Dickinson v. Dickinson

138 S.W. 205, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 823
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 205 (Dickinson v. Dickinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson v. Dickinson, 138 S.W. 205, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 823 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

FRY, J.

This suit was instituted by defendant in error to obtain a divorce from the plaintiff in error. He alleged in his petition that he was an actual bona fide inhabitant of Texas, and that he had resided in Nueces county for at least six months next preceding the filing of the suit; that he was married to his wife, at that time Sarah Frances Mattocks, on June 15, 1893, in the *206 city of Chicago, state of Illinois, and that they had lived together as man and wife until on or about February 21, 1907, when he was forced to abandon her on account of her cruel and harsh treatment and improper conduct. He alleged that he was kind and affectionate and supported and maintained her, but that she was a very jealous and dictatorial woman, and that her jealousy manifested itself in fearful tirades and abuse of the petitioner; that he endured that conduct for years, until he was forced to abandon her; that she refused to visit his relatives in Texas, where he was born and reared. He further alleged: “That plaintiff and defendant remained in Chicago a few years, and then went to New York City, and while in New York defendant so circumscribed plaintiff in his acquaintances and surroundings that he found it extremely difficult to engage in any kind of business for the support of himself and wife. Plaintiff finally secured a lucrative position in New York 'City, -which required him to travel more or less. In order to minimize her outbursts of anger and have any peace whatever with her, plaintiff was compelled to pay to defendant regularly and promptly his entire salary. Whenever it became necessary for plaintiff to make a trip for his company, defendant would immediately begin her quarreling and abuses, and in many cases, in order to pacify her, plaintiff was compelled to take her with him until she became tired of being a traveling woman. After a few years, her insane jealousy grew into such an acute mania that she would not let plaintiff leave her for even an hour or two in the evening to meet the customers of his company on important business engagements. At times when plaintiff was compelled to make sudden business trips, and when it was impossible to take defendant with him, defendant would go to the extreme of having detectives shadow plaintiff. In the winter of 1903 and 1904, soon after plaintiff had arrived at the Auditorium Annex Hotel in Chicago from New York, one of the clerks at the hotel advised plaintiff that he was being shadowed by a detective, and plaintiff knew intuitively that it was his wife who was having this done and employed detectives to shadow her detective. When plaintiff returned to New York within a few days, he charged defendant with having hired detectives to watch him, but defendant denied the same with great vehemence. Plaintiff told defendant that he did not propose to be disgraced before the managers of the various leading hotels of the country, and that, if she ever again hired detectives to watch him, he would not live with her. Eater, when plaintiff was in Chicago again, the detectives were again shadowing him the moment that he arrived, and plaintiff had his detectives trace her detectives to the latter’s agency, and plaintiff learned confidentially from a very high and influential source that it was without question the defendant who was having plaintiff shadowed, and at that time wrote defendant a letter that she was seeking to disgrace him in the eyes of the people, and that he would not ¿gain return to her. But through the influences of defendant’s family and the defendant herself having promised that she would stop spending plaintiff’s salary in hiring ex-convicts, thieves, and thugs, who-constitute the cheap detective service in Northern cities, to shadow plaintiff and disgrace and humiliate him, he went back to-defendant and continued to try to live with defendant. That defendant did not keep her promise, and time and time and again, when plaintiff would leave New York, the detectives would follow him until it became known among plaintiff’s friends and was becoming known in his business relations. Finally, on the day of the said separation, plaintiff had occasion to take two of his New York customers to Milwaukee to see the new plant of the company for which he was working, and telephoned defendant from his office that he had to go on a very hurried trip, and, when he went up to their apartments to prepare for’his departure, defendant had her baggage ready, and swore that she was going also. Plaintiff argued with her and pleaded with her that it was a hurried business trip, and that he would be with men constantly, and that it meant a great deal to him in a business way, and it was-impossible to take her, but she was absolutely persistent and obdurate, and plaintiff’s arguments and pleadings availed nothing. She again indulged in her stubborn abuses and slanderous accusations against plaintiff until plaintiff finally told her that they had come to the parting of the ways, and that their future living together was an insult to-God and humanity and a disgrace to themselves. After defendant had so treated plaintiff and forced their said separation by the said course of unkind, harsh, ■ cruel, and tyrannical treatment toward plaintiff, and had applied to plaintiff the vilest abuses and epithets, without any cause or provocation-whatever on the part of this plaintiff, defendant secretly followed plaintiff on his-trips, and continued to hire detectives to-shadow him. That, when plaintiff next returned to New York, he went to the apartments where he and defendant lived and' removed his personal belongings only, leaving said apartments, together with the furnishings which had been placed there by plaintiff at a cost of several thousands off dollars, to defendant. From the date of their said separation up to December, 1908, plaintiff has paid to defendant the sum off $7,800 in cash and transferred to her one-half of the stock which plaintiff owned in. the company of which he was an officer, on which defendant will shortly realize the sum of $10,500 in cash. After the date of their-said separation and during all the timer *207 since, defendant has continually abused and villified plaintiff to hjs friends, and especially to the influential men with whom plaintiff has been in a business way engaged, 'both in New York City and Chicago and Milwaukee and in Europe. Defendant has been since said separation first in Chicago then in New York City, but has at all times had detectives following plaintiff and has been to the office of plaintiff in Chicago on two or three different occasions, and created a great disturbance with the office force, and compelled both the employes and plaintiff to leave the office. Defendant has frequently denounced plaintiff in the most outrageous terms, and, while in the Pompeiian drinking room in the Auditorium Annex Hotel in Chicago, she swore that she would do personal violence to plaintiff on sight, and has declared on many. occasions that her only mission in life was to absolutely ruin and devour plaintiff. That all the slanderous accusations made by defendant against plaintiff are false and untrue; and that said marriage relation between plaintiff and defendant still exists.”

The petition was filed on April 22, 1909, and May 29, 1909, plaintiff in error filed an answer, consisting of general and special exceptions and a general denial and special pleas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 205, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-v-dickinson-texapp-1911.