Crume v. Crume

378 P.2d 183, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 120
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1963
Docket198
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 378 P.2d 183 (Crume v. Crume) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crume v. Crume, 378 P.2d 183, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 120 (Ala. 1963).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

This action was commenced by the husband seeking a divorce on grounds of incompatibility of temperament caused by the fault of the wife through her “excessive use of intoxicating liquor, which has lead [sic] her to violent unpredictable actions.”

In an amended answer the wife denied the allegations as to incompatibility and cross complained for a divorce in her behalf, apparently on grounds of cruelty and personal indignities.

The husband was the first witness to testify at the trial. At the conclusion of the husband’s testimony, but before he had rested his case in chief, the trial court decided that a divorce should be granted to the wife in language as follows:

"[T]he plaintiff [husband] asks for a divorce on grounds of incompatibility of temperament; and in effect the defendant [wife] does the same thing— they don’t get along. I think it’s been well established that they don’t get along, and I believe there’s enough before the Court after hearing testimony of plaintiff to find that a divorce should be granted on grounds of incompatibility of temperament, and the Court grants such a divorce on behalf of the defendant, and tire only thing before us now is the determination on property settlement and whether or not there should be alimony.”

The husband now claims that the trial court committed error in granting the divorce to the wife on his testimony alone 1 and before any evidence had been elicited from the wife on her cross-complaint. In his brief he states that he was prepared to call other witnesses, who were present in court, to substantiate the grounds for divorce alleged by him, and that he “rested his case at the decision of the Court when the Court restricted the introduction of further testimony.”

The record reveals that the trial judge was unduly precipitate and even arbitrary in limiting the evidence on the question of which party was at fault. We have previously mentioned the undesirability of premature decisions made before all available competent evidence on the question has been heard. 2 We would reverse and remand this case for a new trial were we not of the belief that the revision of the $10,000 award we are providing for in this opinion will result in substantial justice being done in this case.

The second error specified 3 by the husband is the refusal of the court to permit *185 him to testify concerning certain misconduct of his wife after the filing of the complaint. He urges in his brief that such testimony was admissible because it had a direct bearing on the question of whether or not the wife was entitled to alimony. However, that was not the reason he urged below. There he argued that the evidence wras admissible to show a pattern of behavior which existed before the divorce. Furthermore, the specification does not set out the full substance of the evidence re-j ected.

Supreme Ct. R. 11(a)(6) is directly in point here in its requirements that

“When the error alleged is to the admission or rejection of evidence, the specification shall quote the grounds urged at the trial for the objection and the full substance of the evidence admitted or rejected, and refer to the page number in the transcript as contained in the record on appeal where the same may be found.” [Emphasis added.]

Since the requirements of our rule have been disregarded, we need not consider the error intended to be urged. 4

The next four specifications of error all relate to the admission or rejection of evidence and, as in the case of the second specification discussed above, they set out neither the grounds urged at the trial for the objection nor the full substance of the evidence admitted or rejected. Therefore, these specifications need not be considered. 5

The only other issue raised by the husband is that contained in his seventh specification of error to the effect that the trial court abused its discretion in granting the wife substantially all of the accumulated property of the parties and a $10,000 judgment to be paid at the rate of $200 per month.

The trial court found that the parties own their home in Anchorage in which, at the time of the trial, they had an equity of about $18,000 or $19,000 and against which there was an encumbrance of between $11,-000 and $12,000; that the husband had a reserve for pension fund coming to him from the Alaska Railroad of between $8,300 and $8,500; and that his earnings for the three years indicated below were as fob lows:

$12,292.61
15,329.59
14,525.00.

The court further found:

“[T]hat the defendant [wife] is now suffering from instability, is very nervous and is not able to go out and earn a livelihood for herself and that due to the plaintiff’s [husband’s] earning power and due to the fact that the defendant was injured while living and cohabitating with the plaintiff, and due to the fact that the injury resulting in the disability of the left hand was caused by a bite inflicted by the plaintiff on the defendant, that the defendant should have judgment against the plaintiff giving to her, as a perpetual place to live, the home property as her own separate property and included therein the furniture, furnishings, fixtures and equipment therein; and in addition thereto a lump sum judgment against the plaintiff for the sum of TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS ($10,-000.00), together with all costs of this action including attorneys’ fees; and that the plaintiff is to have as his separate property this reserve at the Alaska Railroad, which is a retirement fund, free and clear of any claim of the defendant herein; that he have his automobile, the property at Sunshine, all of his personal effects, his bank ac *186 count and all cash that he has now in his possession and under his control.” 6 On the basis of the foregoing findings the

court concluded and decreed that the wife should have the family home and all the furnishings therein for her own and “a lump sum in lieu of any other alimony” for $10,000, payable at the rate of $200 per month; and that the retirement reserve should be the sole and exclusive property of the husband and that he should be awarded the Sunshine property, the automobile, and all his clothing and personal effects.

In his specifications of error the husband does not attack any of the findings of fact above related, but asserts that the decree and judgment of the court as to the division of the property and the $10,000 award to the wife was “excessive, arbitrary, and a clear abuse of discretion.” He asks us to restore half of the “community property” to him and reduce the “alimony” in conformance with the proportion of property accumulated prior to the marriage or, in the alternative, grant him a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
378 P.2d 183, 1963 Alas. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crume-v-crume-alaska-1963.