Bisel v. Bisel

90 S.E.2d 779, 197 Va. 636, 1956 Va. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1956
DocketRecord 4447
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 S.E.2d 779 (Bisel v. Bisel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bisel v. Bisel, 90 S.E.2d 779, 197 Va. 636, 1956 Va. LEXIS 133 (Va. 1956).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a divorce suit in which we are to decide whether the husband or the wife, or either, is entitled to a divorce and who should have custody of the children, questions which are the bitter fruit of broken marriages.

*637 The court below, after an ore terms hearing, decreed that the wife should have the divorce and custody of one of the three children, with money for their support, and that the husband should have the custody of the other two, one of whom has since married, with visiting rights to both parents. The husband, J. Dwight Bisel, who brought the suit, now appeals and will be referred to herein as plaintiff; and the wife, Bernice F. Bisel, who assigns cross-error, will be referred to as defendant.

The parties were married in Pennsylvania in 1937. In 1940 they bought and moved into a home in Arlington county, which was conveyed to them jointly, and they lived there until their final separation in 1950. Three children were born of the marriage: LaSylda Ann, on March 9, 1938; Linda Jo, on September 10, 1947; and Robert Lee, on August 4, 1949. By the decree appealed from the custody of LaSylda Ann and Robert Lee was given to the plaintiff, and of Linda Jo to the defendant.

The married life of the parties in the home they established soon deteriorated. Fault-finding, quarreling and discontent preceded a separation in 1945, during which the plaintiff instituted suit for divorce against the defendant, but they were later reconciled, the suit was dismissed and they resumed their married life.

The plaintiff instituted the present suit in March 1952, alleging that the defendant deserted him in January 1950, and praying for a divorce a vinculo and the custody of the children. The defendant filed her answer and cross-bill alleging that the marriage had been a stormy one, full of cruel treatment by her husband which became so bitter and disagreeable that she was forced to leave their home and go to live with her mother in Baltimore. She prayed for a divorce a mensa to be enlarged at the proper time into an absolute divorce, for the custody of the children, money for their support, alimony, attorney’s fees and costs.

The plaintiff now contends, first, that the court erred in refusing his prayer for a divorce and granting a divorce to the defendant. He recognizes the rule that the finding of the trial court in an ore tenus hearing is equivalent to the finding of a jury on conflicting evidence, and leaves for our consideration only the question of whether there was substantial credible evidence to support the finding. Oliver v. Oliver, 193 Va. 571, 576, 69 S. E. (2d) 350, 353; Nix v. Nix, 186 Va. 14, 20, 41 S. E. (2d) 345, 347. He argues that there was no substantial credible evidence to establish the defendant’s *638 claim that the plaintiff was guilty of cruelty which forced her to leave the home and to constitute willful desertion by him for which the court granted her an absolute divorce. See Denny v. Denny, 118 Va. 79, 86 S. E. 835; Ringgold v. Ringgold, 128 Va. 485, 104 S. E. 836.

In Latham v. Latham, 71 Va. (30 Gratt.) 307, often quoted, it was pointed out that there may be cases in which the husband, without either actual or threatened violence, may render the marriage state impossible to be endured, by conduct which may as effectually endanger life or health as physical violence. The Ringgold case was held to be a typical one for the application of this exception to the general rule. There the husband, who “considered himself a very pious man,” elicited from his wife an admission of some childhood indiscretion, and for that cause he took a separate room and declined to live with her as her husband until some indefinite time when she had, in his opinion, “lived out of her life the sins of her childhood.” His other conduct was in keeping with this austere attitude. In holding that the wife was entitled to a divorce on the ground of cruelty and desertion, it was said that violence and apprehension of bodily hurt are not indispensable ingredients of the offense of cruelty; and that mental anguish, repeated and unrelenting neglect and humiliation may be as bad as physical wounds and bruises and amount to cruelty “even in the very strict sense in which that term ought always to be used in the law of divorce.”

To establish her charge of cruelty the defendant testified to a series of occurrences and a course of conduct over a period of years on the part of her husband, the cumulative effect as well as the underlying purpose of which she claimed was to drive her away from the home. The main details given by her are these:

In the summer qf 1940, the first year in their new home, she was preparing to take their child, LaSylda Ann, to Sunday school and objected when the plaintiff, his brother and the latter’s wife tried to take her somewhere else with them. On that occasion he threw her into a chair and beat her.

In February 1945 she was suffering from a thyroid condition, for which she had been under treatment for two years or more, and had just recently been confined to her bed with grippe. Plaintiff told her to be ready and he would take her to a doctor. Instead of doing that, without her knowledge he took LaSylda Ann with him and went to the home of his sister in Pennsylvania and did not come back until June of that year. She later went to the home of his sister who *639 was keeping the child, and he ordered his sister to put her out, which the latter declined to do. She begged him to come back, and in June they came back together and brought the child with them. It was during that period that he began a suit against her for divorce, but after their reconciliation he dismissed the suit and they began living together again. She had an operation for her thyroid trouble in March 1946 and her second child was born in September 1947.

They soon resumed, however, their quarrels and disagreements, and late in 1949, after the birth of their third child, there came, she said, “a general upheaval.” He began telling her she was not acting right; that she was not well. She consulted doctors who tried to reassure her, but plaintiff continued on the theme, telling her that she would run from people, fear them, not want to be with them. He discouraged her church and social activities and frequently absented himself from home on week-ends. He persisted in telling her she was not mentally right; that he would get control of the family and home, and that she had to get out and go to work. Over a period of weeks from Thanksgiving through Christmas this went on “over and over and over and over again.” A day or two after Christmas she called her mother, who came over from Baltimore. During her visit she went with the plaintiff and defendant to see a doctor, who told her mother that he considered it essential that she stay in the home with the defendant, and she did stay for a week or ten days.

The defendant then took the children and went to her mother’s in Baltimore, where they stayed for two weeks.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.E.2d 779, 197 Va. 636, 1956 Va. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bisel-v-bisel-va-1956.