Bush v. Bush

44 N.E.2d 767, 316 Ill. App. 295, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 731
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
DocketGen. No. 9,350
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 44 N.E.2d 767 (Bush v. Bush) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Bush, 44 N.E.2d 767, 316 Ill. App. 295, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 731 (Ill. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice

Riess delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant Frank Bush has appealed to this court from certain decretal orders of the circuit court of Macon co'unty, entering judgment against him for nonpayment of the amount found to be due under the terms of a decree for alimony pendente lite and granting prayer of complaint for separate maintenance, solicitor’s fees and costs to the plaintiff appellee, Augusta Bush, on final hearing of said cause.

Plaintiff appellee, Augusta Bush, had filed suit in equity in the circuit court of said county, against said defendant appellant, Frank Bush, her husband, seeking a decree for separate maintenance for herself and incompetent daughter, Esther Bush, aged 22 years, then residing with the plaintiff in the city of Decatur. The complaint in substance alleged the lawful marriage of the parties in 1908 and the subsequent birth of four children, all of whom are of age; that during the five years preceding the suit, defendant pursued a morose, hostile and wrongful course of conduct toward plaintiff; that on three specific occasions set forth in the complaint in April, May and July, 1939, the defendant struck, beat and bruised plaintiff with his fists, without reason or provocation, and on July 12, 1939, removed their household furnishings in a van without plaintiff’s previous knowledge or consent and against her will, from their home which was then located adjacent to a tavern operated by them near Decatur, to a certain dwelling house in Decatur, and thereafter lived separate and apart from plaintiff and said daughter without fault of plaintiff; that defendant paid one month’s rent of $22.50 for the newly rented dwelling house; that plaintiff’s sole income was the rental of $36 per month from property owned by her and that defendant was able-bodied and received income of $2,000 a year from the IT. S. Government for trucking mails to and from the post'office and railway stations in Decatur, and also received certain income from rentals and management of the above tavern and adjacent residence. The complaint prayed for a decree of separate maintenance for herself and incompetent daughter and for allowance of solicitor’s fees- and costs.

Defendant, in his answer, denied the acts of neglect and cruelty alleged; denied that plaintiff had done the family cooking and cared for their home or assisted in working.in the tavern as alleged and averred that she had failed and neglected so to do or perform other marital duties; that she was high-tempered and quarrelsome, had attacked and made threats to poison him and that their separation was due to her misconduct.

A verified petition for temporary alimony was also filed by plaintiff, and upon hearing of the latter on July 16, 1939, a decree was entered ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff until further order of court, the sum of $40 per month and $22.50 to cover rental of dwelling house to which they had been removed by defendant, together with $25 solicitor’s fees; the order reading for the support of plaintiff and “two” daughters — another daughter then living at home and of age was subsequently married. For default in making such payments, defendant was thereafter cited into court on two occasions to. show cause why he should not be punished for contempt of court for such failure. At the first hearing, he was found to be in arrears in the sum of $342.50 and paid same on March 13, 1940. Later, he was again found and decreed to be delinquent in the accrued sum of $320 due to November 7,1940, but was purged of wilful contempt for such failure, and on his petition therefor, the future payments of temporary alimony were reduced by the chancellor then presiding to whom the defendant had taken the cause by change of venue, to $20 per month plus amount of said rental payments of $22.50 per month, viz: $42.50. Judgment was entered for the $320 conceded to be in arrears, which defendant had asked to be remitted, this motion being denied. On December 31, 1941, the cause having been heard on its merits on December 10th and taken under advisement, a decree for separate maintenance was entered as prayed and defendant was ordered to pay $20 per month and said $22.50 dwelling house rentals being a total of $42.50 until further order of court and to pay $125 solicitor’s fees in $15 monthly instalments and costs of suit; the solicitor’s fees were to be paid to plaintiff’s counsel.

Upon appeal from said orders, defendant has assigned reversible error in entry of an order for temporary alimony, in finding lawfully due and unpaid thereunder the sum of $320 and entering judgment against defendant therefor, in the admission and exclusion of certain testimony, in overruling defendant’s motions to dismiss the suit for want of equity and in entering decree for separate maintenance and solicitor’s fees and costs.

Proof of the material allegations of plaintiff’s complaint concerning her treatment by defendant and of her own conduct prior to July 12, 1939 was offered by plaintiff and certain corroborating witnesses and was denied by defendant and his witnesses. On this sharp conflict in the testimony as to the conduct of the respective parties, as alleged or denied in the pleadings, the court found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and that the parties were living apart through no fault on the part of plaintiff; that the plaintiff had properly conducted herself as the wife of the defendant; that defendant is a strong, healthy man, well able and capable of supporting plaintiff and said daughter Esther, as prayed in petition and is now employed in gainful occupation, as recited in the evidence and decree of the lower court. The record clearly shows that the defendant moved the plaintiff to a separate house and continued to live apart from her thereafter.

Considerable testimony was heard as to the income of defendant, the several changes in title to the tavern property and the conduct, income and expenses of such business, and also concerning the $275 per month conceded to have been regularly paid to the defendant under his contract for carrying mail, and the incidental expense of procuring and operating mail trucks, which tended on behalf of defendant to show that the expenses thereof exceeded the income. There was some conflict in relation thereto by testimony of the former partner of defendant under the mail contract and some discrepancy as to certain expenditures. Among credits so claimed by the defendant was $10 per week and certain additional incidentals for his own support while maintaining himself separate and apart from his family, which exceeded in amount the $42.50 monthly allowance of the court toward the support of his family. The daughter Esther was shown to have previously been an inmate of the Lincoln State School for feeble-minded persons and was found by the chancellor to be unable to contribute to her own support and to be dependent on her parents for support and maintenance. The defendant testified concerning the removal of his family that (Abst. of Rec. 75) “I did not kick them out, I moved them out. I have not invited them back. I am not willing to move the Prells out and have my wife and daughter live with me. I do not want them around. I supported them up to now.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.E.2d 767, 316 Ill. App. 295, 1942 Ill. App. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-bush-illappct-1942.