Chubb v. Chubb

298 N.W. 111, 297 Mich. 501, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 656
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1941
DocketDocket No. 3, Calendar No. 40,442.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 298 N.W. 111 (Chubb v. Chubb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chubb v. Chubb, 298 N.W. 111, 297 Mich. 501, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 656 (Mich. 1941).

Opinions

Plaintiff filed her bill for divorce asking alimony and division of property interests. Defendant filed cross bill asking that a decree of divorce be granted to him. The trial court dismissed plaintiff's bill, awarded defendant a decree of divorce, and allowed plaintiff the sum of $1,500 in lieu of all dower and property rights and rights of support and maintenance. Plaintiff appealed, and defendant filed a cross appeal.

The printed record of approximately 400 pages is largely a mass of contradictory testimony of the parties themselves. Each charged the other with outbursts of temper, vindictiveness, profanity, and physical assaults.

At the time of their marriage, defendant was 57 years of age and plaintiff was 32. Each had been previously married. Plaintiff had a daughter, aged 10, and defendant had a son 21 years old. Much of the trouble apparently started over the fact that defendant's son lived with the parties. Plaintiff accused him of not paying her the proper respect, and ordered him out of the house. Defendant remonstrated, and recalled that it had been agreed before their marriage that his son was to live with them. Defendant had been a good father to his son, who had lost his mother by death when he was a small child, and there seems to have been no reasonable grounds for plaintiff's attitude with regard to the boy. Finally, the son said that, if he had a short time to make arrangements, he would leave — which he did. Plaintiff's daughter continued to live in the home of the parties, and the evidence showed that defendant was unusually kind to her and solicitous about her welfare and school activities. *Page 504

In her claims that she was subjected to abuse and physical violence, plaintiff is unsupported by any direct evidence of her witnesses. Her mother testified that, when plaintiff made a certain visit to her, she exhibited marks on her body which she said were the result of having been beaten by defendant. A physician also testified as to having examined plaintiff, during the period the parties were living together, and having found that she had a laceration on her forehead and contusions on the left side of her face, her left arm, and her left thigh. Plaintiff claims this was a result of violence inflicted upon her by defendant. Defendant gives as an explanation of these bruises that he had been engaged in woodworking in his basement, making some small swing doors to go on the kitchen sink at his farm; that plaintiff, in one of her spells of pugnacity, ran down into the basement and grasped the frames for the panels of the doors, upon which defendant was working, and after striking him with the frames and biting his arm, she tried, in her vindictiveness, to push the panels through the furnace door in order to destroy them; that defendant, in trying to rescue the panels, shoved her to one side, and that as a result thereof she fell against the workbench and suffered these bruises, which were really of no consequence. In addition to the foregoing testimony, on her behalf there was introduced the evidence of plaintiff's sister and brother-in-law, who testified that, although the parties seemed to be very happy at first, defendant began to speak less and less to his wife in their company and finally ignored her entirely.

Defendant's testimony that he was often assaulted by plaintiff is supported by numerous, apparently disinterested witnesses who testified that they saw plaintiff strike defendant, tear at his hair, and bite *Page 505 his arm, through the windows of the home where the parties were living. Photographs were introduced in evidence on the part of plaintiff for the purpose of showing that such witnesses could not have seen these incidents through the window from the place where they said they were viewing them. Upon careful examination, these photographs are not persuasive as affecting the credibility of such witnesses.

Much testimony was introduced that plaintiff had told various persons, including delivery men, neighbors, and many members of the community, that defendant was too old for her, and was no good as a man, and that she married him for what she could get out of him. There was also considerable testimony that plaintiff referred to defendant by other derogatory, profane, and abusive terms.

Defendant's son testified that at one time when he and his girl friend and his father were at defendant's farm, plaintiff came out and said to them: "You and your father would like it if I named your girl friend as a co-respondent in my divorce suit." Plaintiff admitted on cross-examination that what she said to them was that the girl "would feel very foolish if I ever named her." There appears no reason whatever for such a threat, or any grounds upon which any intimation of improper conduct on the part of the girl could be substantiated; and one must conclude that it was a vicious, insulting, and vindictive threat, calculated to anger and humiliate all of the parties toward whom it was directed.

Plaintiff made frequent efforts to have defendant execute conveyances, change insurance policies and bank accounts, with the design of receiving all of the defendant's property at his death, to the exclusion of his son. As previously remarked, plaintiff was supported by no witnesses who testified to any *Page 506 of the many and repeated assaults which she claims defendant made upon her. It seems significant that the one person who could substantiate the claims, made by plaintiff, was her daughter, who was living with the parties during this whole period, but who was never called as a witness.

The trial court, in its opinion, said:

"The evidence is overwhelming, coming from various storekeepers, a milk delivery man, and others in the vicinity, that plaintiff had frequently indulged in profanity and violent language and had frequently called and at other times referred to defendant in vicious, vile and insulting terms. The evidence establishes that plaintiff had a mania for telling her troubles, real or imaginary, to anyone who would listen and then complained because, as she expressed it, the people of the city or at least of her community were all so against her that she suggested to defendant that they move elsewhere."

While we are not restricted by the findings of the circuit court, a divorce case on appeal being heard de novo, especial consideration is given to such findings, so largely based upon the credibility of the witnesses, and the reviewing court ought not to reverse the determination of the trial court in such a case, unless convinced that it must have reached a different conclusion had it occupied the position of the lower court, under like circumstances. Brookhouse v. Brookhouse, 286 Mich. 151; Stratmann v. Stratmann, 287 Mich. 94; Westgate v.Westgate, 291 Mich. 18.

Plaintiff's counsel contends that, because defendant was a strong, healthy man and plaintiff was a frail woman, it was absurd and unreasonable for the trial court to find that plaintiff was guilty of the assaults upon defendant as claimed by him. If the facts were as the trial court concluded, it can be *Page 507 said that it is not the first time in the history of human relations that a smaller and weaker person has wreaked a tyrannous, vituperative, vengeful, and cruel course of conduct upon a spouse with the impunity from a retaliation of violence that civilization may be said to prescribe in such situations.

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Bluebook (online)
298 N.W. 111, 297 Mich. 501, 1941 Mich. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chubb-v-chubb-mich-1941.