Bosveld v. Bosveld

7 N.W.2d 782, 232 Iowa 1199
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 16, 1943
DocketNo. 46153.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 N.W.2d 782 (Bosveld v. Bosveld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bosveld v. Bosveld, 7 N.W.2d 782, 232 Iowa 1199 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellee brought this suit for divorce from appellant on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment. Stated more specifically he, in effect, alleged: nagging and faultfinding by appellant in the home and elsewhere; accusations of infidelity by appellant against him; fits of anger in which 'appellant would run from home in her night clothes and remain away for many hours at a time; “actual or pretended” attempts by appellant to commit suicide — once by drinking lysol and another time by the threatened use of a “large and very sharp butcher knife”; invitation by her on separate occasions to two men to have improper relations with her; and on one occasion the making of a statement to another woman that she would like to have improper relations with certain men.

Appellant denied generally and filed cross-petition for separate maintenance on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment consisting of alleged improper relations with other women; the conduct of appellee in excluding her from the family home and preventing her from entering same; his refusal to allow her to see her children; physical violence committed by him against her, consisting of choking her shortly before her last child was born; and his conduct in forcing her to get into a ear, bending her arm back and hurting her on the occasion of taking her to a hospital in Michigan.

A large number of witnesses was examined, most of them, naturally, being relatives or friends of one or both parties. There is the usual showing of prejudice and partisanship by witnesses on both sides.

*1201 Tbe undisputed facts show that appellee and appellant were married December 5, 1929; that one son was born in 1931, one in 1933, and a daughter in August 1939. Appellant had a miscarriage three or four years before the daughter was born.

They resided in Peoria, Mahaska county, Iowa, and were members of Christian Deformed Church. It seems to be a principle of the church to take charge of trouble that arises and to try to keep the parties out of court. Appellant’s father and brother belonged to another denomination. This possibly was the cause of some lack of complete sympathy between ap-pellee and appellant.

One gets the impression in reading this record that appellant was always high-strung and had a quick and uncontrolled temper. Also, that after her miscarriage, which was around 1935 or 1936, her condition in that respect was worse.

There seems no doubt that latterly, at least, she was guilty of faultfinding concerning her husband’s long hours of work and inadequate pay and their resultant low standard of living. She may have been unwise in carrying it to the degree indicated by the record. She frankly admitted much of the so-called nagging though denying the appropriateness of the word. She complained of not having needed utensils and conveniences at home, and of other hardships which she thought could be avoided if appellee sought more lucrative employment.

She makes no denial of the butcher-knife incident:

“I recollect about grabbing a butcher knife, but I couldn’t help it. * * * I never said anything, just ran out of the house. * * * I do not know much about what took place until I was at Abbott’s hospital. ’ ’

There may be some significance to the fact that her husband took her to the hospital on that occasion instead of blaming her for her acts. He evidently considered that she was a subject for medical treatment.

It is also significant that after each attempt at suicide (or “pretended attempt,.” according to appellee) the appellant was taken to a psychopathic hospital or sanitarium. In December 1939, she took a dose of lysol. After being cared for at home for a period of approximately two weeks she was taken *1202 to the Christian Psychopathic Hospital at Grand Rapids, Michigan. Again, after she had been home from the hospital about three months the butcher-knife incident occurred and she was again promptly taken back to Grand Rapids (September 1940) and remained .there till January 1942. The hospital was maintained for the mentally afflicted people of the church to which appellee and appellant belonged and incidentally any others “who care to come.”

We are impressed by this record with the fact not only that hers was a mental case but also that her husband and associates so considered it. Two witnesses testify, apparently referring to two entirely separate occasions, that they saw her on the street, late at night, dressed only in her night clothes. She denies these incidents. Assuming they happened, they indicate an abnormal mentality rather than a malicious attempt to disgrace or annoy her husband.

The morning after the knife incident, when appellant resisted being taken to Michigan, appellee by force put her into the car. She says: “He pushed me in the car and kissed me goodbye.” He has not denied this testimony. It indicates that up to that time the husband considered her irresponsible rather than blameworthy. He knew the hospital to which she was being taken was for mental cases.

Dr. Abbott of Oskaloosa testified:

“The diagnosis showed she had flu of the base of the brain affecting her nervous system and she was very nervous and having slight hallucinations * * *. ”

The testimony of the two men as to having received improper proposals from appellant, if true, indicates • strongly that her mental condition was affected. Forthright proposals such as they relate, without any preliminary incidents or overtures leading up to them, are not indications of immorality so much as of irresponsible mentality. She denies that evidence in toto.

Mrs. Hoitenga, the pastor’s wife, took appellant to the Grand Rapids institution the first time and, with Rev. D. J. Hoitenga and others, also accompanied her there the second *1203 time. She testifies: “I remember when she had a miscarriage. That always gave her a good deal of trouble after that. ’ ’

Rev. D. J. Hoitenga says:

“Mrs. Bosveld has been taken to a psychopathic hospital a few times and I have considered Mrs. Bosveld from my observation of her, as being a bit immature because her mind was at a standstill in the process of development. * * * I believe there are indications and I have reasons for it, why I say that her mind is not perhaps altogether up to normal.”

There is much evidence that defendant was deeply attached to her children. We shall not attempt to review it in detail. Reverend and Mrs. Hoitenga expressed that opinion. Mrs. Abbott, the doctor’s wife, so testified. The doctor himself testified that after her return from Michigan (the second time) “she seemed to be perfectly normal to me, only she had a great fear of something happening, she was going to lose her children, that was the thing she talked about mostly.”

We are not unmindful of the fact that various witnesses testified that appellant swore at the children, that she neglected them, that they were untidy and ill-kept. Other witnesses gave testimony the other way. As to the matter of alleged untidiness of the children as well as of the housekeeping, it is possible the pastor’s wife, Mrs. Hoitenga, correctly explains the conflict in opinion:

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.W.2d 782, 232 Iowa 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bosveld-v-bosveld-iowa-1943.