Deeds v. Deeds

196 P. 1109, 108 Kan. 770, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1921
DocketNo. 23,095
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 196 P. 1109 (Deeds v. Deeds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deeds v. Deeds, 196 P. 1109, 108 Kan. 770, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 263 (kan 1921).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

When the plaintiff was forty-nine years old and the defendant was sixteen years her senior she advertised for a husband and found one in him. He was a widower with a son and daughter and she was a widow with a boy about ten years old. The marriage occurred in July, 1912. Neither the abstract nor the briefs tell us when the action was begun, but counsel say in one place that the plaintiff lived with the defendant seven and one-half years, which indicates that it might have been begun about January, 1920.

In the petition the wife alleged that the defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty and gross neglect of duty, and had cursed and reviled her and called her bad names and charged her with infidelity. That once after a separation, in 1917, she forgave him on the promise of doing better, but when she requested small sums of money he forced her to take in sewing and earn money for her own clothing. She also alleged that there was an oral antenuptial contract by the terms of which the defendant promised her if she would marry him his two children should inherit or be the devisees' of one-half of his property and that at his death the plaintiff should have the [771]*771remaining half thereof. That the plaintiff married the defendant upon these terms, keeping all her obligations as his wife and in writing gave her consent to his last will and testament by which he gave to each of his children a good farm in Rice county, Kansas, subject to his life estate therein. That some time before this action was begun he undertook to put all of his property out of his name, and as a part of the scheme his children brought suit in Stanton county, claiming practically all of the property on the theory that it belonged to their mother in her lifetime, and that the defendant by collusion made default.

The plaintiff testified that without any occasion he would become angry, call her vile names, charging her with “running out and tearing up with dirty dogs all over town,” and that he accused her of being a prostitute. The defendant testified, among other things, that before the marriage he told the plaintiff what he had, that he was worth about $20,000, and all the Rice county land belonged to his two children and there was nothing said about her having one-half of the property and the children the other half, and that they got along “fairly good the first year” and after that—

“We didn’t get along very good. She wanted me to deed her half of the property, and just kept nagging at me to deed half of the property to her; and I told her the property would keep till I was through and then she would get her share at my death; and she thought it would make her safer; and I told her I was not going to steal this property and at my death she would get her share of it.”'

He ■ testified that she had some insurance which she kept paid up for the benefit of her folks, and he tried to get her to drop it; that he furnished some cows but did not get any butter because she took all of it to raise money to keep this insurance and buy things for her people back in Ohio. He denied that he cursed her, and he said:

“She would nag at me till, if a man wouldn’t curse he would have no sense. I couldn’t help it. There is no man living could help it.”

He complained that she sat up nights working and that—

“She said if she dropped it she wouldn’t have anything to do. . . . Well, gosh, she was up till two o’clock many nights, and I would get up and cut out the lights, and her son would get up and run to where the meter was and wire round the meter and steal the lights, and I caught him. doing it, and made him take the wire out.”

[772]*772He said that a good deal of the time he had to do his own cooking and complained because she contracted a small bill for Christian science treatment; that she cooked for harvesters and threshers and took in sewing and after October, 1917, she refused to cohabit with him unless he would deed’ her the property; and that he accumulated some property from the combined efforts of himself and his first wife and certain money which she furnished and’that in 1887 he formed a partnership with certain men and the partnership failed and he mortgaged his home to start up again.

The court, in its opinion, stated that the defendant had ■property worth $26,500, besides that covered by the will already referred to; that the Rice county land was worth $38,-000 and that the only property owned by his first wife at the time of her death was certain property in Lyons, Kan., and that this, worth $2,000, which came from her estate, was all he derived from her. The court also concluded that there was no evidence to show any trust touching the estate of the defendant. It was also observed that a month after the marriage the son and his wife conveyed to a brother-in-law the real estate covered by the will for the consideration of one dollar, and on the same day the brother-in-law reconveyed all the property to the- two children for the consideration of one dollar, and in less than thirty days thereafter the daughter reconveyed all her interest back to her father, the defendant, for one dollar, and shortly thereafter the son reconveyed his interest to the father.

The court found that the defendant had been guilty of extreme cruelty of a character sufficient to warrant a divorce, but very little of the evidence is set out, and we are unable to say, therefore, that this finding was' not sustained thereby. It was found that the property, standing in the name of the defendant, was not accumulated through the efforts of the plaintiff or that his estate was enhanced by reason of her participation in his affairs; and also that the proof did not sustain the claim of an antenuptial contract.

“This marriage was one of convenience and like all such marriages, has ended in disaster. I was not very favorably impressed with the testimony of either one of the parties to this suit. They both possess an irascible disposition; easily and unnecessarily provoked to anger, [773]*773testy, inconsistent and intolerant; each anxious to cast all the odium upon the other without assuming any responsibility whatever. . . . Where, therefore, the parties seem to be in equal wrong; each guilty of an act which would .be ground for divorce under the statute, the court has a discretionary power which it may exercise.”

The plaintiff was awarded alimony in the sum of $4,000. She appeals and complains of the inadequacy of the amount, and presents authorities in support of her contention that it should be greatly enlarged.

The court found that $38,000 worth of property had been conveyed to the defendant’s children and that he still had $26,-500 worth without any trust feature attached for the benefit of any one. The defendant testified that his income for 1919 was something like $3,500, and that his average income for six years would probably be about $2,000; he did not think his income for 1918 was as much as $4,000.

The statute provides that when a divorce shall be granted by reason of the fault or aggression of the husband the wife shall be allowed such alimony out of the husband’s real and personal property as the court shall think reasonable. (Civ. Code, § 673.) In Packard v. Packard, 34 Kan., 53, 7 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 P. 1109, 108 Kan. 770, 1921 Kan. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deeds-v-deeds-kan-1921.