Cole v. Cole

299 S.W. 924
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1927
DocketNo. 7837.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 299 S.W. 924 (Cole v. Cole) 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
Cole v. Cole, 299 S.W. 924 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

L. Y. Cole and wife, Ada Si-mons Cole, were married on August 12, 1923. After living together for nearly three years, the husband left the wife, and afterwards brought this action for divorce. The wife contested the suit, and in turn urged a-cross-action, in which she sought a divorce and a property settlement, as well as attorney’s *925 fees. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of tlie husband against the wife, who has appealed.

At the time of their marriage appellee and appellant were, respectively, 69 and 52 years of age. Appellant owned a furnished residence in Harlingen, where appellee had recently purchased, entirely on credit, and was operating, a grocery business. Appellant set about, at once to help her husband in his affairs. She contributed the use of her own home, in which they resided until appellee left her. She at once loaned appellee $842— all the money she then had — for his use in the grocery business, and later on loaned him $755 more. Subsequently appellee repaid these loans. She spent her days as a regular “hand” at the store, helping him run the grocery business and was concededly of great value in building up that business. Moreover, she did her own housework, including the cooking and washing, except on unusual occasions when they had the latter done by hired help. Their daily life was simple and happy. Every morning, while the husband bathed, shaved, and dressed, she prepared a hot breakfast for him. After breakfast, she washed the dishes, set the home in order, and by 8 or 8:30 was at the store, where she worked through the remainder of the day.' At noon, while her husband partook of a hot lunch at a near-by eating house, she remained on duty at the store, getting a cold lunch out of stock. When evening came, and the day’s work at the store was over, they elo'sed the store and walked home, where she prepared a hot evening meal for him. He liked hot meals, particularly hot biscuits, and she saw to it that he always had them. After the evening meal, she cleaned up the kitchen and washed the dishes, which he sometimes dried for her. .Then for a while they sat about the house in pleasant companionship. In due course they joined in evening worship at the family altar they had erected, and then retired for the night. This was the simple and wholesome routine of their daily lives, as related by him and confirmed by her. On Sundays they worshipped together at his church. He was a very religious man, and she herself had been a member of the church ever since she reached the age of 16. So they lived quite happily together for more than two years.

Appellant was an Ohio woman, while ap-pellee was a southern man. Appellant had an unsettled interest in an estate in Ohio. Two years or more after the marriage it became necessary for her to go to that state in connection with her property affairs there. She remained there for several months, during which they corresponded satisfactorily to each other, and then returned home. Then appeared the first cloud upon their marital horizon, in the form of an unexpressed indifference which appellee observed in appellant’s attitude towards him. Their relations were not thereby seriously affected, however; the routine of their lives seems not to have been materially disturbed.

Shortly afterwards appellee sold the grocery business, and joined appellant in a visit to her married daughter in Ohio. They went up with the purpose of making a several weeks’ visit, but matters did not go to suit appellee, who insisted upon returning home at once, and they did return shortly after-wards. Small quarrels ensued, which ap-pellee took seriously, and so he left appellant, subsequently filing this suit for divorce.

It is difficult to point out and seize upon the causes relied upon by appellee as grounds for his complaint. He alleged no specific grounds, or, rather, he set out no specific facts upon which he based his very general charge of excesses, cruel treatment, and outrages which he considered as rendering insupportable their further living together. In neither his pleadings nor his evidence did he seek to base his complaint upon any ground except that in section 1 of article 4629 K. S. 1925, which provides that a divorce may be granted “where either party is guilty of excesses, cruel treatment or outrages toward the other, if such ill treatment is of such a nature as to render their living together insupportable.”

But, giving full force and intendment to ap-pellee’s testimony, and disregarding all evidence in conflict therewith, his claims of objectionable conduct upon the part of appellant amount to no more than these incidents:

First. While upon their visit to appellant’s daughter in Ohio, appellee appeared not to partake very heartily of the food supplied in the daughter’s home,' although admitting it was bountiful and satisfactory to the daughter and her family, as well as his wife. It is inferable from the record that his objection rested largely upon the absence of hot biscuits from the meals, although the evidence tends strongly to show that appellant, knowing appellee’s penchant for these concededly delightful adjuncts to a well-rounded meal, went into the kitchen, and herself cooked hot biscuits for him on numerous occasions. But appellee testified that at the dining table on the second day of the’ visit in the daughter’s household the daughter said to his wife, in his presence, “Ma, what shall I cook for Dad? He doesn’t seem to' eat what we have,” to which appellant replied, “Just cook whatever you want to, and, if he don’t eat it, let him do without.” Appellee “let that go,” but later in the day told appellant he wanted to go home; that he “was not used to that kind of living.” Next day, again at the dining table, appellant told her daughter that appellee wanted to go home, but that she was not ready to go. .Then, according to appellee, “the daughter said, T would not go until I got ready. It don’t make any difference what he says.’ I got up and went to the door, and *926 said, ‘Bessie, don’t come between me and your mother, pleáse. You know bow it is. I want to go home, and you know how you would feel if you wanted to go home,’ and she said, T will say what I God damn please to my mother, and.it is none of your business, by God!’ Mrs. Cole was there at that time and present at that time when her daughter said that to her. Those words were said to me. When I said that to her, that is the reply she made to me. Mrs. Oole did not make any reply. I went back in the room, went back some bit in there, kind of in the back room. I and Mrs. Oole returned home after that.” This entire incident, or at least appellee’s description of the language and interpretation of it, were flatly contradicted by the testimony of appellant and her daughter.

Second. While upon this visit in Ohio ap-pellee and appellant went with the daughter and her husband to a service held by some sort of religious cult — “spiritualists,” according to appellee — at which certain dark and mysterious seances occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
299 S.W. 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-cole-texapp-1927.