Brown v. Brown

268 P. 401, 92 Cal. App. 276, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 766
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1928
DocketDocket No. 3507.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 268 P. 401 (Brown v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Brown, 268 P. 401, 92 Cal. App. 276, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 766 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

TUTTLE, J., pro tem.

The complaint in this action is based upon a charge of cruelty. The cross-complaint consists of two causes of action, the first being desertion, the second cruelty. The court found against the plaintiff and appellant as to all of her allegations of cruelty, and in favor of the defendant and respondent as to all of his allegations of cruelty, and in his favor on his charge of desertion against the plaintiff and appellant. The interlocutory decree of divorce was granted to the defendant and respondent specifically on the charge of desertion against the plaintiff and appellant.

The appeal is based entirely upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence; first, on the ground that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings of the trial court as specified in paragraph 14 of the findings of fact, that on or about February 2, 1922, the plaintiff and appellant, without cause, wilfully deserted the defendant and respondent; and, secondly, that the evidence is insufficient to support the finding of the court, that the plaintiff and appellant is not a fit and proper person to have the custody of the minor children of plaintiff and defendant, as specified in appellant’s opening brief.

The appellant and respondent were married on August 29, 1914. At the time of their marriage, and prior thereto, it was understood that they would live upon a ranch near Wildomar, in Riverside County. Appellant knew during the period of their courtship that the respondent was a rancher, and it was planned that they would live on the ranch above mentioned. Soon after their marriage the appellant became discontended and dissatisfied with her situation and life on the ranch, and began complaining about the conditions there, and her own condition, which dissatisfaction and complaints continued through the entire time that the parties resided together on the ranch at Wildomar.

*279 Four children were born to the parties during their life together: Wilfred Brown, a son, born December 9, 1915, David Brown, a son, and Catherine Brown, a daughter, twins, born September 15, 1918; and Gerald Brown, a son, born October 6, 1921.

It is undisputed that the appellant left the home of the parties at Wildomar, on February 2, 1922, at a time when the youngest child was between three and four months old, and there is evidence to show that the appellant was not ill at the time she left, but, on the contrary, that there was nothing wrong with her at that time, and that she was perfectly normal; that, according to her own statement, she had wired to her mother a few days previous thereto to come and get her, and that after her mother arrived they hurriedly decided to leave at once; that the appellant left early in the morning, at approximately 6 o’clock and in inclement weather, and that at the time she left she or her mother had represented and stated to the respondent that she would return in two months, and, according to her own statements, that it was definitely understood that she was to be absent only for a period of two months with her mother, after which time she would return to the ranch.

On the morning of her departure she made no effort to take the baby with her, which astounded and surprised the respondent and a Mrs. Soules, who had been brought in by appellant’s mother to, as she thought, help get the children ready to go with their mother, the appellant, and the appellant at this time flatly refused to take the baby with her, even though the baby had not yet been weaned, and had up to that time been nourished by receiving milk from its mother’s breast.

Appellant made no provisions for the care of the baby, which she had nursed up to that time, and left no instructions in reference to its care or comfort.

The appellant left the home of respondent on February 2, 1922, leaving the three youngest children in his care and custody, without any previous arrangement for their care, without any instructions as to their food or comfort, and without any questions as to how they would be taken care of.

According to her own testimony, she did not return to the ranch to see the children from February 2, 1922, until *280 June, 1924, at which time she returned with her mother and her attorney without any intention of remaining at the ranch or taking up her duties as a mother of the children and wife of the respondent. She made no offer to return and stay on the ranch, or do anything that showed any intention to terminate the period of separation.

It is undisputed that she did not return to the ranch or make any effort on her own part to see the children during this entire period of more than two years and four months, after having left an unweaned baby in sole care of the respondent.

Various physicians testified as to their opinion to the effect that she was a hypochondriac or a psycho-neurotic of the sexually perverted type, inclined to dwell upon sex matters and become centered upon matters having to do with various phases of sex questions, the result of which was to blunt the. maternal instinct, and that such condition affected the care of the children. This conclusion, expressed in different forms by the various physicians, was arrived at as a result of their own personal experience in treating her, and also as a result of the other testimony and evidence presented during the trial and embodied in a hypothetical question to them. Some of them said that the influence of such a person over children was detrimental, and that the condition was progressive and would continue to get worse instead of better; that such a person became self-centered and egotistical, and dwelt upon sex questions, and often made a very scientific study and research of sex conditions and matters, as was evidenced by the letters written by the appellant. These letters, as stated before, contradict all the accusations made by the appellant against the respondent in reference to his treatment of her, and indulge in a detailed discourse and discussion of sex matters.

The appellant was examined at various times by physicians after her emphatic contentions that she was suffering to a great extent from the results of improper treatment by physicians, and upon each of such examinations the physicians found that she was normal.

During the period of her absence, although, according to respondent’s testimony, she stated that she only intended to go to Los Angeles for a period of two weeks or two months, at which time she expected to return to the ranch, she never *281 theless not only went to Los Angeles for a period of two weeks but proceeded with her mother to Berkeley, San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose and several other places, during part of which time she, according to her own testimony, walked about, did housework, and even engaged in certain occupations, such as canvassing and soliciting orders from university students at Berkeley for a period of time.

The trial of the action consumed some three weeks. Fifty witnesses were examined, and the record of the testimony is spread over some two thousand pages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P. 401, 92 Cal. App. 276, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brown-calctapp-1928.