Davis v. Davis

60 Mo. App. 545, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 332
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 Mo. App. 545 (Davis v. Davis) 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
Davis v. Davis, 60 Mo. App. 545, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 332 (Mo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is an • action of divorce, the ground thereof being that of desertion. The answer was a general denial, coupled with the charge of adultery. There was a trial in the court below, resulting in a decree for plaintiff, from which defendant has appealed.

The first question which is presented for our decision by the defendant’s appeal is whether the charge made in the petition, that the defendant has absented herself without a reasonable cause for the space of one year, is sustained by the evidence contained in the [548]*548record before us. The determination of this question has imposed upon us the duty of examining nearly four hundred pages of printed evidence, which, in many particulars, is quite contradictory. It appears that from 1870, the time when plaintiff and defendant were married, until the fall of 1887 there is little or nothing in the history of their marital relations which, in any way, tends to support the charge contained in the plaintiff’s petition.. It appears that plaintiff was a butcher and has been engaged, since the date of his marriage, in slaughtering and supplying some of the eastern markets with dressed meats. This business he has carried on, with occasional intervals, with varying success, at Kansas City, Boston, Chicago and other places. In the summer of 1887 the plaintiff was engaged in business in New York City, while defendant lived in a boarding house in Boston, where resided the relatives and friends of both parties. During plaintiff’s stay in New York he was in the habit of visiting defendant fortnightly. Finally, about the ninth of September, of the year just mentioned, the plaintiff visited defendant and, without her knowledge, sold and disposed of his horse, buggy, sleigh and harness, after which he left, presumably-for New York, from where, on the nineteenth of September, he wrote her a letter telling her that he supposed she would be surprised to learn he was going west. When he went away he'was indebted to his landlady for his wife’s board. Defendant was thus left helpless and penniless. She was compelled to dispose of certain articles of personal adornment to pay her board. The shock occasioned by this behavior of plaintiff rendered her sick in mind and body, utterly prostrating her. Vain were endeavors to find out what had become of her fugitive husband, until a sympathizing mother-in-law, by an anonymous letter, indicated his whereabouts. After the lapse of several [549]*549days defendant, by telegraph, finally reached plaintiff at- Omaha, in. the state of Nebraska. In his letter, without date, responding to defendant’s telegram, plaintiff tells her that he had no idea of leaving her unless she gave him reason for doing so, and that he hoped she would forgive him this time for what he had done, arid that he would never do so again as long as he lived. Defendant testified that, in reply to this letter, she wrote to the plaintiff, that a Mr. and Mrs. Hollis had informed her that he had told them that he was going to leave her because she was extravagant, and also that she had every reason to believe that he had gone west .with a woman. Defendant, testifying in the same connection, produced another letter from plaintiff, in which he informed her that he was in Kansas City in business; that “I never will treat you like I have. All I want you to do is to excuse me for what I have done. * * * All I want of you is to say you forgive me, just this time, and I will always make you happy.” It is clear from a letter of plaintiff to defendant, dated New York, February 15, 1888, written while he was in business in that city, in answer to 'one previously received by him from her, that the latter must have then had some intimation of the plaintiff’s improper relations with another woman; for plaintiff, in his letter, says: “There is one thing that I will do, and I suppose will please you, and that is before I come home, will sell everything out and find a room up town for my things and get my meals at stock yards, and live in my room all alone ancl bring no one else with me. The party you speak about is gone to ivork in a store at once and going to board with friends of hers and take care of herself. ’ ’ This is a confession that the plaintiff had been living in a room with a woman in New York City. This letter, however, gave defendant the assurance that [550]*550the plaintiff would lead a better life, and that when he returned to Boston, he would bring 'satisfactory evidence of it along with him. The plaintiff himself, in his testimony, admitted that he engaged Rose Goodwin to go from Boston to New York to keep house for him, but stated that she returned to Boston without doing ■so. There is other evidence showing that she occupied, not only the same room, but the same bed with the plaintiff during part of the time the latter resided in New York City. The plaintiff further admitted in his testimony that when he left New York, at the time heretofore stated, Miss Goodwin accompanied him. The defendant, without previous warning to plaintiff, came out to Kansas, City, and after consultation with the chief of police on the twenty-sixth of December, 1887, in company with two detectives, took a carriage and drove over to Armourdale, in the state of Kansas, to a house where the plaintiff was reported to be then residing, arriving there about half past 10 o’clock that night. The defendant, after one of the detectives had pointed out the plaintiff’s house, approached the door and knocked for admittance. The response- was, “Who is it?” The defendant answered, “A telegram.” After this, plaintiff raised the curtain over the half-glass door and repeated the inquiry, “Who is it?” The defendant replied, “I should think you would know who it is.” The plaintiff then ejaculated, “My God! it is Hattie.” The defendant testified that just after this she saw someone jump out of the plaintiff’s bed and run past 'the door in a night dress with some clothes in her hand. The plaintiff opened the door and admitted the defendant. The defendant demanded to know of plaintiff who was in the room with him when she came, and he protested that there was no one. The defendant then looked about the room and found -a set of artificial teeth and a woman’s switch of hair on the [551]*551bureau, and in the bureau were various articles of female apparel. After quite an extended colloquy between the plaintiff and defendant, the latter was admitted into a room, usually occupied by one Charley Barry and his paramour, Miss Briggs. Finding no one there, defendant proceeded to the kitchen, where she found Miss Briggs and Miss Groodwin. It is unnecessary to repeat the unpleasant remarks exchanged by these parties on that occasion. The plaintiff' and Miss Goodwin, each in their testimony, deny that the latter was occupying the same bed with the former; while Miss Briggs, in her testimony, corroborates defendant’s statementJjhat such was the fact. The plaintiff in his testimony stated, that it was true that Miss Goodwin occupied the same room as he did, but that their beds were not the same, and that there was a hanging curtáin which separated the room into two apartments, she occupying one of these and he the other.

The defendant, after remaining in plaintiff’s house two or three hours, returned to her hotel in Kansas City the plaintiff not accompanying her. The defendant, the next day, met the plaintiff at her hotel, accord-to defendant’s testimony, and, after several hours conversation, in which plaintiff stated that things had gone so far that he could not leave Rose Goodwin, the defendant thereupon returned to Boston.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Mo. App. 545, 1895 Mo. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-davis-moctapp-1895.