Guarino v. Guarino

186 P.2d 927, 29 Wash. 2d 314, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 379
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1947
DocketNo. 30283.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 927 (Guarino v. Guarino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guarino v. Guarino, 186 P.2d 927, 29 Wash. 2d 314, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 379 (Wash. 1947).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

In this action, an interlocutory decree was entered granting a divorce to the defendant. The trial court, valuing the tangible and visible assets of the community at nineteen thousand three hundred dollars, awarded property to the plaintiff of the value of seven thousand dollars, leaving the appellant in possession of property valued at twelve *315 thousand three hundred dollars. The only question presented by the appeal is definitely circumscribed by the following statement in the appellant’s brief:

“From this judgment appellant appeals only from the order awarding the respondent $7000 insofar as the award was in excess of $2500.”

The parties are of Italian lineage. Defendant, Guarino, was born in Italy in 1889 or 1890, and emigrated to the United States at the age of eighteen. The plaintiff was born in the United States. It is inferable that their marriage was arranged in accordance with Old World customs and usage. At any rate, the plaintiff was but thirteen years old at the time. The defendant was, by several years, more than twice her age. She had known him but one week, and in that brief period had seen him but three times. Shortly after the marriage, defendant, m partnership with some other Italians, bought a piece of land on contract near Bothell, Washington, and engaged in raising chickens and pigs. The child wife, according to her undisputed testimony, did the work of a grown woman.

“A. Yes. We had a thousand chickens, and we brought out quite a number of hogs, and we had a couple of cows. Q. What did you actually do yourself? A. Fed the chickens and took care of the egg part, and saw that the chickens had water, and all that stuff that you do on a farm. . . . Q. What did you do around the house? A. We had two houses to take care of there. I used to do the housework and cook for him, and take care of the animals because he used to go to the market and I used to have the whole responsibility of it there myself.”

The partnership did not prosper in the pig and chicken venture. They changed over to the “moonshine” business. While that was being conducted, the plaintiff acted as a lookout. After the Bothell venture, which collapsed in about a year, the parties returned to Seattle and engaged in market gardening. In 1921, they purchased three quarters of an acre at 9620 Fourteenth avenue south for one thousand dollars and built a two-room frame house, supported on posts. It was unpainted and had no water connections. During the next seven years, a concrete foundation and basement were *316 constructed, several rooms added, and other improvements made. It was still the family home at the time of the trial of this actioh and was valued by the court at six thousand dollars.

(It may here be parenthetically noted that the testimony of a qualified real-estate appraiser that the home property could be sold for seven thousand five hundred dollars was not disputed by any other qualified witness. The care taken by the trial judge with respect to the division of the property of the parties is illustrated by the fact that he appraised it at six thousand dollars, on the theory that the then existing inflated real-estate market was not a true indicia of actual value.)

Shortly after the establishment of the home at that location, the Guarinos set up a roadside fruit and vegetable stand. Plaintiff testified as follows:

“Q. Who was responsible for running the vegetable stand? A. That responsibility was all on my shoulders. I had to go down in the garden and get my own vegetables and bring them up there and wash them and clean them and put them up there, and take care of all the customers that came in all during the day, and take care of my house besides. Q. Who raised the vegetables for sale in this stand? A. My husband used to take care of the vegetable part. I used to go down lots of time during the time that I had and weed and clean the vegetables so they would grow. I would go down there and pick them all the time, bring them up and wash them and put them on the stands. Q. What time of day would you open the stand? A. As soon as I got up. If I would get up at 7:00 o’clock, I opened it up. If I got up at 7:30,1 opened it up, and would stay open until about 11:30, 11:00 o’clock. Q. 11:00 o’clock in the morning? A. At night. . . . Q. Was there anyone to help you in the running of the vegetable stand? A. My husband used to help in the mornings and on Sundays, and I was there practically all the time. Q. You didn’t— A. I never hired anybody and paid wages out to help, no. Q. Was this vegetable stand open the entire year around? A. We would keep it open the whole year around provided it didn’t get cold in the wintertime and potatoes and stuff would freeze. If it would freeze, we would close it maybe about two or three months in the wintertime. Otherwise we kept it open all the time. . . . Q. What did you do with the funds yourself when you got *317 them each day? What disposition did you make? A. Well, the money was always turned over to my husband. I never did have much say about money. I used to get it, and he used to come and take it out of the register, or I used to turn it over to him and he would keep the amount himself. I never did know exactly how much money we had, but I had a good idea. Q. Do you know what he did with the money then? Did he put it in the bank? A. No, he always kept his money out of banks. He had a very small account in a bank, but his money was always put around. Most of his money is put in fruit jars some place around that property right now. Q. During this period of time that you were working out there, were you working out there voluntarily? A. I was forced to go out there. He got himself a job and he was away from there; and when you have a business you have to get out and do it, and I had to get out and do it. I had to be outside when people come along, and I had to get the vegetables up there. I had to do all that. I just had to get out and do it. Q. Who took care of the children during this time, and the house? A. The children were out by themselves or out under my legs. Then a couple of years I had my sister out with me, and she took care of them there for a while when my last daughter was born. I stayed in bed five days, and I was up and out in that business right away after that. I was out there on the sixth and seventh day. He turned the business right back to me again and I had to keep on doing the same thing as I had been doing ever since we had been there. So I started to go down in the fields and picked up lettuce and cabbage and stuff like that, and I got a rupture, but there was no sympathy there. I had to just keep on doing it anyway.”

(Two of the three children were born while respondent was operating the vegetable stand, the son in February, 1922, the youngest daughter in June, 1924. The oldest daughter was born in September, 1920, two days after respondent became sixteen years of age.)

There was no substantial denial or rebuttal of any of the above-quoted testimony, except the statement of the witness that: “Most of his money is put in fruit jars some place around that property right now.” Defendant testified at the trial that he had only about two hundred dollars on hand at home. This may be true. Substantial amounts were taken *318

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brady v. Brady
201 P.2d 695 (Washington Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 927, 29 Wash. 2d 314, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guarino-v-guarino-wash-1947.