Bonham v. Bonham

172 P. 333, 25 Wyo. 449, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 12
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1918
DocketNo. 895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 P. 333 (Bonham v. Bonham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonham v. Bonham, 172 P. 333, 25 Wyo. 449, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 12 (Wyo. 1918).

Opinion

Potter, Chisp Justice;.

This is an action for divorce brought by Virginia A. Bonham against Alfred E. Bonham. The plaintiff asks in her petition also that a reasonable portion of the property held in defendant’s name be awarded to her. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the court rendered a decision and judgment in favor of the defendant; this appearing to have been done without a motion or suggestion on the part of the defendant. The court- found that the plaintiff had wholly failed to establish any ground for divorce, or any need for the intervention of the court in adjusting the property rights of the parties. The case is here .on error, and the only question presented is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding and judgment denying plaintiff’s right to a divorce.

The parties were married September 8, 1875, and lived together until February 9, 1915, when the plaintiff left the defendant and their home in Sheridan, in this state, and established another home in the same city for herself-and a married son, referred to in the evidence as Will, with, his five children, who had been making their home with the plaintiff and defendant for several months preceding the separation. That son appears to have had some trouble with his wife, and with his children he came to live with his -parents, the parties to -this suit, with their consent at the .time. The defendant, after a few months, objected to his remaining there at his home with the children, and this seems to'have been the chief cause of the difficulty between the plaintiff and defendant resulting in their separation; [452]*452the plaintiff defending the son and insisting that he and his children be not compelled to leave the house.

It is alleged' as ground for divorce that defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty to the plaintiff. No act of physical or personal violence is alleged or shown. But the charge of cruelty is based upon certain alleged conduct of the defendant during the married life of the parties, and particularly the last year or two of their life together, consisting principally of occasional outbursts of anger over matters displeasing to him, accompanied by profane language ; the defendant having a “miserable temper” as stated by the plaintiff in her testimony; habitual complaints and exhibition of anger upon a presentation of bills for living expenses; threats on one or two occasions when angry to kill himself; accusing the plaintiff of lying to -him, the defendant, on one or two occasions during a disagreement concerning the son aforesaid and his failure to secure employment, or when he was angrily complaining about some other matter; during the earlier years of their marriage violently beating his horses; complaining at one time about the plaintiff’s wanting a.nd having a special nurse wlien she was in the hospital for an operation; and one act of violence toward a son then about twelve years old, several years before their separation, when he was angered about something the boy had done. We have not attempted to mention every instance mentioned in the testimony of the exhibition of anger by the defendant during the married life of the parties, but what we have stated indicates generally the facts upon which the plaintiff bases her charges of cruelty. • It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff that these outbursts of anger were not as a rule directed toward her. Indeed in very few instances is it ■shown that the defendant exhibited any anger toward her or.because of anything she had or had not done.

There are other acts alleged and testified to by the plaintiff which she says occurred during the early years of their married life, some of which are not at all corroborated and bear no relation to defendant’s subsequent conduct com[453]*453plained of, and some shown only by his alleged admission to the plaintiff, such as at one time prior to their marriage that he had been a member of a vigilance committee in Colorado, all of which occurred so many years prior to the separation and are so clearly unrelated to anything occurring subsequently, that they are not entitled to consideration: One act of the defendant is alleged and testified to by the plaintiff, with some corroboration -by other witnesses, as having occurred a few months prior to the separation. It is alleged and the plaintiff testifies that a few months prior to the separation the defendant, taking-to his assistance an unmarried son then living with him, and the married son above mentioned, removed certain furniture of a tenant from one of his houses, and brought the same to the house where he, the defendant, was living, destroyed some of it and attempted to secrete the remainder; and it is sought by the evidence'as to that matter to show that the defendant had burglarized the house and stolen the furniture. But it appears from the plaintiff’s evidence that the defendant, after having been arrested, was discharged upon a preliminary hearing before the examining magistrate, and that the furniture which had been taken from the defendant’s, home upon a search warrant was returned to him by order of said magistrate. And there does not appear to have been any further attempt to hold or prosecute him.

The married son, about whose presence in the home the parties disagreed, testified against his father on his said examination, and the plaintiff offered or was willing to testify against him at that hearing, and she appears to have been very indignant over his discharge, showing her resentment to such an extent as to assert in her testimony that the defendant had “bought off” the prosecuting attorney and examining magistrate, and apparently without anything to justify the assertion except the fact that the prosecuting attorney had not immediately authorized a 'search warrant when requested to do so, and that defendant was not bound over or held for trial on the charge against him. And it appears also from the plaintiff’s'testimony, on cross-exam[454]*454ination, that shortly before the hearing aforesaid she had gone to the county and prosecuting attorney proposing or suggesting that the defendant be tried on a charge of. insanity; but she explained that she first went to the family doctor and he told her to go to the county attorney. She further testified about that as follows:

“Q. Wasn’t Bill trying to. railroad your husband to the penitentiary or insane asylum? A. No, sir, he was like me. He was up a stump. Q. Didn’t he know enough to get out and leave his father? A. How would you like to get out in the dead of winter with the children? The month of August, when the boy was not working, he had money at that time and was turning in money all the time. Q. So when Mr. Bonham was tried on this charge of larceny, you not only offered to testify against him and Will did testify against him, but you wefit to the county attorney to try to have him taken up for insanity? A. No, that was before this came up — before Christmas, and this trial never came up until the'day before we left home the 8th of February. Q>. At that time you said Mr. Bbnham was insane? A. We didn’t know. We.knew he had this sick spell.”

It appears that about a year or perhaps two years before the plaintiff left the defendant the latter had a severe sickness, and most of the occasions of the exhibition of temper mentioned in the evidence appear to have occurred after tht. The evidence is to be understood, we think, as showing that after the “sick spell,” as it is referred to in the testimony, the defendant became less able to control his. feeling of displeasure or his disposition to anger.

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Bluebook (online)
172 P. 333, 25 Wyo. 449, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonham-v-bonham-wyo-1918.