Belville v. Belville

45 A.2d 571, 114 Vt. 404, 1946 Vt. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 5, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 571 (Belville v. Belville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belville v. Belville, 45 A.2d 571, 114 Vt. 404, 1946 Vt. LEXIS 87 (Vt. 1946).

Opinion

Jeffords, J.

On the facts found the libellant was granted a divorce for intolerable severity, and the case is here on exceptions by the libellee. The only exception briefed is to finding No. 6 which is as follows:

“On her threat to leave him he warned her that he would make her pregnant so that she could not leave him and succeeded in doing so, resulting in the birth of their second child. She was afraid to leave him.”

*405 The exception to this finding was based on the grounds, in effect, that it was not supported by the evidence and that the undisputed evidence showed condonation of the acts of misconduct.

The undisputed evidence and reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom pertinent to the questions in issue were as follows : The parties were married in July, 1942. About three weeks thereafter the libellee struck the libellant and from then on until she finally left him he frequently brutally assaulted her in various ways not'necessary to describe. The libellee drank intoxicating liquor to excess and these assaults often took place when he was in an intoxicated condition. At various times the libellant called on the sheriff or the police for protection. The libellee several times threatened to kill the libellant and to bury her in the swamp on his farm, even showing her the exact spot where he proposed to bury her.

Because of abusive treatment the libellant left the libellee on three different occasions. The. exact dates of the first two do not appear in the transcript but it is to be reasonably drawn from the evidence that the first time was in the early summer or _ late spring of 1943. At that time he would not let her take their child which was then about three months old. She left without the baby but found that she could not stay away from the child so she returned in a few days.

The second occasion was during the absence of the libellee to get the libellant’s father who was quite ill. She felt it would he injurious to her father to come to their home under the conditions in which they were living so she took her child and rented an apartment in Barre for about a month and lived there until her father’s death. The libellant testified that during this time the libellee “threatened me if I didn’t come back.” Finally he begged her to return and because of her love for his small children by a former marriage she did so.

The final separation took place after the libellant had learned of a purported marriage between her husband and a Miss Jones. Testimony of the libellant in regard to this occasion is as follows:

Q. “After you learned of this relationship between Blanche Jones and your husband did you leave then?
*406 A. “Not immediately.
Q. “Why?
A. “I didn’t dare to.
Q. “Well what was the particular reason that you didn’t leave then?
Q. “I knew that if I left when Mr. Belville was home he wouldn’t let me take my child and I am afraid of Mr. Belville and what he might do to me.”

At other times during her testimony the libellant stated she was afraid of Belville while they were living together and was still in fear of him.

When the libellant knew that her husband was to be away on a business trip which would last from ten days to two weeks she told him she was going to leave him and he said that she could not; that he would make her have a child so that she could not leave and would have to live with him the rest of her life. She made plans to leave and when Belville went on his trip about April 15, 1944, she did leave their home about May 1 of that year.

The evidence of intercourse between the parties which the libellee relies on as conclusively showing condonation is to be found in the cross examination of the libellant and is as follows:

Q. “The last time you had intercourse with your husband was in January, 1944?
A. “Definitely not.
Q. “You tell us just when it was.
A. “It was some time between April 6th and 15th; it was several times, it wasn’t just one time.
Q. “And he left on what date?
A. “Around April 15th.
Q. “You had intercourse with him several times between the 6th of April and 15th of April?
A. “That is true.
Q. “When you had that intercourse did you have any understanding about it or just went about it in the natural way and had your intercourse ?
A. “It was the natural way.
*407 Q. “Nothing was said?
A. “I talked with Mr. Belville about leaving-and he told me that I would have a child so that I couldn’t leave him.
Q. “And you willingly submitted to his having intercourse with you in order to conceive a child, is that right?
A. “I was afraid of Mr. Belville, I always did everything he said, at his orders.
Q. “Even to submitting to intercourse with him?
A. “Definitely.”

Where findings are challenged upon the ground that they are without evidentiary support, they must stand if there is any legitimate evidence fairly and reasonably tending to support them. Taylor v. Henderson, 112 Vt 107, 111, 22 A2d 318.

Counsel for the libellee conceded on argument that there is evidence, as indeed there is, to support the first sentence in the finding in question but insists there is none to support the last sentence contained therein.

From evidence which we have set forth it is clear that the trial court was warranted in finding that the libellant was afraid to leave the libellee at the time of their acts of intercourse in April, 1944, which apparently is the time meant in the finding. The testimony of the libellant first above quoted is enough by itself to support the finding. This testimony clearly shows that the libellant was afraid to leave when Belville was home not only because of apprehension of what he might do to her but in addition because of fear that he would not let her take her child if he were there to prevent her so doing. There is other evidence in the case which clearly supports this finding of fear on the part of the libellant at the time in question.

The libellee claims that this quoted testimony of the libellant refers to a time early in their married life and subsequently to that time there is no evidence of such fear. From a reading of the transcript, however, it is very apparent that the testimony in question referred to a time very shortly before the final separation and there is nothing in the evidence to indicate that the libellant’s fear of leaving while Belville was home changed from that time on.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 571, 114 Vt. 404, 1946 Vt. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belville-v-belville-vt-1946.