Carl, her son, for the bad condition in which he found his horse when they were about to drive to a relative’s home to a family dinner. The next trouble was over the matter of two dollars that he had lent to his son-in-law, Fred Greer. Maude Greer, his daughter, did some wall-papering for him and he balanced the two-dollar account against the papering, and Mrs. Bartlow “showed her spirit up; she objected to it.” Then they had trouble abouGtheir contract, she saying she could not live on §500, “ and of course that would get up a contention and she would get out of humor; I would not agree that it should be changed, and she got to figuring on my death.” His daughter, Maude, and her husband, Mr. Greer, went west to Washington; Maude was dissatisfied and came back to Eushville within a month, and then started back again to Washington. Her husband died there while she was on the way, and she wanted defendant to come after her, and that made trouble. Mrs. Bartlow did not want him to go, but be went and brought Maude back to Eushville, and to his home, where “ my wife received us cool enough. She did not say anything out of the way. She would not sleep in the bed with me for three nights before I started. She was out of fix with me because I was going.” Defendant rented a house for Maude and then Maude concluded she would not take it, and she stayed at defendant’s home, and next day he took her to her father-in-law’s home when it was raining, and Mrs. Bartlow said she would not ride again in his buggy and would not help clean it. “One time she told me to get up and build the fire; 1 told her I did not feel able to build the fire, and did not want to get up. She came to me in the bed and grabbed me by the shoulders and jammed me in the bed. She says, ‘ You old hypocrite, you get up and go and build the fire; ’ and when I got up she clinched me and swung me round and round and shoved me in a chair.” At another time shortly after this, “I said I was going to my farm at Bruce’s, and was putting on my coat, and she wrenched it off and says, ‘You just be quiet and stop this,’ and locked the door on me and I did not go. She cussed me one time; that was the only time that she used language that was not becoming to a woman. * * * One evening I says, ‘ 1 am not going to stay here if you keep up this racket.’ I got up and went out to the' buggy shed and got the halter and started to get my horse; she came out and clinched me; she says, ‘You just come back in the house; you are not going a step.’ I insisted on her letting me alone; she kept jerking and pulling at me; she says, ‘Go into the house and I will not bother you;’ I went in and she did hush up and went to bed. * * * The main cause of our trouble was the contract; she became dissatisfied with the amount of the contract; she was jealous of me; she told me I thought more of any woman in the neighborhood than I did of her. If a woman got in the buggy to ride with me, she would show her disposition up; get mad at me. * * * She did not tell me in so many words, but she gave me to understand that me and my daughter had improper relations. * * * After I left her the first time she wanted me to come back and I went back. I said to her if I come back I must have the privileges I have been denied, such as to go to places around what she opposed me unless she went with me, to Washington or Kansas or the State Fair. I was to give my children anything I wanted and she was not to give any trouble about that. 1 asked her to look after Maude'and her little children and she said she would. She said she would even divide her fruit with her; I lived with her then two we,eks; I began to look for a place for Maude. Kow I says, ‘ Are you going to be willing for me to buy this place for Maude?’ She says, ‘You can buy the finest mansion in town for her if you want to.’ I says, ‘Will you consent for me to carry some milk to these children ?’ She says, ‘You can give her the eow if you want to.’ The next Saturday she shaved me and she asked me to go out to her aunt’s and I refused. She finished shaving me, all but the back of my neck, and quit, and got mad when I suggested her going to Maude’s and she said Maude was a liar, and I said, ‘ It’s no use talking, this thing is just like it always was,’ and I made an attempt to get my clothes, and she took the grip and threw it in the closet.

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Bluebook (online)
114 Ill. App. 604, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlow-v-bartlow-illappct-1904.