Cooper v. Cooper

120 S.W.2d 268
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 1938
DocketNo. 4939
StatusPublished

This text of 120 S.W.2d 268 (Cooper v. Cooper) 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
Cooper v. Cooper, 120 S.W.2d 268 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

The appellant, Lee E. Cooper, a resident citizen of Potter County, Texas, instituted this suit in the district court of said county on May 11, 1937, against his wife, Mabel Cooper, the appellee, who resides in Cascade County, Montana, to obtain a divorce on abandonment alleged to have occurred about May 1, 1933.

The appellee answered by general demurrer, general denial, and by way of cross complaint sought a decree of divorce from appellant and alleged for her causes of action abandonment, adultery and cruel treatment.

She also alleged that since she was deserted by her husband about May, 1934, she had the responsibility of maintaining their two boys and was without means of support and she and they were unable to earn sufficient moneys to maintain themselves ; that she had been compelled to borrow and obligated herself to pay $7,065, all, except $450 which she paid to the state of Montana on a 320 acre tract of land, was expended for necessaries for herself and sons; that after the appellant deserted her, particularly since the spring of 1935, he had been receiving an income from the sale of oil and gas from his interest in the Cooper ranch in .Carson and Hutchinson Counties, Texas, amounting to approximately $1,000 per month; that he had contributed nothing to the support of his family but had himself lived in luxury and bought expensive presents for his various women friends.

The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury and the court rendered judgment that appellant take nothing by his suit, but appellee [270]*270on her cross action was granted a divorce and the bonds of matrimony theretofore existing between her and appellant dissolved. She was decreed a recovery from him for $7,150.21 borrowed money which had been expended for necessaries; the sum of $2,500 as attorneys’ fees for Underwood and Strickland, her lawyers; 25% of the proceeds he derived from the sale of oil and gas produced from the Cooper ranch until Quinten Cooper reaches twenty-one years of age, and subsequent thereto, 15% of the revenues of such sales so long as appellee remains unmarried; and awarded $250 per month as alimony pending this appeal.

The appellant presents this judgment for review and challenges as error the action of the court denying him a divorce and granting appellee a decree cancelling the marriage relations between him and his wife.

The record discloses that appellant and appellee were married about May 22, 1913, and had two children. The elder boy, Lee E. Cooper, Jr., was born March 29, 1916, and Quinten Cooper, the younger, was born January 2, 1919.

According to the testimony in the record, the trial court was justified in refusing to grant the appellant a divorce on his petition.

The evidence offered by appellee to sustain the allegations of her cross complaint for a divorce is evasive and unsatisfactory. Certainly, had it not been for the corroborating testimony of disinterested witnesses and the admissions of the appellant on the stand, the court would have been justified in refusing to cancel the bonds of matrimony on the cross complaint of appellee. The evidence of herself and the two sons was on many material questions too uncertain and indefinite to have much probative force and this, together with their admitted conduct toward appellant, the circumstances of which we shall refrain from enumerating, convinces us that the only interest any of them had in appellant was to secure the greatest amount of money or property obtainable from his separate estate for their joint and several benefits. In view, however, of the testimony of some disinterested witnesses and the admissions of appellant, we have concluded that the judgment of the trial court granting appellee a divorce was warranted.

The appellant assails as error the action of the trial court in adjudging appellee a recovery of $7,150.21 for necessaries; the sum of $2,500 attorneys’ fees for her lawyers; 25% of the proceeds of the sale of oil and gas from the Cooper ranch until the minor Quinten reaches twenty-one years of age, and subsequent thereto 15% of such revenues to appellee so long as she remains unmarried, and $250 a month as alimony pending the appeal.

In 1910, three years prior to the marriage of appellant and appellee in 1913, he contracted to purchase and did purchase 320 acres of land from the state of Montana on the twenty year payment plan. In 1921 or 1922 he conveyed this 320 acre tract to his. wife and they acquired two other tracts, one of 320 acres and the other of 240 acres, and a great percentage of this 880 acres was tillable land on which they placed improvements of the value of three or four thousand dollars, machinery of the value of several thousand dollars, about 130 head of cattle and five or six head of horses. In 1928 they purchased and had conveyed to' appellee a home in the town of Great Falls, Montana, for the sum of $6,000, $3,000 of which was paid and $3,000 evidenced by appellant’s promissory note unsecured by a lien on any property. The only indebtedness against the Montana property in 1935, after appellant and appellee had -separated, was some delinquent taxes and $500 due the state on the second 320 acres of land acquired by appellant from the state of Montana, $450 of which presumably was paid out of a part of the loan appellee obtained from Edward Cooper, the father of appellant. The $3,000 borrowed by appellant from his father to pay part of the consideration for the home purchased in Great Falls, Montana, was not a lien against any of the property and was, according to the judgment of the court, not a community debt but a debt for which Lee E. Cooper was alone responsible.

Domestic trouble, had reached a critical stage in 1934, if not previous thereto, and Mabel Cooper in June of that year filed a suit in Cascade County in the state of Montana to obtain a divorce from her husband, Lée E. Cooper. Regarding their property in that state, she alleged in a verified petition that the lands held by her and her husband were of the reasonable value of $30,000 and had an annual rental value of $5,000, and this did not include [271]*271the home in Great Falls. She applied for and was awarded, though probably none of it was ever paid, alimony in the sum of $30 per month. This suit was never prosecuted to judgment but was dismissed and within ninety days thereafter, Lee E. Cooper filed a suit against Mabel in Cascade County, Montana, to obtain a divorce on the grounds of cruel treatment, but she contested and defeated the suit.

In answer to said suit, Mabel alleged that she lived with Lee and assisted him on the farm as late as 1933 and as long as it was humanly possible for her to endure his cruel and brutal treatment. The testimony discloses, without controversy, that in good crop years the farm and ranch yielded a profit of approximately $5,000. When the seasons were too dry, little or nothing was made and but small amounts had been realized from the crops and cattle in several years.

The trial judge made no finding of facts as to the value of the property in Montana but we conclude from the testimony that the fair market value of the ranch, improvements and machinery thereon, together with the home and furniture in Great Falls was approximately $25,000 at the time of the trial of the instant case.

Some time previous to the institution of this suit in Potter County,

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120 S.W.2d 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-cooper-texapp-1938.