Cox v. Cox

159 So. 378, 181 La. 246, 1935 La. LEXIS 1481
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 4, 1935
DocketNos. 32912, 32920.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 So. 378 (Cox v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Cox, 159 So. 378, 181 La. 246, 1935 La. LEXIS 1481 (La. 1935).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

This is a suit for divorce on grounds of adultery.

*248 Plaintiff married defendant in the parish of .St. Bernard, March 15, 1930. The matrimonial domicile has always been in the city of New Orleans.

About March, 1933, defendant engaged in a venture of operating excursion steamers out of Chicago on the Great Lakes, and in this connection took up his residence chiefly in Chicago through the spring and summer of 1933, and practically until this suit for divorce was filed on October 6, 1933.

Plaintiff specifically accuses defendant of adultery in Chicago with two women, one named Naomi Spalding, in his bedroom at the Medinah Club, where he resided in Chicago, on or about June 28, 1933; and with another named Mildred Mason, with whom, it is alleged, he first had relations in the Eastgate Hotel on or about June 4, 1933, and with whom, it is further alleged, defendant practically lived for about two weeks thereafter, either ashore or aboard his steamship, the Isle Royale, which was making week-end excursion runs on the lakes.

After this divorce suit was filed against him, October 6, 1933, defendant moved his residence to the Roosevelt Hotel, New Orleans, La., and it is charged that defendant in his room at this hotel also committed adultery on November 1,1933, with a third woman, named Patricia Morris.

In our opinion, the charge of adultery with Mildred Mason in Chicago is abundantly proved by ten witnesses, whose testimony was taken under commission. The other charges of adultery will be reviewed in this opinion later.

Reducing the depositions of these witnesses to narrative form, we have the following state of facts:

Rube Shafford, an automobile salesman of Chicago, who lived in the same club with the defendant, Mr. Cox, introduced him early, in June, 1933, to Mildred Mason, as both Shafford and Miss Mason testify, and Mr. Cox admits.

The following Sunday, Mr. Cox, took Miss Mason to the Chicago Exposition, accompanied by two other couples, Shafford and Mildred Bach, and George Wentz and Joanne Meyer. Wentz was the general manager of Cox’s Steamship Company in Chicago, and Miss Meyer was Mr. Cox’ publicity agent. This trip to the Pair is testified to by all five- of Cox’ companions.

About 8 or 9 o’clock that night, they left the Pair. Wentz and Miss Meyer separated from the party, but Mr. Cox and the other three repaired to Shafford’s room in the East-gate Hotel, where later on Shafford and Miss Bach left Mr. Cox alone with Miss Mason, as Shafford, Miss Bach, and Miss Mason all testify.

On this occasion, Mr. Cox swapped hotel keys with Shafford, who spent the night in Mr. Cox’ room at the Medinah Club, as Shafford testifies. Mr. Cox then spent the night with the Mason woman in Shafford’s room in Eastgate Hotel, as she testifies.

Several evenings laterj Mr. Cox took Miss Mason to dinner at the Rutledge Inn at the World’s Pair, and afterwards kept her that night in his room at the Medinah Club, as Miss Mason testifies. It was on this occasion *250 that Mrs. Cox, plaintiff, heard a woman’s voice in Mr. Cox’ room over the long-distance telephone.

The Isle Royale, Cox’ excursion steamer, was put in commission Friday, June 9, 1933, and on the night Miss Mason spent with him in his room in the Medinah Club, she testifies that he arranged to have her as his companion aboard the boat.

In corroboration of this testimony, it appears that on Friday, June 9, 1933, Mr. Cox had Miss Mason meet him at his office and together with his nephew, Bob Hose, the three went to Mr. Cox’ room at the Medinah Club, where she packed his clothes and personal effects for the trip. Ben Berkson, purchasing agent of Cox’ Steamship Company, and Mr. Ehwan, vice president of the Beloit Dairy Company, visited the room and saw Miss Mason there, this incident in Mr. Cox’ room being testified to by Miss Mason and Mr. Berk-son both.

Although Miss Mason was going to sail aboard the Isle Royale ostensibly as a “waitress,” she rode from the Medinah Club to the boat with the president of the steamship company in Mr. Ehwan’s Chevrolet coupé, driven by Mr. Ehwan, while Berkson and Rose walked, as Miss Mason and Berkson further testify.

On the publicity rides on Lake Michigan that night, Miss Mason appeared on board at functions as the companion of Mr. Cox, as is sworn to by Miss Bach, George Wentz, Miss Meyer, Ben Berkson, Captain Clark, master of the vessel, and Miss Mason.

On the ensuing week-end, June 10-11, 1933, on a round trip to Milwaukee, and through the ensuing week in port at Chicago, Mr. Cox kept Miss Mason living aboard the vessel in his cabin, “Parlor M,” as is sworn to not only by her, but also by Shafford; by Wentz, the line’s general manager; by Miss Meyer, the boat’s publicity agent; by Berkson, the purchasing agent; by Griffith, the general agent for ticket sales; by Captain ■ Clark; by First Officer Tyron; and by Second Officer Monroe.

At the end of the week during which Miss Mason lived with' Mr. Cox on the Isle Royale, the vessel was scheduled to leave on a weekend excursion, June 17-18,1933, for Fort William, Canada, and on the night of departure, Mrs. Cox arrived in Chicago and was escorted out into Lake Michigan by Mr. Shafford; Mrs. Cox having planned to make the initial voyage.

Before Mrs. Cox boarded the Isle Royale, the Mason girl, although aboard as “a waitress,” was moved out of Mr. Cox’ cabin, but not to the “flicker,” or waitresses’ quarters, but to cabin 201. Mrs. Cox learned of her presence in a guest cabin, and, being an executive of the steamship line herself, arranged for her removal to the crew quarters. The Mason woman objected, but Captain Clark ordered the chief stewardess, her superior in personnel, to remove her, which was done, and she displayed unwillingness to perform the duties of “a waitress.” This is testified to not only by the Mason woman, but by General Manager Wentz, by the first and second officers of the ship, and most fully by Captain Clark.

On the voyage, Mr. Cox associated and danced with the Mason woman in' front of Mrs. Cox, as the Mason woman testified.

*252 Other than the ten witnesses who'gave their testimony for plaintiff under commission in Chicago, the only persons who testified were Mrs. Cox, Mr. Cox, and a man named Warren C. Zoeller.

Mr. Cox, of course, denied the adulteries charged.

His only witness is one Zoeller, who operated the liquor bar on Canadian trips and slot machines on the Isle Royale, and who, eliminating the ship’s more reputable personnel, was alone picked out by Mr. Oox to come to New Orleans and testify in the case regarding events on shipboard. This witness knows nothing except the attempted corroboration by his testimony of all of Mr. Cox’ denials of the actual adultery. His whole effort has been to put Mildred Mason aboard the vessel solely in the role of “a waitress.” He says that Miss Mason did not sleep in Mr. Cox’ cabin the night of the first excursion, the publicity rides with newspaper men and debutantes on Lake Michigan, because he and Mr. Oox slept there together that wight.

He says “She worked

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Related

Cox v. Cox
190 So. 401 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 378, 181 La. 246, 1935 La. LEXIS 1481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-cox-la-1935.