Christopher v. Christopher

110 S.E.2d 503, 144 W. Va. 663, 1959 W. Va. LEXIS 49
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1959
Docket11058
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 110 S.E.2d 503 (Christopher v. Christopher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher v. Christopher, 110 S.E.2d 503, 144 W. Va. 663, 1959 W. Va. LEXIS 49 (W. Va. 1959).

Opinion

Given, President :

Plaintiff, Elizabeth Pearl Christopher, instituted her suit for separate maintenance against Everett Grant Christopher, in the Circuit Court of Preston County, alleging that the separation occurred on the eleventh day of February, 1958, as the result of cruel and inhuman treatment of plaintiff by her husband, and praying custody of the one child born to their marriage, August 31, 1955, Sharon Yvonne Christopher. Defendant filed an answer denying any cruel or inhuman treatment and alleging that plaintiff deserted their home without just cause or provocation. After receiving testimony offered by the parties, the trial court found and decreed separate maintenance to the wife, granted her custody of the child, and the monthly sum of $140.00 for her separate maintenance and for support of the child.

The bill of complaint, after alleging cruel and inhuman treatment in general terms, specifically alleged that on the “1st day of February, 1958, in the parties’ residence *665 in Kingwood, West Virginia, the Defendant violently and without provocation assaulted and struck your Plaintiff on and about her head and body, and knocked your Plaintiff against an electric range and refrigerator, and onto the floor, and that your Plaintiff received, at the hands of the said Defendant, bruises on or about her head, arms and other parts of her body; that at the time and place aforesaid, the Defendant in the presence of your Plaintiff used vile and obscene language, and that your Plaintiff was then and there forced to run from the parties’ said home and seek the assistance of a neighbor, and that it was thereafter necessary, in order to quiet the Defendant and make it safe for your Plaintiff to return to her home, to call the assistance of law enforcement officers * *

The only evidence tending, in any appreciable degree, to support the charge of cruelty, which we need consider, relates to the incident of February 1, 1958. The wife’s version of that incident is as follows: “I was sitting at the table feeding Sharon and geting her ready for bed. While I was feeding her Grant was getting ready for bed and he wanted the baby to kiss him goodnight and she did not want him to and he went to the basement and got the yardstick and when he came back from the basement he took Sharon out of my arms and hit her twice against the legs with the yardstick and I broke the yardstick and threw it in the sink and when I came back from the sink Sharon was still on the table and I was shoved against the refrigerator and onto the floor and shoved against the stove and wall * * She further testified to the effect that, as a result of the incident, she suffered numerous bruises about the head, face and other parts of her body.

Within a few minutes after the incident the wife went to the home of a neighbor and called for members of the State Department of Public Safety. In response to the call two members of that department came to the home of the Christophers, talked with them, but made no arrest.

*666 On the following morning plaintiff, with the child, attended Sunday School and church. On the following Monday she visited the office of her family physician, who made a thorough physical examination of her, and on the following Tuesday she consulted an attorney about her difficulties with the defendant, and was advised by the attorney to go back home and “try to iron things out”. The parties continued to reside in the home, without any further controversy, until February 11, 1958, when she left, delivering to the defendant the keys to the automobile used by her in moving, advising him that she and the child had left the home. Since leaving, she and the child have resided in the home of the mother of the plaintiff.

The wife further testified to the effect that she and her husband had previously separated “at least two times”, but that the last separation before February 11, 1958, was five years anyway”; that the defendant had a “high temper”, and used vulgar and profane language in the presence of the child; and that her extreme nervousness was due to the ill treatment by defendant. When asked if defendant often corrected the child or punished the child, she replied: “He never punished her too much or corrected her too much. Sharon is only two and a half years old and you do not correct a child that age too much”.

Doctor Davis, the family physician who examined plaintiff on Monday after the incident of February 1, 1958, testified to the effect that plaintiff was then suffering from “multiple small abrasions of the head and face and both wrists”, and from “acute anxiety syndrome”, and explained that acute anxiety syndrome was the result of “a group of symptoms of extreme apprehension and nervousness with tremor and depression associated with wanting to cry and being emotionally upset”. He also testified to the effect that the abrasions were superficial and that plaintiff had suffered from nervousness prior to the incident of February 1, 1958, *667 but for reasons not connected with difficulties with defendant.

The mother of plaintiff, Pearl Ringer, testified to the effect that she noticed the extreme nervousness of plaintiff for “quite a while because I had reason to be there quite often, long before the time I had my arm broken”. Also, that she visited the plaintiff on Monday, February 3, after the incident of February 1, 1958, and observed “a knot on her head and a mark on her arm and also on her legs blue spots”, and “black and blue marks on her face”.

Robert Hale and Ross Teets testified to the effect that plaintiff was a fit and proper person to' have custody of the child. John E. Coleman, one of the troopers who responded to the call made by the wife on the evening of February 1,1958, stated that when he arrived at the home plaintiff had been “crying and her face was red”, and that she “seemed to be upset”; that he and the other trooper went into the home, and talked with Mr. and Mrs. Christopher; that defendant was not drunk, but had been drinking; and that no warrant was obtained and no arrest made.

Defendant’s version of the incident of February 1, 1958, is as follows: “Approximately nine or ten o’clock when she got the baby ready for bed I walked over to pick the baby up ,to kiss her goodnight and the baby wras sleepy and tired and slapped me and I said she should not do that and she did it again and I picked the baby up and picked up the yardstick and struck her slightly on the leg, tapped her lightly, I did not hurt her, to correct her for it, and when I did so ‘Libby’ went in a state of anger stating I should not have did what I did, that I did not have sense enough to correct the child, and made quite an argument about it, and I said that I was correcting the child and I did not bother her when she corrected the child and she kept on that I did not have sense enough to correct her and should not be allowed to correct her and I asked her again to go on and be quiet that I did not want to hear any more about it *668

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Related

Reese v. Reese
161 S.E.2d 92 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1968)
Gallaher v. Gallaher
128 S.E.2d 464 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.E.2d 503, 144 W. Va. 663, 1959 W. Va. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christopher-v-christopher-wva-1959.