Cantwell v. Cantwell

217 S.W.2d 450, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 882
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1948
DocketNo. 4597.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 217 S.W.2d 450 (Cantwell v. Cantwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cantwell v. Cantwell, 217 S.W.2d 450, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 882 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

SUTTON, Justice.

This is an appeal from the 65th District Court of Dallas County. The suit is one for divorce and the custody of two minor daughters between the ages of one and five years. The suit was brought by the wife, Ann Perfect Cantwell, against the husband, Thomas B. Cantwell. The trial was to the Court and judgment for divorce. The custody of the children was awarded the mother and provision made for a contribution of $40.00 per month by the father. From that judgment the defendant appeals.

The ground for divorce was “a course of harsh, tyrannical conduct” alleged to be insupportable. Since there are no questions raised on the pleadings we will regard them as sufficient to present the issues on this appeal.

*451 The defendant has two points. The first is the court erred in granting a divorce on the grounds pleaded because the evidence was insufficient to authorize it. The second, the court erred in overruling defendant’s •motion and application for a stay of the proceedings during the pendency of an action between the parties pending in New York State.

We will review the facts in detail. The parties were married at Dallas April 4, 1942, and lived together as husband and wife until October 11, 1946, when plaintiff left their home in Saranac Lake, N. Y., and returned to Dallas with their two little daughters. The defendant was a commissioned officer in the service of the country at the time of their marriage. He was a native of Saranac Lake.

On direct examination plaintiff was asked this question: “Now, what was the reasons for your separation ?” She answered: “In-law* interference and complete domination, and I had no more trust in him, and he refused to discuss matters with me as 'a husband should do with 'his wife.” On cross-examination she was asked: “Did you leave Mr. Cantwell, on October 11, 1946, because of any difficulty you people had while you were at Dallas, Texas?” Answer: “No, I left him because of the conditions there, and because we were not happy, and because I did riot think it was best for the children.”

We shall now undertake to supply all the explanations of those answers from the testimony of the plaintiff on both direct and •cross-examination, whether responsive or not, giving also that which antedates their removal to Saranac Lake, for whatever it may be worth in shedding any light on the matters transpiring there:

“Did you manage the household affairs with prudence and economy? As much as I was able. I had no money to manage the household affairs up in Saranac, but in Georgia I did the best I could.” (The parties while in the Army lived in-- Georgia and so far as the record discloses got along well.)
“What was his reaction to the children •being girls ?
“Well, he had his heart set on boys both times, and he was very disappointed, and he felt all along, and has felt that girls are a liability, and he showed his disappointment to me and made me very unhappy, of course, I couldn’t help that they weren’t boys.
“Did that cause you much grief and anxiety because of his attitude?
“Yes, it did.
“You think that was sort of an excessive attitude for him to take?
“Yes, I do, as long as they were normal.”

The defendant worked in the legal department at the Veterans’ Administration in Dallas for some four months. There is some indication his work was confidential, but whatever it was the plaintiff-said:

“Well, he didn’t tell me for abóut a •month where he was working, or how I could get in touch with him in case I should like to call him in an emergency and I ask him repeatedly and he would give such answers as ‘I am going out to see a man about a dog’ or he’d say he was going to take a break, and then one day it hailed in Dallas and that night the paper said the— that it hailed in Dallas every place but Love Field, and so, I deduced that he must be working with the Veterans’ Administration at Love Field, because the car came in with no hail marks.”

About May 1, 1946, defendant told plaintiff they were going to leave for New York; that she would pack everything and they would go in the car; “you will make a clean sweep” she quoted him as saying: “You have married out of your family and I 'have not married your family, and you will forget Texas.”

The younger baby was about three months old and plaintiff was not willing to make the trip in the car with the baby. Defendant went on and plaintiff followed by plane about June first. After she arrived in Saranac Lake they lived in a cottage owned by defendant’s father about one-half block from the parents. When asked whether she bought the groceries she replied: “No, I didn’t. My mother-in-law bought most of the groceries, and I had no money to run the house on at all. Nor did *452 I get to choose the furniture or anything like that.” (There is a -further explanation about the furniture later.) S'he said during the time she lived with the defendant she had about two suits, “and about maybe three dresses in four years.”

W-ith reference to spending money she said: “He gave me about $10.00 the day before his birthday and about $10.00 — I had a -little -high school girl that helped -occasionally for part time and one week she was absent -and he gave me the $10.00 he would have given her and told me so and then he gave -me two dollars the day he left for this pleasure trip, this college reunion, and I left that because I didn’t figure it would buy much. I didn’t have money lots of times to buy stamps and he would say, T just haven’t got it’ ” when she would ask him for it.

On -cross-examination she explained further that the husband and mother-in-law picked out the living room suite for the cottage and -the rest of the furniture was in there; that she did -not leave because of anything ' that happened in Dallas but because of the -conditions at Saranac, as heretofore quoted, and explained “Well, of course, this dominating mother-in-law has been in the picture since 10 -days after we were married. You see, she came to -Columbus (Ga.) 10 days after we were married. We were living in one room and she stayed three weeks and went through my letters and trunks and criticised everything I did, every meal I cooked.”

The criticisms are not detailed. When asked if he treated the children as his children she replied:

“Well, he was beginning to — for instance she would, you know, a -child will eat a piece of bread and leave the top crust, if she should -care to do that, he would begin to give 'her a lecture on the starving children of Europe, and s-he was just 3.
“He was not mean to these children ?
“He was beginning to cow -her so -she was actually afraid. Well, -one time she broke a -little doll and she said, ‘Oh mother, -help me fix it before daddy gets home’ * * *.
“Does he want more -children ?
“'He wanted a boy.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W.2d 450, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantwell-v-cantwell-texapp-1948.