Baselt v. Baselt

224 P.2d 631, 37 Wash. 2d 461, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 438
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1950
Docket31503
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 224 P.2d 631 (Baselt v. Baselt) 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
Baselt v. Baselt, 224 P.2d 631, 37 Wash. 2d 461, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 438 (Wash. 1950).

Opinion

Hill, J.

This is a divorce action. The husband appeals from a decree awarding the wife a divorce and property of a value in excess of eleven thousand dollars and awarding the husband two life insurance policies, each in the amount of one thousand dollars but with no cash surrender value, a 1938 De Soto sedan, and all interest in a government retirement pension which will pay him $1,280 a year when and if he attains the age of sixty-two. (He was fifty-five at the time of the trial.)

A somewhat unusual situation existed with reference to the property awarded to the wife. The community, for the purpose of assisting a son to establish himself in the drive-in restaúrant business, had mortgaged the family home. It had also been necessary to mortgage the property on which the restaurant was located. The son was to pay the mortgages on both properties in monthly installments and, when the mortgages were paid, the community was to have a half interest in the drive-in restaurant property and business. The home was worth $12,500, and the unpaid balance of the $5,000 mortgage was, at the time of the trial, $4,339.17, which, as indicated, the son was obligated to pay. The restaurant property was found to be worth $10,200, subject to an unpaid balance of $3,713.48 on the mortgage. The court found that the home, the interest in the drive-in restaurant property and business, and household furnishings worth $1,000 had a net value of approximately $11,353.26.

The husband contends that the wife did not establish *463 grounds for divorce, and that the property award was an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court.

The trial court properly regarded all property, including the retirement pension, as community property. The husband is a skilled workman, found by the court to be “strong, able-bodied, healthy and powerful”; the wife’s health is such that she is unfit for such employment as is open to one of her experience. It seems to us that, with the pension (which could be paid only to him), the husband would be in a much better position than that of the wife even if she received all the rest of the property.

The question of whether the wife was entitled to a divorce on the showing made presents a closer question. She alleged in her amended complaint, verified September 19, 1949:

“That on April 29, 1949, defendant [appellant] deserted and abandoned plaintiff [respondent] without warning and without information as to his whereabouts. That since said date defendant has not communicated directly with plaintiff and has furnished her only the sum of approximately $202.00 for temporary support and suit money since the beginning of this action. That plaintiff is informed, believes and therefore alleges as a fact that defendant left the state of Washington with another woman with whom he has lived since he left plaintiff, & that defendant had been employed in the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard for twenty-two (22) years but resigned his position in the Shipyard in order to leave the state with this woman. That defendant left plaintiff penniless at the time of his departure, without any means of support and without any provision for paying the indebtedness on the home. That plaintiff has no training for earning a livelihood and no income, but has been forced to rent her home and to seek employment in a hospital dining room. That the parties younger son is a sophomore in Olympic Junior College, living at home with plaintiff at the time that defendant deserted them and that defendant has utterly neglected to make any suitable provision for the support of his wife or his son.”

The reasons for which a divorce may be granted under the divorce act of 1949. (Laws of 1949, chapter 215, p. 698; Rem. Supp. 1949, § 997-2 et seq.) that could conceivably have any application to the present case are:

*464 "... (2) For adultery on the part of the wife or of the husband, when unforgiven, and the application is made within one year after it shall have come to the knowledge of the party applying for a divorce. . . .
“(4) Abandonment for one year.
“(5) Cruel treatment of either party by the other, or personal indignities rendering life burdensome. . . .
“(7) The neglect or refusal of the husband to make suitable provision for his family. ...” Rem. Supp. 1949, § 997-2.

A subsequent section of that act, § 997-11, reads in part as follows:

“In all cases where the Court shall grant a divorce . . ., it shall be for cause distinctly stated in the complaint, proved, and found by the Court. ...”

As we construe the allegations of the wife’s amended complaint, it could be inferred, though it was not distinctly stated, that she was seeking a divorce because of (1) desertion and abandonment, (2) adultery, and (3) cruelty and personal indignities. A fourth'ground, the failure of the husband to make suitable provision for his family, was distinctly stated.

The desertion and abandonment, though found by the trial court, had not continued for one year and may be disregarded.

The trial court’s finding that the defendant became interested in another woman is amply supported by the evidence, but the finding of “infidelity” (which we assume was intended as a synonym for “adultery”) is not so supported.

The husband’s association with the “other woman” might well have constituted cruel treatment or personal indignities rendering his wife’s life burdensome. However, allegations of mental anguish and suffering contained in the original complaint were omitted from the amended complaint, and this ground (if the wife intended to rely upon it) was not distinctly stated. We have had occasion to make it clear that it is the effect of the conduct of the erring spouse on the other that determines whether or not the conduct *465 complained of constitutes cruelty or personal indignities. Thompson v. Thompson, 16 Wn. (2d) 78, 132 P. (2d) 734; Neff v. Neff, 30 Wn. (2d) 593, 192 P. (2d) 344. And it was not proved that the husband’s conduct had caused the wife embarrassment, humiliation, or mental anguish, nor did the court so find.

We are persuaded that no ground for divorce was “distinctly stated in the complaint, proved, and found by the Court” unless it be “The neglect or refusal of the husband to make suitable provision for his family.”

The youngest son of the parties was within six months of his twenty-first birthday when the husband left the family home April 29, 1949, and had attained his majority before the decree was entered herein. Our chief concern, therefore, is with the situation in which the husband left his wife and what provision he made for her.

He took with him some five hundred dollars, that being all of the cash of the community except three dollars. He left her with a home — mortgaged, it is true, but with one of the sons obligated to make the mortgage payments. This home she rented, first for one hundred dollars a month and later for seventy-five dollars a month.

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Bluebook (online)
224 P.2d 631, 37 Wash. 2d 461, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baselt-v-baselt-wash-1950.