Bruce v. Bruce

1930 OK 38, 284 P. 5, 141 Okla. 160, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1930
Docket20507
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 1930 OK 38 (Bruce v. Bruce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruce v. Bruce, 1930 OK 38, 284 P. 5, 141 Okla. 160, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 38 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

CULLISON, J.

This case comes to this court on appeal from a judgment of the district court of Muskoge county, Okla., granting the plaintiff in error, J. J. Bruce, an absolute divorce, from defendant in error, Ida B. Bruce, and awarding the custody of the minor children of said parties to said J. J. Bruce, and adjudicating the property rights of the respective parties. The parties herein will be referred to as in tho trial court; J. J. Bruce, plaintiff, and Ida B. Bruce, defendant.

The record shows that there were born to plaintiff and defendant three living children, as follows: Robert Bruce, 18 years of age; Edward J. Bruce, 16 years of age; and James L. Bruce, 14 years of age.

Plaintiff in his petition alleges his wife, the defendant herein, is a common gossip, a disturber of the peace of the neighborhood in which she lives; neglects her household duties; untidy housekeeper; will not cook his meals; that she quarrels at, nags, and harasses him; that her conduct is detrimental to his business and his health; and that it is impossible for him and his wife to live together.

Plaintiff further alleges that his wife is cruel to him; that she accuses him of having improper relations with other women; that she has jeopardized his life.

Plaintiff in his own behalf says he has been patient, meek, and kindly disposed toward his wife; all of which defendant denies.

Wishing to preserve the dignity of this honorable court, we limit comment.

The petition, prima facie, states sufficient facts, if true, to warrant the court granting a divorce.

Defendant says that plaintiff’s evidence is insufficient, and does not support tho judgment of the trial court granting plaintiff a divorce.

The testimony is conflicting, much of it incompetent, nearly all of it repeated from two to five times, composing nearly 100 pages of typewritten matter, all of which ¡we have read and reread.

After a very careful study of the entire record in the case, we are unwilling to say that plaintiff has failed to establish or prove tlie allegations of his petition.

In the case of Stovall v. Stovall, 29 Okla. 125, 116 Pac. 791, this court held:

“Where, in an action for divorce on the ground of cruelty, the evidence is conflicting as to the facts and the faifft, but there is sufficient evidence to sustain the decree of the trial court, the same will not be disturbed on appeal.”

We are not unmindful that the trial judge was, or should have been, conversant with all the facts and circumstances developed and surrounding the divorce proceedings; he had the witnesses before him and was in a much better position to pass on their *162 credibility than is this court. For these reasons, we cannot say or hold that the trial court erred in granting plaintiff a divorce. In view of our law which permits the court to grant a divorce to either of the parties to the action, the judgment of the court granting plaintiff a divorce from the defendant will be sustained.

Property Settlement.

The record shows that on February 28,1929, the court rendered judgment granting plaintiff a divorce and on February 28, the court rendered a supplemental judgment adjudicating the property rights and decreed the care and custody of the children to the plaintiff.

The court in his findings of fact enumates and .describes all of the property of plaintiff and defendant, consisting of many X>ieces of town and farm property, and concludes his findings of facts with the following statement:

“And that said property was acquired by the industry and out of the earnings of the plaintiff as an attorney at law.”

With the above statement we cannot agree; neither is it borne out by the evidence.

Time and space will not permit this court to discuss in detail the property rights of these litigants. We think the evidence of jffaintiff and defendant and of the witnesses sworn to testify clearly shows that all the property owned by plaintiff and defendant, except two pieces which we will notice hereafter, is the joint accumulation of both parties since their marriage. The evidence does show that at the time of the marriage the plaintiff had no business or property of any kind. The evidence does show that the defendant was reared, educated, and married in the state of Georgia: that her people are wealthy and highly respected. The evidence further shows that when plaintiff and defendant were married, defendant’s father bought all the furniture and household goods with which these parties began housekeeping; and the home was well furnished. The evidence shows that plaintiff had title to or interest in a one-half acre tract of land in Georgia of but little or no value; that he borrowed $200 from his mother-in-law and deeded her the land as security for the loan. Plaintiff in his testimony (O.-M. 219) said he sold the land, the one-half acre, for $60 and that the $200 was never paid. The evidence further shows that at the time of defendant’s marriage she was teaching school; that she continued to teach for some time after marriage; that she turned all of her wages over to the plaintiff at the close of each month. The record clearly shows that at the time of the marriage, plaintiff had no properly or business; that the money or property received from defendant’s people and what she earned by teaching school enabled them to come to Oklahoma. The record shows that soon after plaintiff and defendant moved to Oklahoma, defendant’s people purchased and deeded to the defendant a piece of property in Muskogee, Okla., which property is known and referred to as the “24th St. property” and described by the court as: “South % of lots 1 and 2 and all of lots 4, 5 and 6 in block 1, Love’s addition to the city of Muskogee, Okla.”. Defendant testifies that the 24th street property was deeded to her hy her people to enable her to get a home, and in time a five-room house was built on said property. The court awarded said property to the defendant as part of the joint accumulations since marriage. The evidence nowhere tends to support such a conclusion.

It is our opinion, from a careful reading of the entire record in this case, the 24th street property set off to the defendant by the court is not a part of plaintiff’s and defendant’s joint accumulation since marriage nor is it property earned by the plaintiff. Upon the other hand, the record is clear and convincing that said property was purchased and deeded to defendant by her people. It is the opinion of this court, and we so hold, that said 24th street property is not a part of the joint accumulations of plaintiff and defendant since marriage, but is the separate and individual property of defendant. Plaintiff could have no right in or to said property except through his matrimonial relations with his wife, and when he divorced her he thereby forfeited all his interest in her separate property.

Section 6607, C. O. S. .1921, provides:

“The husband must support himself and his wife out of his property or by his labor. The wife must support the husband, when he has not deserted her, out of her separate property, when he has no separate property and he is unable from infirmity to support himself.”

Section 6608, O. O- S. 1921, provides:

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 38, 284 P. 5, 141 Okla. 160, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-v-bruce-okla-1930.