Gicinto v. Gicinto

414 S.W.2d 339, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 729
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedApril 3, 1967
DocketNo. 24590
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 414 S.W.2d 339 (Gicinto v. Gicinto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gicinto v. Gicinto, 414 S.W.2d 339, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 729 (kanctapp 1967).

Opinion

MAUGHMER, Commissioner.

Plaintiff husband sued for divorce. The defendant wife countered With a petition for separate maintenance. The judgment granted plaintiff a divorce, dismissed defendant’s cross action for separate maintenance and awarded custody of the 16 year old son to the defendant with an allowance of $100 per month for his support and maintenance. Defendant on her appeal asserts that plaintiff failed to prove that he was the innocent and injured party and prays for a reversal outright of the decree of divorce. No other assignment of error is presented.

Charles V. Gicinto and Marie Gicinto were married to each other on January 31, 1942, in Olathe, Kansas. Plaintiff said that his wife on four different occasions in 1946, 1949, 1952 and 1953, filed suits against him for divorce or separate maintenance. However, each time their difficulties were partially resolved and no action was pressed to final determination. These parties finally separated about March 1, 1965, and on November 15, 1965, plaintiff filed the instant suit for divorce. Three children were born to the union but at the time of trial on March 11, 1966, two were of age and emancipated. The other, Marion Carl Gi-cinto, was 16 years of age.

Apparently Mrs. Gicinto has never been employed outside of the home. At the time of the marriage, Mr. Gicinto was a truck driver. For several years prior to the divorce he worked as automobile salesman for Miller Pontiac in Kansas City. On July 8, 1953, plaintiff was sentenced to serve a ten year prison term in the Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas. He was incarcerated in that institution for six years and until about October, 1959, when he was released on parole. During this [340]*340period his wife received federal aid of $100 per month for support of the minor children. This income was supplemented by help from relatives.

The evidence shows that plaintiff provided for his family adequately, from a financial standpoint, except for the time he was in prison. He was injured while driving a truck prior to his imprisonment and was paid $6500 in damages. After his release from Leavenworth he resumed life with his family and worked first as a truck driver and then as an automobile salesman. He had substantial earnings. He estimated that his earnings averaged $600 per month gross. The W-2 report of wages received in 1965 shows that he was paid $7,758.12. His income tax return for 1963, a period during which he was driving a truck, and prepared by H & R Block, showed a gross income of $8,728. It is conceded that he paid the bills and supported his family. His parole was terminated on November 12, 1965. From March 1, 1965, the date of the final separation, until parole termination date, he paid the family house rent, household bills, doctor bills and $45 monthly in addition as support for Marion, the minor child. After the suit for divorce was filed and under order of court he paid $160 monthly as temporary alimony and $60 monthly as child support. It was necessary for plaintiff to secure approval or consent from his parole officer in order for him to live separate and apart from his family. This permission was granted but on condition that the family support contributions as herein listed be made.

Mr. Gicinto was asked to “tell the circumstances pertaining to the separation.” We summarize his answer: “She and my son Joey gave me the ultimatum to move out. They told me to move out or they were going to put my clothes out”. “They put new locks on the doors so I couldn’t come in.” “Well, she was constantly arguing with me, falsely accusing me at all times of going out with other women when I was at work trying to sell a car. Then when I was driving on the road I’d notify her every night where I was at, where I was staying, called her every night. There was no girl there I was staying with but she would call there all hours of the morning, three or four o’clock in the morning and get me up and accuse me of being with Helen or with someone else; just always degrading me, always telling friends, people I done business with that I was an ex-convict. I wasn’t to be trusted. I was no good. Just constantly arguing with me all the time, making my life, kept me in such turmoil I couldn’t no longer sell cars or even work. I would be constantly pushing her off, trying not to argue with her, her false accusations. She kicked my shins, tried to argue, she pinched me, kept me up all hours of a night, constantly pinched me, kicked me. She threatened that she would send me back to prison and called Mr. Owens, my parole officer”; “they almost succeeded by calling a man on some checks on account they had bounced * * * I found two hundred some dollars in checks written on my account signed by my son Joey”; “Joey admitted this to the parole officer.” Plaintiff said his wife called his boss and “all the people I sold cars to,” “said she was going to bankrupt me, break me, destroy me.” Plaintiff said his wife and sons charged $2520.94 to him at Macy’s. “She was cold and indifferent. She wouldn’t have nothing to do with me”; “she said I was an old man, was this and was that, just everything; just didn’t like me, * * *. She hated me, she couldn’t stand me.” Plaintiff said when he first came home from Leavenworth defendant was living with her folks. “I got extra jobs, bought them a house in Independence, new furniture, and an automobile”; “they didn’t like to live out there and Marion wouldn’t go to school out there. He transferred to Northeast and I had to pay $225 tuition and she drove him back and forth,” “then I rented a house at 326 North Quincy for $95 a month. I had to sell the house at a loss.” Mr. Gicinto said he bought a life insurance policy on his youngest son when he was born but the insurance [341]*341man told him his wife had signed his name and cashed in the policy.

Mr. Earl Miller, President of Miller Pontiac, testified that Mrs. Gicinto called him “possibly two or three times to inform me what was going on, did I know what was going on”; “I don’t recall she actually asked me to fire Charlie”. Mr. Miller said she made reference to his going out with other women. He said that in his business association with Mr. Gicinto he had found him to be honest. Mr. Donald Sloan, who worked with Direct Transports when plaintiff was a driver there, said Mrs. Gicinto told him “she would like to put Charlie away or get even with him.” He also heard her accuse her husband of running around with other women. Clarence Gi-cinto, plaintiff’s brother, said defendant called him on numerous occasions about 4:00 a. m., complained about Charlie, said she was going to put him back in jail. He said she called him (the brother) an s. b. right on the street.

Mrs. Gicinto testified that plaintiff would come home “at two or three in the morning. He had been drinking. He had makeup all over his shirt and lipstick on his face. He never had an explanation.” She admitted that she went to the home of Rose Ann Leach (one of the women she accused her husband of running around with) at 4:00 p. m. Her husband and Rose Ann’s two small children were there. The defendant just opened the door and walked in. Mrs. Gicinto said that at the time she remarked to them: “I guess I caught you right. You told me Charlie had never been in your house.” It was plaintiff’s explanation that this woman and two others were “bird dogging”; that is, locating prospective automobile purchasers for him. Defendant says that she has asthma and diabetes and that the young son also has asthma. She admitted having had the locks on the house changed. She said the reason was that they heard the landlord downstairs one day and didn’t want him to have access to their quarters.

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Related

McGehee v. McGehee
448 S.W.2d 300 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
414 S.W.2d 339, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gicinto-v-gicinto-kanctapp-1967.