Gardiner v. Gardiner

93 So. 2d 638, 230 Miss. 778, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 421
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1957
Docket40433
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 93 So. 2d 638 (Gardiner v. Gardiner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardiner v. Gardiner, 93 So. 2d 638, 230 Miss. 778, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 421 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

*781 Kyle, J.

This case is before us on appeal by Jane Garrison Gardiner from a decree of the Chancery Court of the Second Judicial District of Jones County against her husband J. Lyon Gardiner awarding to her separate maintenance in the sum of $250 per month, and dismissing with prejudice the cross bill for divorce filed by the' appellee, J. Lyon Gardiner. The appellee has also filed a cross-assignment of errors which will be referred to later.

*782 The record shows that the appellant was 57 years of age at the time of the trial in the lower court; the appellee was 60 years of age. The parties were married in the City of Laurel on February 6, 1946,• and lived together as husband and wife until December 13, 1955. Each of the parties had been married before. The wife had two adult children by her prior marriage; and the husband had one adult child by a prior marriage. There were no children of the present marriage.

The record shows that the appellant was first married in 1922. That marriage was terminated by a divorce granted to the wife in 1927. The appellant came to Laurel in 1943, and at the time of her marriage to the appellee was engaged in the business of purchasing oil, gas and mineral leases for lease brokers on a commission basis. The. appellant at that time had on hand three or four thousand dollars in cash; she owned her household furniture and an automobile; and had acquired mineral interests from which she derived an income of approximately $1,000 per year. She became acquainted with the appellee sometime duiing the month of November 1945, and they were married on February 6, 1946.

At the time of the marriage the appellee had no business, profession or employment. He lived with his parents and depended upon gifts of money and capital assets for his livelihood. He had accumulated a “few thousand dollars” in a bank account, and owned a 20-acre tract of land in the Country Club Hills section of Laurel. The appellant testified that it was her understanding at the time of the marriage that she was not to be the bread winner, that it was their idea that they would live on capital. — ‘ ‘ That is what he told me before we were married.” The appellant testified that her husband had “no earning capacity,” that he could not hold a job, “that his father wras always giving him money.” She said, “We lived on capital * * * selling *783 off capital that we had. ’ ’ The appellee testified that he had had no earnings from his own individual' efforts since his marriage to the appellant.

Soon after the marriage the couple had constructed a dwelling house on the land owned by the appellee in the Country Club Hills section. Construction costs were paid through outright gifts to the couple by the appellee’s parents. They moved into the dwelling house after it was completed, and occupied the same as a home until their separation on December 13, 1955. The home was valued at the time of the hearing at $35,000 or $40,000. In 1948 the appellee’s mother died and he received a substantial amount of property under her will. He owned at the time of the hearing in 1956 common stocks listed on the New York exchange of the value of approximately $90,000. In 1953 the appellant inherited from her deceased sister property of the value of approximately $10,000. Some of this money she spent in buying additional furniture and equipment for the home and in air conditioning the home. She let her husband have $1,000 of the money that she had received from her sister’s estate.

It appears from a reading of the record that the marriage arrangement between the parties worked very well during the first three or four years, but after that their relations with each other became somewhat strained, and long before their final separation the parties occupied separate apartments in the house. On December 13, 1955, the appellee left the home and went to live with his father, who was also living in the City of Laurel, and on December 20, 1955, the appellant filed her bill for separate maintenance.

The appellant alleged in her bill that the appellee had left the home without cause or justification, and that he had failed and refused to provide funds for her separate support, and that she was in dire need for the *784 necessities of life. She alleged in her bill that the appellee had been unfaithful to his marital vows; that he was addicted to strong drink; and that he had revolting-habits. The appellant alleged that the appellee was a man of independent wealth, and that he was engaged in disposing of his property in order to defraud her of her right to proper support and maintenance out of his estate; and the appellant asked that the court grant her a decree for separate maintenance, and that she be awarded the possession of the home, and also suit money. In a separate petition the appellant asked that a restraining order be issued, forbidding the appellee from withdrawing funds from the First National Bank of Laurel pending the final hearing of the cause, and that he be restrained from entering or permitting anyone else to enter his safety deposit box in said bank. The chancellor issued a restraining order immediately enjoining the appellee from entering or having any other person enter his safety deposit box until further order of the court.

The appellee filed an answer to the appellant’s bill, and in his answer denied that he had refused to provide for the appellant since the separation. The appellee averred the truth to be that he had provided for her support and maintenance since the date of their separation, and he denied that she was entitled to separate maintenance, or that he had been unfaithful to his marital vows. After the filing of his answer the appellee obtained permission from the court to file a cross bill for divorce. The appellee then filed a cross bill for a divorce in which he alleged habitual cruel and inhuman treatment as grounds for divorce.

The cause was heard upon its merits at the regular August 1956 term of the court, and in its final decree the court ordered that the appellee pay to the appellant for her separate maintenance the sum of $250 per month, *785 and that the appellant have the exclusive use and occupancy of the marital domicile in the City of Laurel, together with the house hold furnishings and effects, and that the appellee maintain insurance on the property and pay the taxes thereon. The appellant was also given the exclusive use of a Chevrolet automobile which was then in her possession, and was allowed an additional sum of $550 as solicitor’s fee to be paid to her solicitor, which should be in addition to a $450 fee theretofore allowed. The court dissolved the injunction entered in the cause on December 20, 1955, and ordered that the appellee place in the registry of the court 100 shares of common stock of The American Telephone and Telegraph Company, which he owned at the time the decree was entered, as security for the payment of the sums ordered to be paid to the appellant, but reserving to the appellee the right to receive the dividends paid thereon. The court dismissed the appellee’s cross bill with prejudice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 So. 2d 638, 230 Miss. 778, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardiner-v-gardiner-miss-1957.