Claude v. Claude

174 P.2d 179, 180 Or. 62, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 190
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 174 P.2d 179 (Claude v. Claude) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claude v. Claude, 174 P.2d 179, 180 Or. 62, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 190 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This is a divorce suit in which both husband and wife seek a dissolution of the marriage contract. The Circuit Court found both parties at fault, and, applying the “clean hands” doctrine, declined to grant relief to either. Both parties have appealed from the decree of dismissal.

In her complaint the wife charges her husband with cruel and inhuman treatment, consisting, among other things, of physical assaults, threats to do her bodily harm, cursing and reviling her, accusing her of having affairs with other men, and refusing to participate with her in the social and community life of Ontario, the city near which their home is located. The husband, by his answer and cross-complaint, denies her accusations of misconduct, and charges his wife with extravagance, neglect of her home, and a love affair with another man.

As to the wife’s charges the Circuit Court found that for several years “the husband has pursued a course of cruel treatment of the wife by using profane and abusive language to the wife in the presence of their children and others, often threatening to do her bodily harm and employing physical force upon and against the wife and subjecting her to physical violence, all in an apparent effort to compel the wife *65 to conform in all ways to the wishes and ideas of the husband.”

The court further found “that during the latter part of July or the first part of August, 1944, the parties quarreled and the husband again visited physical violence upon the wife”.

Respecting the alleged misconduct of the wife the court found:

“That for several months prior to January, 1944, and continuing until their final separation in July or August, 1944, the wife has, with the exception of about two months immediately after March 13th, 1944, continuously associated with a man by the name of Bernard Anderson in such a manner and to such an extent that her name has been linked with that of the said Anderson in common gossip and in the vicinity of Ontario, Oregon, and that, while there is no direct evidence of improper relations between the wife and the said Anderson, yet the conduct of the wife has been such in this regard as to incite such gossip and has been unbefitting a wife and mother, and has caused the husband and older children great embarrassment and humiliation. ’ ’

The parties were married at Fresno, California, on February 19, 1924. Mrs. Claude was then fourteen years of age and her husband twenty-nine. They have four children — Louise, a daughter, twenty years of age, and, as counsel for the plaintiff inform us, married since the trial of this case; Eugene, a son, seventeen years of age; Colleen, a daughter, eight years of age; and Jacquolyn, a daughter, six years of age. For a number of years prior to their marriage the defendant had engaged in the sheep business, either on his own account or as an employee of others, and their married life began, and most of it has been spent, on a *66 sheep ranch in Malheur County. At the time of their marriage the defendant was worth, according to his own testimony, $8,000.00; according to hers, less than $1,000.00. Through hard work and sacrifice their affairs prospered to such an extent that today their holdings, consisting of livestock, lands, farm equipment, a house in Ontario, their home in the vicinity of Ontario, cash in bank, bonds, and other property, are worth probably in excess of $100,000.00. The defendant’s estimate is between $60,000.00 and $70,000.00; the plaintiff’s $150,000.00. The trial court found the value to be between $50,000.00 and $100,000.00.

Mrs. Claude worked with her husband in the lambing camps, the sheep camps, and on the ranches. In this, as the evidence indicates, she did no more than was customary among women in her station in life in the country in which she lived. Her husband, however, seems to have recognized that her labors had contributed substantially to his success, for, on June 3, 1935, he entered into a partnership agreement with her in which he acknowledged her ownership of a one-third interest in the property devoted to their livestock and farming business. Thereafter they transacted their business under the firm name of “Claude & Claude”, and in that name kept bank accounts upon which they both were authorized to draw checks.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude appear not to have had any serious domestic difficulties until after 1938 when they acquired a place near Ontario, consisting of a comfortable house and sixty-eight acres of land, which is referred to in the testimony as the “ranch home”. This was their home until their final separation. Mrs. Claude desired, and, we may say, was entitled to enjoy a measure of social life — something she had not had in the sheep camps of Malheur County — and to this *67 end she joined a number of social and fraternal organizations in Ontario. Also, she was active as a member of the War Chest Committee for Malheur County and in blood donor work. In these latter activities she became associated with Bernard Anderson, the man referred to in the Circuit Court’s findings above quoted.

In January, 1944, after a quarrel, Mrs. Claude left home and went to Boise, Idaho, taking her three daughters with her. On January 28, 1944, the defendant filed suit for divorce, alleging, among other things, his wife’s wrongful association with an unnamed Ontario man, evidently Anderson, and thereafter Mrs. Claude filed a cross-complaint alleging various acts of cruel and inhuman treatment. After prolonged negotiations between the parties and their attorneys they agreed to compose their differences, and, under date of March 13, 1944, entered into a written agreement for the settlement of their property rights. (In the present suit the plaintiff seeks specific performance of this agreement, and the defendant asks to have it set aside on the ground that its execution was procured by the fraud of the plaintiff.) The parties thereupon resumed marital relations, although the then pending divorce suit was not dismissed until May 12, 1944, the order of dismissal being entered pursuant to a written motion therefor signed by the parties and their attorneys and filed in court on May 10, 1944.

Not many weeks after their reconciliation the parties were quarreling again, the plaintiff having renewed her association with Anderson. She informed her husband that they could no longer live together and finally, on August 2, 1944, filed the present suit.

*68 Before discussing the evidence we will dispose of a contention of the defendant that plaintiff condoned the wrongs of which she complains by continuing to cohabit with him for three days after she filed her complaint for divorce. She denies his testimony in this regard, but it is not necessary to determine what the fact is, because in this state, under our statute, § 9-911, O. C. L. A., condonation of a marital offense, except adultery, cannot be establishéd by implication from the voluntary cohabitation of the parties after knowledge thereof, and to constitute a bar to any of the causes of divorce named in the statute except adultery the offense must have been expressly forgiven. Saville v. Saville, 103 Or. 117, 122, 203 P. 584. To the same effect see Arndt v. Arndt, 146 Or. 347, 350, 25 P. (2d) 1118, 30 P. (2d) 1.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.2d 179, 180 Or. 62, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claude-v-claude-or-1946.