Dodd v. Dodd

129 S.W.2d 166, 278 Ky. 662, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 481
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 26, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 166 (Dodd v. Dodd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodd v. Dodd, 129 S.W.2d 166, 278 Ky. 662, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 481 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

The appellee, Agnes B. Dodd, the plaintiff below, will be referred to in this opinion as the plaintiff, and the appellant, John L. Dodd, the defendant below, will be referred to as the defendant.

Mr. and Mrs. Dodd were married in 1918, and they had one child, a son, who died several years before their separation, March 29, 1934. Mr. Dodd was addicted to the nse of liquor and after the death of his son he became so dissipated he attempted to destroy himself by taking iodine, March 29, 1934, and on that night about 2 o ’clock, his wife and father-in-law pnt him in the Louisville Neuropathic Sanatorium where he was confined until April 12, 1934, with a male nurse constantly in attendance. The iodine so burned Dodds throat he could not take food or water for several days, and this, coupled with his prolonged and excessive use of liquor, put him in bad shape mentally and physically. He left the Neuropathic Sanatorium April 12th, and went to the home of a relative in Louisville, remaining there until April 23rd, when he entered the Cincinnati Sanatorium where he remained for some two weeks, and from there he went to Brown’s Camp, located in New York on the Hudson, to rehabilitate himself.

During the interim between leaving the Louisville institution and entering the one at Cincinnati the defendant went to the office of his cousin, Hon. Allen P. Dodd, *664 a prominent and highly respected attorney in Louisville, and informed him he wanted a divorce from his wife. He had no grounds upon which to obtain a divorce and as his wife did have, he wanted her to bring the suit, saying he would amply provide for her in a settlement of property rights. Mr. Allen Dodd had the full confidence of Mr. and Mrs. Dodd and he assumed the very difficult role of trying to advise both and to make a fair and equitable property settlement between them. Mr. Allen Dodd was a director in the bank of which Mr. John Dodd was vice-president and he arranged for a six months leave of absence for Mr. John Dodd in order that he might regain his health. Mr. Allen Dodd was somewhat alarmed about the mental state of his cousin and was most anxious to get his affairs arranged to his satisfaction so he might leave Louisville and enter an institution for treatment.

Mr. Allen Dodd had the plaintiff come to his office and told her that her husband wanted a divorce and that he would enter into a contract with her settling their property rights. She told Mr. Allen Dodd she did not desire a divorce, to which he replied her husband was insistent upon a divorce and was going away for treatment and there would be no property settlement unless she agreed to sue for divorce. The testimony is clear the husband was insisting upon a divorce and Mr. Allen Dodd was insisting upon a settlement of property rights and putting his cousin’s property in trust, evidently hoping the trust agreement would insure Mrs. Dodd a living and would prevent Mr. Dodd from squandering his estate.

Mrs. Dodd agreed to sue her husband for divorce and Mr. Allen Dodd drew a separation agreement dated April 18, 1934, which recited the parties had separated and each desired a settlement of property rights. Mr. and Mrs. Dodd signed this separation agreement, which in substance provided her husband would pay her $200 per month alimony and maintenance during her life or until she remarried, so long as he held his position with the bank which paid him $5,000 per year; should he lose his position, or get reduced in salary, this maintenance would be subject to readjustment by the mutual consent of the parties. To secure these monthly payments the husband put in trust with the Lincoln Bank and Trust Co., _ trustee, under separate agreement made with it April 18, 1934, approximately $45,000 in securities and . *665 Ms life insurance policies in the neighborhood of $20,-000. The separation agreement further provided Mr. Dodd would convey his wife their home on Everett Avenue, which the record shows was worth about $12,500 and he agreed to put it in suitable repair and in doing so he spent $1,390 on the house; that he would transfer a De Soto automobile to his wife, which he did; and it was further agreed after he had regained his health and returned home, he and Mrs. Dodd would divide the household effects, she taking such parts thereof as she might need for her comfort, the balance, including Mr. Dodd’s heirlooms, should be stored in the Safety Transfer and Storage Company of Louisville, which was to issue a receipt for same to the trustee. It was further 'provided in this separation agreement, should the wife survive the husband and remain unmarried, then upon his death the trust should terminate and the trustee should convert the securities into cash and pay Mrs. Dodd one-third of the proceeds; that the trust created could be terminated only by the mutual consent of the parties or upon Mr. Dodd’s death. It will be noted there is no obligation whatever put upon Mrs. Dodd by this separation agreement and she did not agree therein to sue her husband for divorce.

On Oct. 27, 1934, Mr. and Mrs. Dodd entered into a supplemental agreement by which they divided their household effects. By this agreement she retained all items of furniture purchased since their marriage, and in addition thereto she took practically all the household effects her husband had at the time of their marriage and which he had inherited from his mother. The agreement contained a provision, to the effect if Mrs. Dodd remarried, or at her death there would be returned all the household property taken by his wife which belonged to the mother or ancestors of her husband. The fourth paragraph of this supplemental agreement reads:

“Simultaneously with the execution of this agreement and the division of the property as heiein provided, the second party will file a petition against the first party for divorce, the first party agreeing to bear all costs incident to said proceedings for divorce, including any counsel fees, or, to state it differently, agrees tb, in case of the filing of said divorce petition, and in addition to all other matters covered by this stipulation, and saia *666 former stipulation,, be responsible for any costs or fees incident thereto.”

On Dec. 6, 1934, through Mr. Allen Dodd as her attorney, Mrs. Dodd filed suit in the chancery division of the Jefferson Circuit Court for divorce. The husband entered his appearance, no depositions were taken, but Mrs. Dodd and her attorney testified in person before the chancellor, who on the next day, Dec. 7, 1934, granted her an absolute divorce. Neither of the agreements settling the property rights of the parties was made a part of the divorce judgment, nor are they referred to therein. Mr. Dodd carried out all the terms of the separation agreement and paid $200 per month to Mrs. Dodd up to August .1, 1936, at which time he ceased to make these payments and on Jan. 11, 1937, she filed this action in equity for the unpaid monthly maintenance for the five months from August through December, 1936, or $1,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W.2d 166, 278 Ky. 662, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-dodd-kyctapphigh-1939.