Crum v. Crum

207 P. 506, 57 Cal. App. 539, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 479
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 2441.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 207 P. 506 (Crum v. Crum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crum v. Crum, 207 P. 506, 57 Cal. App. 539, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 479 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HART, J.

J.—The plaintiff was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce from the defendant on the ground of extreme cruelty. The decree also awarded to plaintiff the custody of the minor child of the parties, Mabel Buth Crum, age seven years, the only issue of the marriage of said parties, and one-half of the community property, consisting principally of real estate. The personal property, of which there was a small amount, and which also belonged to the community, was awarded to the defendant.

The defendant appeals from the judgment under the alternative method upon the sole ground that the testimony of plaintiff as to the acts of cruelty alleged to have been committed by the defendant upon her was not legally corroborated.

The parties intermarried in the state of Missouri, in the month of May, 1908, and removed to Kings County, this state, about two shears later.

The complaint alleges that on numerous occasions from the year in which the parties were married until May 12, 1920, on which latter date they separated and ceased' living together, the defendant “has treated plaintiff in an ex *541 tremely cruel and inhuman manner,” following which averment is a specification of certain acts of cruelty on plaintiff by the defendant in the years 1910, 1911, 1915, 1916, and 1919. It is alleged that on one of these occasions the defendant, in the presence of others, called plaintiff a “d-n fool,” a “d-n b-eh,” and cursed and threatened to inflict bodily injury upon her by saying: “God d-n you; I will bust your head,” and threatened to kick plaintiff out of the house; that at another time, the defendant, becoming very angry at plaintiff, struck her a violent blow “over the head with his gun-case,” and that on another occasion, specifically mentioned in the complaint, the defendant, having been asked by plaintiff “a few friendly questions,” became sullen and morose and refused to answer said questions; that thereupon plaintiff insisted on answers, when defendant became very angry, “grabbed her with both hands and jammed her up against some shelves, saying that he was going to kill her”; that at thisi time defendant, without cause, “twisted plaintiff’s arm painfully and cracked a bone in one of her fingers”; that in April, 1919, “while plaintiff and defendant were living near Lemoore, in said county, defendant, without cause, grabbed hold of plaintiff forcibly- with his hands and! jammed her against the wall a number of times, and said that he was going to kill plaintiff”; that, during the four years immediately preceding the date of their separation, the defendant has practiced sexual abuse upon the plaintiff, by reason whereof she has become a nervous wreck. The complaint then charges generally numerous other acts of cruelty practiced upon plaintiff by defendant during the four years the couple resided in Lemoore, it being stated that, without cause, the defendant “constantly reviled plaintiff and cursed her with the vilest language”; that defendant “has constantly been sullen and morose, without cause, around home; that he has constantly and habitually refused tó talk to plaintiff, and has never talked to her except when compelled by necessity to do so.” There are some other charges of cruelty in the complaint of a more or less specific nature, as to which no findings were made and which, therefore, require no specific notice herein.

The complaint describes and specifies the value of the several pieces of real estate which it alleges is the comm *542 unity property of the parties and asks for a division thereof between said parties. The defendant, by his answer, denies specifically each and every material allegation of the complaint, and, while not asking for a decree, alleges that the trouble between the parties has been due to the ungovernable temper of the plaintiff; that she would “fly into a rage and run all the hired men off the ranch and would not allow anyone to come on the ranch to work for defendant,” and that she otherwise frequently so annoyed and harassed the defendant that he could not do the work on his farm which was required of him, etc.

The court found generally that, since the date of the marriage 'between the parties, “the defendant has treated plaintiff in an extremely cruel and inhuman manner,” and also specifically found that the several acts of cruelty particularized in the complaint and which are therein alleged to have occurred in the years 1910, 1911, and 1915 were committed by the defendant as so alleged. It was further found that, during the period of four years immediately preceding the date of the-separation of the parties, the defendant practiced sexual abuse upon plaintiff “with the result that her nervous system was impaired thereby.”

Reading the testimony in this case without reference to the findings of the court, one could hardly dodge the conclusion that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant was, in the maintenance of their domestic relations, a paragon of amiability in disposition. The plaintiff herself admitted that, on one occasion, having been provoked by the insulting language with which the defendant addressed her, after she had asked him in a singularly civil way some very decent questions, emphasized her indignation thereat by hurling at him a china coffee-cup with such accuracy of aim that it landed on the 'side of his face with sufficient force to inflict thereon a slight wound. This circumstance, however, does not mean that there is not sufficient corroboration of the plaintiff’s testimony as to the general cruel treatment of her by the defendant during much of their married life. Indeed, she claimed and testified (and her testimony supporting this claim was corroborated by her adopted daughter) that she never at any time, including the occasion on which she hurled the coffee-cup with such telling effect, betrayed ill temper in controversies with her *543 husband until she had become so overwrought through his gross and inhuman mistreatment of her that she was unable to control herself.

That the testimony of the plaintiff is sufficiently corroborated will readily appear from an examination of the evidence. There is no need for a detailed recapitulation herein of the testimony for the purpose of confirming this declaration. It will suffice merely to refer in a general way thereto.

The plaintiff testified that the defendant, sometimes in the presence of persons not members of their immediate family, had, on frequent occasions, addressed to her opprobrious epithets and cursed her, such as “God d-n you;” “you d--n b-ch,” and that he had threatened to break her head and had, at different times, violently struck her; that he was of a morose and sullen disposition and very seldom would answer her with civility, sometimes not at all, when she would ask him about the business of the farm. She testified that his manner of maintaining sexual relations with her, against objection by her, was such that it resulted in the production of serious female trouble and, consequently, in a corresponding impairment of her health.

The adopted daughter of the parties testified that she had, on two occasions, witnessed the infliction of physical violence upon the plaintiff by the defendant. One of these occasions, though, was when the plaintiff struck the defendant with the coffee-cup.

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Bluebook (online)
207 P. 506, 57 Cal. App. 539, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crum-v-crum-calctapp-1922.