Bishop v. Lucas

251 S.W.2d 126, 220 Ark. 871, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 30, 1952
Docket4-9741
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 251 S.W.2d 126 (Bishop v. Lucas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. Lucas, 251 S.W.2d 126, 220 Ark. 871, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 812 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Griffin Smith, Chief Justice.

Nick Alvin was the only child of Kenneth and Wilma Lucas when they were divorced May 21, 1951, on the husband’s complaint. The boy was then three years and four months of age. The decree recited that the parties had entered into an agreement “suitable to both of them” regarding “possession, custody, and support of the child”. There were, said the Chancellor, no rights to be settled as to alimony, attorney fees, cost, or division of property. The decretal findings were that Mrs. Lucas had been guilty of abuse, contempt, and studied neglect. Ark. Stat’s, \ 34-1202, fifth subdivision. The agreement was that the child should remain with its mother. In June, 1951, the father alleged that because of changed conditions, and because of facts not known to him when the divorce was granted, the original order should be superseded. The appeal is from a decree giving custody to Lucas.

Charles G. Bishop married in 1934. His wife, Lucy Irene, procured a divorce July 23d, 1951. Irene had a son by a former husband. The son was 29 years of age at the time this case was tried.

Bishop and Wilma Lucas were married July 25,1951. Although the divorce decree granted on the wife’s complaint is dated July 23d, it mentions a property adjustment executed July 18th. Bishop testified that he settled more than $60,000 on Irene. Costs and attorney’s fees, he said, increased the expenditure to about $65,000.

Bishop had served in the army, but had been discharged several years before the transactions resulting in this litigation occurred.

Wilma married Lucas when she was 17. Her testimony was that she had not really loved Kenneth, but his letters (written from El Paso while on military duty) had over-persuaded her to take the matrimonial step. After being released froni the armed service in 1946 Kenneth completed his education under G. I. allowances. For several months he was a student at Conway and received a bachelor’s degree in biology. He then spent two years at Ft. Collins, Colorado, in the state A. & M., where in June, 1950, he received a master’s degree in animal breeding. Shortly before Lucas completed his work at Ft. Collins Wilma went to Mabelvale, Arkansas, and Spent a month or two with her husband’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Lucas.

Kenneth Lucas procured a position at Lonoke in September, 1950, as a veteran’s instructor. Bishop had formerly been connected with Standard Oil Company as district superintendent, but at the time of matrimonial discord he owned a filling station on Asher avenue in Little Bock. As a side line he was interested in farming and livestock.. Through mutual interests Bishop met Kenneth in October, 1950. Because of his knowledge of livestock and familiarity with that part of Colorado where he had attended college, Lucas agreed to go with Bishop on a combination hunting and stock-inspection trip. As a result Bishop purchased a blooded bull for his farm of 146 acres near Mabelvale. From that time until the early part of March, 1951, Charles and Irene Bishop and Wilma and Kenneth Lucas frequently visited, sometimes at the Lucas home in Lonoke, and sometimes at Bishop’s home in Pulaski county.

On March 10, 1951, Kenneth re-enlisted in the army. His position as an instructor of veterans had ended and he was not able at that time to find employment commensurate with the army pay of a second lieutenant. He was sent to San Antonio, Texas, for study preliminary to an assignment to Fort Biley, Kansas. Lucas says that at the time he left Lonoke it was understood that Wilma and the little boy would promptly join him. Within a few days after Lucas reached San Antonio some one wrote him that Bishop and Wilma were having “an affair”. Lucas called Wilma by telephone. She denied any misbehavior and, according to Lucas’ testimony, promised him that she would leave at once for San Antonio. Instead of doing this she sent a telegram she could not come, but would write. Without waiting for the letter Lucas procured a short leave and returned to Lonoke. The result of their conversations was that Wilma announced she wanted a divorce. She had, in fact, written the letter mentioned during the conversation by telephone.

Lucas testified that he got Mr. and Mrs. Bishop together, and with Wilma, and with Bishop or Wilma separately, the disagreements were discussed. There is testimony that Bishop advised Wilma to wait six months and see if matters would not adjust themselves. On the other hand there is testimony that Bishop took a belligerent attitude. But Lucas, during the trial resulting in this appeal, insisted that he believed Wilma, did not suspect her of unfaithfulness, and merely consented to a divorce because she wanted it that way. He had formerly testified that during January, February, and March, “. . . and up until I went into the service, almost every-other night or two — or three times a week — we would go to [the Bishop] house, or they would come to Lonoke”.

Mrs. Bishop testified that she became suspicious of the relationship between her husband and Wilma. Her apprehensions were aroused when the two would leave the room together and he away from the card table an abnormal length of time. On two occasions she trailed Bishop to Lonoke and claimed to have spied on him in the Lucas home after Kenneth went to Texas. There was evidence from disinterested sources that Bishop’s car was frequently seen at the Lucas home. Mrs. Bishop claimed that she watched at night from a point of concealment in the Lucas yard and for nearly two hours observed transactions and heard conversations suggestive of adultery.

The printed abstract contains 530 pages, and the briefs add another 145 pages to the story of matrimonial distress. The Chancellor awarded the father full custody of Nicky on the theory that Bishop had broken up the Lucas home, that he was a man of positive convictions and violent temper, a heavy drinker; that he used profanity in the child’s presence, and in other respects was not a suitable person to participate in the boy’s family life. There was testimony that the paternal grandparents were wine and beer drinkers, that the small country home they occupied was inadequate, and that the environment there was not of the best. We do not rest our decision upon any of the evidence touching Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Lucas.

Interested witnesses testified that Kenneth and his wife drank to excess, that while the card parties were in progress beer and whiskey were consumed, and that the boy was being taught to drink beer, swear, and use indecent words. In some instances the offending person was the father himself; at other times it was Bishop. Lack of supervision was attributed to Wilma.

We think the record justifies a belief that the so-called drinking and swearing prior to the time Kenneth left for Texas were chargeable to each man. Kenneth, in contending that Bishop swore in the child’s presence, admitted that swearing occurred in his home when the card parties were on: — “Occasionally [Bishop] would use profanity. If the child was asleep I’d let it go, but if the child .was awake I cautioned him right there”. Kenneth also admitted having given the child beer, “But Bishop would try to give him excessive amounts”.

When asked whether he made home brew in Nicky’s presence, Kenneth replied, “I did while I was in school, and this child did not receive it then”.

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Related

Bornhoff v. Thompson
372 S.W.2d 616 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)
Lucas v. Bishop
273 S.W.2d 397 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W.2d 126, 220 Ark. 871, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-lucas-ark-1952.