Connelly v. Connelly

71 S.W. 1111, 98 Mo. App. 95, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 50
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 71 S.W. 1111 (Connelly v. Connelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connelly v. Connelly, 71 S.W. 1111, 98 Mo. App. 95, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 50 (Mo. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Both parties to this action pray for a divorce — plaintiff in his petition, and the defendant in her answer and cross-bill. They were married in January, 1893, and lived happily together for nine years, when Connelly became suspicious of the conduct of his wife and a Russian Jew peddler by the name of Malpe, who stayed a good deal at the home of the Connellys. Their home was on a farm eight miles from Bowling Green in Pike county, and prior to April, 1900, the peddler would occasionally stop there for dinner when [97]*97in that neighborhood. After said date he often came on Friday or Saturday and stayed until Monday, and about the beginning of 1901 he commenced to call oftener and stop longer, not remaining away, the plaintiff says, over two or three days at a time. The demeanor of Malpe and Mrs. Connelly then first attracted the attention and aroused the suspicion of the plaintiff. The peddler would frequently remain in the house when plaintiff was at work outside, and was detected by the latter observing him through the windows. When Connelly returned to the house he sometimes found his wife and Malpe alone together in the bedroom, and the two appeared to spend much time to themselves, and to be unduly familiar. One day late in July, 1901, plaintiff returned to the house unexpectedly on the pretext of getting a file, and found Malpe and his wife in the bedroom together, she standing at the open drawer of a bureau pretending to be looking for some linen for Malpe, who was near her in a posture which naturally created a suspicion as to their behavior. This episode intensified the doubts of the plaintiff and caused him to resolve to drive the Jew away. A few days later Connelly, who is part Irish, took exception to a remark of the Jew’s about the character of the Irish race, and, partly out of anger at the remark, and partly because of his previous irritation on account of the behavior of the Jew and his wife, he ordered Malpe to leave the place, and on the latter’s refusal to leave a fight followed during which Connelly thought his wife sided with Malpe. Her behavior was brought up in the course of the altercation, and the next day she declared an intention to return to her relatives in Tennessee, and asked her husband to give her three hundred dollars for that purpose. . He drove her to Bowling Green at her request, and gave her some money. WMLe in Bowling Green friends intervened, a reconciliation was effected, and the two went. home together where they [98]*98stayed a. week or so, and then took a trip to Tennessee, Connelly making the trip, Ms wife testified, to afford her the pleasure of visiting her relatives and friends. They remained in Tennessee two weeks and returned to their home.

Towards the latter part of September, the defendant’s manner caused her husband to suspect she was engaged in a correspondence with Malpe, with the result that he searched her trunk and found a letter from Malpe bidden in a bolt of goods.

We quote that letter with its broken English and bad spelling:

“Bonham, Texas, September 7, 1901.

“Mrs. Dora My Dear Friend: — I received to-day your letter, this being the first letter from you since I left. I went from B. Gr. to St. Louis the 3rd of August and staid in St. Louis until the first of September. I anxiously awaited a letter from you but none came. I am now in Texas, I opened a dry goods store in Bonham, Texas, this town is about six thousand inhabitants. I will be ready for business on the 15th of this month. You asked me concerning my family, haven’t heard from them. I dont know wen they will come. The reason you haven’t heard from me sooner I thought you not at home and I didn’t know your address, am- not mad at you, my D. I am not mad at you, I will be always your fyiehd as I have been heretofore and I will do all I can in my power to help you. Remember wat I say. I cant forged you all my lief. I swear to you and I will keep my wort only I didn’t want you to work and I want to hear from you every week also send me your picture you promised me. I send one thousand kisses for both of your babies I can’t forged. Will close write to me at once I am ordered to you for the silk waist, I will sent you a check in B. G-. bank. My address is P. Malpe, Bonham, Texas.

1 ‘ Send me your letter direct to texas from St. Louis. I am 1500 miles from St. Louis, it cost me a ticket 21.60, [99]*99I have notes on the people, tell me what to do about collecting my money. Please write soon. Will close as I am busy. It is twelve toknit. I am going to bed. Hoping to hear from you soon I remain “Your friend forever,

“I send you one thousand k.”

Quarrels followed the discovery of the quoted letter, and though the defendant did not leave home until a month or more afterwards, the relations of the parties were discordant from that time'to November, when the final separation occurred. After that separation Connelly was shown a letter written by his wife to Malpe in August, which Malpe had lost on the premises of James McPike, a near neighbor of Connelly’s, where it was found by McPike’s daughter. That letter was as follows:

“Bowling Green, Mo., August 1, 1901.

“Dear Friend: — Will you please meet me in B. G. Saturday morning or leave me a letter with $10 or $15 in it, with the postmistress and tell her I will be in town Saturday, not to let it go in the mail. He said at first I could have three hundred dollars and the children, but now he wont let me have a cent of money. I am going to see a lawyer Saturday and see what I can do and I have to hire a team and wagon to come after my trunk and things. I don’t want any of the neighbors to haul them. I want to show him some one else has some money besides him. Please be careful what you say about me. I want to go Saturday morning and leave the children in town and come after my things and stay at the hotel until I start away from here. Don’t fail to leave the money at the post office. I want to get away from Pike county as soon ás possible. If you are going to Ashley come by B. G. I want to leave Sunday, if possible. I am nearly crazy. (On margin) Let us go quick.”

Besides the facts mentioned, others might be stated [100]*100to show the defendant cherished an improper sentiment, for Malpe and had meditated forsaking her husband to go to him. On one occasion she told a friend that shn had been dreaming ‘ ‘ of her old boy, ’ ’ and being asked who that was she said, “Malpe, of course.” She said to another friend in the course of a conversation about Malpe, “If it wasn’t for my children there is no telling what would happen. ’ ’

The defendant testified that Malpe was brought to her house to board against her wishes, that no improper relations had ever existed between them, that she wrote to him to get money because her husband would not. give her any, that when she said in the letter to Malpe, ‘ ‘ Let -us go quick, ’ ’ she referred to herself and children. She admitted writing at least one other letter of the same kind, and that she understood the sentence in Malpe’s letter to her, “I send one thousand k” to mean one thousand kisses, but said that Malpe had no right to send such a message. She further testified that her husband cursed and abused her and applied vile epithets to her, which, indeed, he acknowledged doing after he discovered her correspondence with Malpe, and said she used as harsh language to him.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 1111, 98 Mo. App. 95, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connelly-v-connelly-moctapp-1903.