Dawson v. Dawson

145 S.W.2d 436, 235 Mo. App. 736, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 90
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 436 (Dawson v. Dawson) 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
Dawson v. Dawson, 145 S.W.2d 436, 235 Mo. App. 736, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 90 (Mo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

CAVE, J.-

This is an action for divofce; the appeal being 'by plaintiff, the husband, from the decree of the court dismissing his petition. It appears from the record that the plaintiff and defendant were married on the 27th day of August, 1937, and lived together until July 10, 1938, at which time the wife left the home of the husband, which was at Warrensburg, Johnson County, Missouri, and went to Kansas City, in Jackson County. Thereafter, the wife filed a suit for divorce in Jackson County. In her petition she charged the husband with-various acts of mistreatment and indignities and prayed for divorce with alimony. ■ On September 13, 1938, John W. Dawson, the, defendant iii that ease, filed answer to' the' wife’s petition in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, and joined with his answer a cross-bill praying for divorce, wherein he charged the wife with various and sundry acts of mistreatment and indignities such as to render" his' condition as her husband intolerable.

A trial was had in the Circuit Court of Jackson County o'n December 27, 1938, on the petition and cross-bill. At the conclusion of the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, the wife, she'voluntarily dismissed her petition for divorce and then the case proceeded to trial *738 oil defendant’s cross-bill. After hearmg the evidence, the court found that the defendant, the husband, was not entitled to a divorce on his cross-bill and entered judgment accordingly, and assessed the costs against the defendant. The parties did not again live together as man and wife and have not done so since July 10, 1938. After the trial in Kansas City, the husband returned to his home in "Warrens-burg, and the wife lived at various other places. It is stated in the record that in July, 1939, the wife filed in the Circuit Court of Johnson County, Missouri, a suit for separate maintenance against the husband, but the petition in that case is not set out in this record, and the charges made therein are not before this court, and cannot be considered. Thereafter, and on August 3, 1939, the husband, John W. Dawson, filed this suit for divorce against the wife, Edna Lee Dawson, in thé Circuit Court of Johnson County, wherein the sole ground for divorce alleged is that the defendant, the wife, without any just cause or excuse, and without his knowledge and consent, had deserted and abandoned the bed and home of the plaintiff on July 10, 1938, and had since that time lived apart from the plaintiff and had refused to return to his home, although requested so to do, and had remained away from the plaintiff more than one whole year next before the institution of the present suit. A change of venue was taken and the case transferred to the Circuit Court of Pettis County, Missouri, where the defendant filed her amended answer admitting the marriage as of August 28, 1937, and a general denial of all the other charges in plaintiff’s petition. Coupled with this answer, the defendant also pleaded the facts concerning the prior divorce case which was tried in the Circuit Court of Jackson County and the judgment rendered therein, and alleged that the judment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, on December 27, 1938, was res ad judicata of the issues alleged in plaintiff’s petition in the present ease. On such pleadings the case proceeded to trial.

The plaintiff, John W. Dawson, testified concerning his marriage with the defendant on the 27th day of August, 1937, and that they lived together in Warmisburg until the 10th day of July, 1938, at which time the wife left his home. Shortly after she left his home, she returned to get her goods, at which time he told her that she would regret leaving and that he had tried to treat her the best he could. To this she made no answer, but took her household goods and left and had not returned. On cross-examination, he identified the cross-bill for divorce which he had filed in the case pending in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, which cross-bill was introduced in evidence. The judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County,, denying him a divorce on the cross-bill, was also introduced in evidence.

. Witness Anza Dillingham testified that she was a neighbor of the Dawsons and that at the request of John W. Dawson she wrote a letter *739 to the wife the latter part of July, 1938, asking her to return to Dawson’s home, but so far as she knew,'she never returned.

It can be inferred from the record that the trial court ruled, or indicated that he would rule, that no evidence could be introduced concerning the conduct of the parties and their treatment of each other prior to the time of the separation on July 10, 1938. Whereupon, the plaintiff declined' to introduce further evidence. The defendant then offered a peremptory instruction in the nature of a demurrer which the court took under advisement, but so far as this record shows, was never acted on by the court. Thereafter and during the same term, the court rendered judgment against the plaintiff and found: “that plaintiff is not entitled to decree upon abandonment, as divulged,” and dismissed plaintiff’s petition. In due time-an appeal was perfected to this court.

The appellant assigns but two grounds of error on this appeal. The first is that the trial court erred in finding that the statutory year of abandonment was res adjudicata-, and second, that the court had erred in finding that the time the first divorce was pending in the Jackson County Circuit Court should be deducted from the time of separation, July 10, 1938, and- the filing of the present petition, August 3, 1939. There is nothing in the record before us which indicates the trial court held that the statutory ground of divorce of one year abandonment was res adjudicata because of the judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County in the first divorce case above referred to. On the contrary, the trial court stated in a conference with the attorneys at the beginning of the trial:

“You have your petition alleging abandonment. I do not know whether you can show sufficient evidence to constitute abandonment or' not, but I think you have a right to show it in connection with the 10th of July, 1938, and the answer, as I see it, simply relies on this res adjudicata.”

This language would indicate the court held the view that the statutory ground for divorce of abandonment for more than one year had not been litigated in the first divorce proceeding and the judgment in that case was not res adjudicata on such issue, and in this the court was correct. The cause of action for divorce on such statutory ground had not ripened into a cause of action which could be maintained at the time of the trial on the cross-bill in the Jackson County Circuit Court, and therefore was not litigated in that case.

We glean from the limited record before us that the court did hold there should be no evidence introduced touching the acts of mistreatment and indignities of the respondent prior to the separation on July 10th, because the judgment of the Jackson County Circuit Court was res adjudicata as to such acts and conduct. Such ruling was correct. It has been uniformally held by the courts of this state that known grounds for divorce which occurred prior to, and were *740 not included in the former suit, are precluded in a second suit. [Viertel v. Viertel, 99 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 436, 235 Mo. App. 736, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-dawson-moctapp-1940.