Bippus v. Bippus

246 S.W.2d 502, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1957
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1952
Docket12373
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 246 S.W.2d 502 (Bippus v. Bippus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bippus v. Bippus, 246 S.W.2d 502, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1957 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinions

W. O. MURRAY, Chief Justice.

This is a divorce suit instituted by Helen M. Bippus against her husband, Scott Bip-pus, wherein she sought a divorce upon the grounds of abandonment, cruel treatment and adultery on the part of the husband. The divorce was opposed by the husband. The trial court after hearing much evidence entered a judgment granting the divorce. From this judgment Scott Bippus has taken this appeal.

Appellant’s first point is that the evidence was insufficient to support the judgment on the grounds of cruel treátment. Article 4629, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Stats., provides:

“A divorce -may be decreed in the follow, ing cases:
[503]*503*‘(1) Where either party is guilty of excesses, cruel treatment, or outrages toward the other, if such ill treatment is of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable. * * *
“(3) In favor of the wife, where the husband shall have left her for three (3) years with intention of abandonment, or where he shall have abandoned her and lived in adultery with another woman.
“(4) Where a husband and wife have lived apart without cohabitation for as long as ten (10) years.”

Appellant and appellee were married in 1933 in Texarkana, Arkansas, and thereafter lived together in Houston, Texas, for a period of about five years. Mrs. Bippus became sick and decided that the Houston water was not agreeing with her, whereupon her husband brought her to San Antonio, Texas, to live. She secured employment in San Antonio and thereafter earned her own living. There was apparently no intention on the part of appellant and appellee to permanently separate at the time she moved to San Antonio. Appellant did not visit her here in San Antonio for a period of one year, but- thereafter he came to see her at regular intervals, sometimes once a week, sometimes once a month. On these visits they cohabited together as man and wife, often renting a tourist cabin and spending from one to three days together. On February 26, 1951, Mrs. Bip1-pus instituted this suit for divorce. She testified that there were no children bom of the marriage; that during the time she was married to Mr. Bippus (he treated her very kindly, and that pertained to the whole time they were married. However, following this general statement she testified that they often quarreled and fussed; that on one occasion he pulled a gun on her and scared her very much, and on two other occasions he choked her until everything turned black, and that she learned from friends and from his own admissions that during the thirteen years she resided in San Antonio, he lived with another woman in Houston, Texas. She said that he would deny this, but that he told so many untruths that she couldn’t believe anything he said. After she came to San Antonio to live in 1938, she and her husband lived apart, except for a period of about five months during which time she tried to live with him in Houston, Texas, but that it wouldn’t work out, and they quarreled and fussed and she returned to San Antonio; that her husband drank practically all the time during these five months. During the time she resided in San Antonio he had given her only $75, $25 of which was given her when she had to go to the hospital for her operation, and the remaining $50 was given to her when she visited her mother in a distant State. Mr. Bippus testified that he didn’t malee much money, although at the time of said trial he had accumulated property valued at from four to five thousand dollars. He never failed to give her a present at Christmas, on their wedding anniversary and on her birthday. Mrs. Bippus admitted that on or about January 15th or 16th, 1951, her husband visited her in San Antonio, and that they spent one or two days at a tourist cabin where they cohabited as man and wife. This was five or six weeks before she instituted the suit for divorce. Mr. Bippus testified that they cohabited in February, just about one week before the suit was filed, and in this he was supported by L. E. Collins, manager of a tourist cabin, but this was denied by Mrs. Bippus. Mr. Bippus testified, corroborated by the testimony of his daughter, that he and his daughter and Mrs. Bippus had dinner together at Christie’s Restaurant in the City of San Antonio after the suit was filed, and that this dinner cost him more than $5. On this occasion he gave his wife a present consisting of some jewelry, which she returned to him some three or four days later. With reference to meeting and dining together at 'Christie’s Mrs. Bippus simply stated that it was a frame-up, she didn’t deny the fact.

We are of the opinion that this testimony of cruel treatment on the part of Mr. Bippus does not justify the granting of a divorce, because Mrs. Bippus had condoned such conduct by thereafter, on many occasions, cohabiting with him as man and wife.

It is true that Mrs. Bippus testified that her husband drew a gun on her on one oc[504]*504casion, and choked her on two other occasions, but none of these instances caused her to cease to cohabit with him as his wife. It is true that she testified that in each instance he promised not to repeat such acts, but she also said that he would not tell the truth and that she could not put any confidence in any promise that he made her. Mr. Bippus did not support her during- the time that she lived in San Antonio, but she was always able to secure work as a practical nurse and seemed to suffer no particular hardship for the want of money; she was able to make herself a good living. She testified that she wore clothes made out of flour sacks, which would indicate some hardship, however, she said that she had a position where she received her room and board and $50 a month, which would provide for -her necessities of life. She testified that fussing and quarreling made her nervous and at the time of her operation she was very nervous and that this nervousness affected her health.

Appellee was fully aware of the fact that her husband was living with another woman in Houston, Texas, during the thirteen years that she resided in San Antonio, and with knowledge of this fact she continued to cohabit with him as his wife.

However, regardless of everything else, appellee, by continuing to cohabit with her husband with full knowledge of all of the misconduct to which she now testifies, condoned this misconduct, and she cannot now set it up as grounds for divorce. It is true that his acts of misconduct are not condoned if, as and when they are thereafter repeated. The facts here show that in January, before the divorce suit was filed in February, appellee was cohabiting with appellant as her husband, and the only thing which she alleges happened after the middle of January, 1951, was that she and appellant had another quarrel. There is no attempt to prove the details of this quarrel, or how it was provoked, or what caused it to take place. This was not sufficient to set aside the fact that she had theretofore completely condoned all of the misconduct that had theretofore taken place.

The doctrine of condonation is defined in 17 American Jurisprudence, page 248, as follows: “The doctrine of condonation, which may be defined as forgiveness, express or implied, by one spouse for a breach of marital duty by the other with the implied condition that the offense shall not be repeated, is a defense which will bar the ■condoning spouse of the right thereafter to seek a divorce for the condoned offense, at least until it is revived by subsequent misconduct.”

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Bippus v. Bippus
246 S.W.2d 502 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.2d 502, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bippus-v-bippus-texapp-1952.