C v. C

474 S.W.2d 41
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1971
DocketNo. 33666
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 474 S.W.2d 41 (C v. C) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C v. C, 474 S.W.2d 41 (Mo. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

WOLFE, Judge.

This is an action for divorce brought by plaintiff-appellant, the husband of defendant-respondent. Defendant filed a cross bill and in another count sought custody of the children of the marriage in the event no divorce was granted. The court denied a divorce on the petition and on the cross [42]*42bill but awarded custody to the defendant-respondent wife. The husband appellant asserts that the court erred in refusing to grant him a divorce and awarding custody of the children to his wife.

The evidence was that the parties were married on August 22, 1953. They were finally separated February 7, 1967. There were six children born of the marriage, ranging in age from a son thirteen years old and five daughters from the ages of twelve to two years. The hearing on the case started April 11, 1968, and continued intermittently until December 20, 1968. On July 30, 1969, the decree from which this appeal is taken was entered. The transcript before us consists of approximately 1500 pages and in addition there are numerous exhibits.

The evidence discloses the following facts. The plaintiff husband is a physician who has now a large and lucrative practice. The parties lived in St. Louis when they were first married and they later moved to Buffalo, New York, where the plaintiff interned. From there they moved to Jackson, Mississippi, where he was with the Public Health Service for two and one-half years. They then moved to Chicago where they resided for three and one-half years. Since the year 1962 they have lived in St. Louis. The home in which they lived was well appointed and in a good neighborhood.

The marriage of the parties was discordant almost from its inception but it became more so when they moved to Jackson, Mississippi, where the husband worked with the Public Health Service. There the defendant wife became critical of him and bragged about her sexual escapades with previous boy friends. At times she struck him and spit in his face. At one time she struck him with such force that she broke a metacarpal bone in her hand. She dug her nails in his wrist. She tried to kick him in the groin. She constantly threatened him with divorce and consulted a lawyer in Jackson, Mississippi. This was the first time she consulted a lawyer, but he was just the first of eight different lawyers she consulted at various times. She stated that her husband hit her when they were living in Jackson. He left the Public Health Service by reason of a disability diagnosed as angina pectoris and was retired at a sixty per cent disability because of this condition.

Moving from there to Chicago they bought a home and it required some finishing which they both engaged in doing with the assistance of the plaintiff’s father who went to Chicago to help them. They then moved to St. Louis and the plaintiff set up an office in St. Louis County and one in Belleville. The wife helped him by answering the phone which had an extension to the home. She kept books for him and made out his income tax return. She ran the household and took the phone calls for her husband when his office was not attended. She had household help one or two days a week. She claimed that her husband beat her and that she had bruises on her arms and legs. He asserted that all he did was slap her when she spit in his face. She claimed that her husband threw a lamp at her. She screamed that she had grounds for divorce and ran from the house to a neighbor’s where she called the police. She took the children from her house to her parents’ home and she withdrew funds from a joint bank account. She refused admission of her husband to the house and when he tried to open the door it was locked by a chain to the molding on the inside and he pushed it and the molding came loose and the door opened. At this point she called her brother-in-law and he threatened to beat the husband and she called the police. There were no arrests and she filed suit for divorce. A short time after she called her husband by phone and said she had the “nesting instinct” and wanted to come home. She then came back with the children.

The defendant wife started taking Dexa-myl which is a habit forming drug combining a barbiturate and an amphetamine. It [43]*43can be purchased only on prescription. The barbiturate causes stimulation, elation and euphoria which is followed by depression. In October of 1966 she asked him for a prescription for the drug, but he refused to write one for her stating that the last thing she needed was a stimulant. She secured the drug by forging her husband’s name on the prescription blanks making out the prescription to other people and then getting them filled herself at different drugstores. She admitted forging the prescriptions and claimed she started taking the drug to reduce her weight, but increased the dosage prescribed as she continued to take it. The drug came in bottles of one hundred tablets and the plaintiff found as many as forty-seven tablets in her purse at one time.

The husband removed the throttle link from the car defendant drove so that it was inoperative after she had run into something while riding with the children and they all had cuts. In January, 1967, the plaintiff stated that his wife was absenting herself from home and coming in at very late hours with the smell of alcohol on her breath. He noticed her car parked in front of a night club. Thereafter he employed an investigator. It was discovered that the defendant was frequently in the company of a part-time musician. On February 7, the plaintiff told his wife he was going on a trip to New York. There was some doubt about flights to New York that day because of fog over New York City and the defendant wife telephoned the airport several times to find out if the flight east had been cancelled. When she was assured that it was not cancelled, she telephoned her paramour and asked him to come to the house. She assured him that the children would all be asleep and that her husband was en route to New York.

She had heavily drugged the six children with a sedative so that she would be undisturbed during her visit with the musician. While she was there with her visitor her husband came in with the investigator and a photographer. That brought to light the fact that she and her paramour had been dining together at various places and had sexual intercourse in an apartment available to them on three occasions and once on a trip into the country. She was taken from the home that night by the investigator to a motel and given some money. The children were so heavily drugged that the father had difficulty in awakening them.

Thereafter he sued for divorce and asked his wife to come to his lawyer’s office. She stated that she was coerced into allowing her husband to obtain an uncontested divorce. This was denied by the husband and his lawyer. A decree was granted the husband but it was set aside and most of the evidence set out above was submitted in the trial that followed. In the interim between the first trial of divorce and the following hearings, she would visit the children and attempt to spend the night at the house. She claimed that her husband had intercourse with her. She said their arguments always ended with her husband “beating” her but she inadvertently mentioned exchanging blows. Their fights seemed to be centered on the husband’s efforts to get her to leave the house after he arrived home from work. At one time she said the so-called beating occurred after the husband had been operated on for a herniated intervertebral disc and was wearing a back brace. One incident resulted in her getting a cut lip.

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Related

Richardson v. Richardson
524 S.W.2d 149 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1975)
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479 S.W.2d 501 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
474 S.W.2d 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-v-c-moctapp-1971.