Flood v. Flood

194 S.W.2d 166, 302 Ky. 167, 1946 Ky. LEXIS 622
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 26, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 S.W.2d 166 (Flood v. Flood) 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
Flood v. Flood, 194 S.W.2d 166, 302 Ky. 167, 1946 Ky. LEXIS 622 (Ky. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

A divorce was granted to Mrs. Sadie Flood from V. D. Flood upon the ground of cruel treatment, and alimony of $1500 was adjudged. Her attorney was allowed a $250 fee, to be taxed as part of the costs. The brief for the appellant does not comply with Paragraph 2 of Rule V, requiring a concise statement and classification of the points contended for, but we gather from its body that the ■ contentions are that the divorce should have been granted him on his counterclaim and, therefore, no alimony should have been awarded the plaintiff, nor more than $100, attorney’s fee. The wife prosecutes a cross-appeal and contends her alimony should have been at least $3,000.

In the matter of attorney’s fee, it is sufficient to say that the judgment is not to the wife for that purpose, but is in favor of the attorney by name, and he is not made a party to the appeal. In such a state of case, we cannot review thé allowance. King v. King, 214 Ky. 171, 283 S. W. 73; Sabel v. Sabel, 286 Ky. 575, 151 S. W. 2d 56.

The chancellor reached the conclusion that both parties were in fault, but the greater fault was that of the husband, and measured the alimony by the rule of comparative rectitude.

"When the parties embarked upon this matrimonial venture in November, 1940, the appellant was a widower with four children, three of whom were living with him, ■the youngest being 13 years old, and the appellee was a widow with two children, eleven and fourteen years old. He owne,d and operated a tourist home in Morehead, which .consisted of a large residence and several cot *169 tages, where they went to live. His parents also lived in the big house and were dependent upon him for support. He was a rural mail carrier and had other business interests. It was not long before a storm arose. It continued for four years, increasing in fury until the final separation, the day after Christmas, 1944.

The essential substance of the evidence introduced by the wife is that the husband was frequently subject to fits of sullenness and anger, unwarranted and unexplainable. During these moods he harassed and aggravated her in the extreme. Time after time he struck her with various objects and missiles, bruising her body and blacking her eye. On one occasion he suddenly attacked her with the heel of one of her shoes, cutting a long gash in her head, and then cut the telephone wires to prevent her calling for help. Cursing her and her children was a fixed habit. He would abuse, find fault, rave and curse her and her family, all without rhyme or reason. At other times he would be morose and sullen and refuse to talk with her or to eat the meals prepared. for him. He would isolate himself, sometimes for several days, without explanation or reason, but apparently through petulance and pure cussedness. Her life was one of aggravation and exasperation. Her health was impaired by his vicious temperament and brutal actions. She underwent a serious surgical operation and he manifested no sympathy and his only interest seems to have been to complain of the cost and his own inconvenience. She left him on three occasions and twice filed suit for divorce. He would display remorse and contrition, beg her forgiveness and promise to do better, and she would try him again. . On one occasion he told her that he would rather live with her and have a fight every day than to live without her. The wife’s ’Story of this tempestuous voyage of four years is substantiated in material respects.

The husband’s story is also one of rough sailing, with himself as the principal sufferer. The material difference in the two accounts is only as to the blameworthiness and as to who was the aggressor in the shameful fights, which went on night and.day. He acknowledged that at times he appeared moody and had withdrawn and isolated himself occasionally, which attitude he attributed to the effect of a head injury sustained in an automobile accident in which his first wife was killed. *170 He explained that he was troubled with indigestion. But he denied ever having cursed the appellee or having applied to her any epithet more offensive than that she was a “damn liar.” He admitted most of the assaults and physical violence, but pleaded self-defense in every instance and claimed to have used no more force than was necessary to repel her attacks all during the course of their marital and martial life. She cursed him and his father and applied vulgar epithets over and over again and threatened to set fire to the cottage where his parents were living. Likewise she endeavored to burn the big house where they lived. Time and again she had hit him over his head with her slipper heel, a favorite weapon of them both. On various occasions she scratched him, blacked his eye, hit him with her fist, a rolling pin, heavy paper weight, syrup bottle, milk bottle, hair brush, and a pipe wrench, with which she had broken in a door to get to him, and had destroyed three alarm clocks in throwing them at him — a costly weapon since no more could then be had for any price. ' Once she broke all the dishes by throwing them on the floor. He left her on this occasion, but she sought him out and prevailed upon him to return. His story readily suggests the classic, “The Taming of the Shrew,” peppered with profanity and vulgarity and ending with the objective unaccomplished.

In rebuttal, the appellee admitted, as she had in part admitted in her original evidence, the application of the epithets and the use of the effective weapons; but she, too, pleaded self-defense, as well as uncontrollable desperation.

To paraphrase the apology in the nursery tale of the Gingham Dog and the Calico Cat, who engaged “in such a terrible spat”:

We were not there; we simply state

What the official record doth relate.

To speak seriously. We are impressed with this fair and frank statement of appellee’s counsel: “The picture drawn by this record is neither a pretty nor a happy one; the picture of a sullen, moody, unstable, capricious and fretful husband upon the one hand and a hot-tempered and easily irritated wife upon the other, both of whom it may be said to their credit were hard working, conservative and economical in the manage *171 ment of their personal affairs and whose marriage might have brought them lasting happiness and a modicum of contentment had there been upon the part of each that forgiveness and forbearance for the faults and errors of the other embodied in their vows when they mutually agreed to accept the other ‘for better or for worse.’ Nevertheless the picture of their relations as detailed in this record is the result of their own voluntary acts, the canvas and the coloring are their own. The record speaks for itself; the evidence of cruelty and disregard for the rights of the other is plain to the eye reading and the mind considering this record, yet withal it can be fairly said that the greater blame and the larger fault squarely rests upon the shoulders of the husband. In few marriages do we find such opposite and incompatible dispositions, characteristics and natures as we find here.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W.2d 166, 302 Ky. 167, 1946 Ky. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flood-v-flood-kyctapphigh-1946.