Hall v. Hall

13 Tenn. App. 683, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 13, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 683 (Hall v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Hall, 13 Tenn. App. 683, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 112 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

*684 OWEN, J.

This cause should be styled Daisy Hall v. Willie Hall as it is a divorce suit tried according to the rules of procedure governing equity, or chancery, causes.

Willie Hall has appealed from a decree rendered in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, granting Daisy Hall a divorce. The defendant’s bank deposit in the First National Bank, amounting to $178, was attached; the attachment was sustained and the Court ordered the defendant to pay the complainant $100 alimony and all costs in the cause. .

The grounds for divorce were cruel and inhuman treatment, failure to provide and abandonment.

The complainant and defendant had married in Shelby County about one year prior to the filing of the complainant’s bill. The complainant had been married previously; as to whether the defendant had been married prior to the ceremony performed between him and the complainant, the record is silent.’ The complainant was the mother of a daughter, the daughter being about, eighteen years of age.

The defendant filed a plea in abatement, which was overruled; it was not preserved by a bill of exceptions. He also filed other pleas which were likewise disallowed. Thereupon he answered and insisted that no valid marriage existed between the complainant and defendant because she was the wife of one Robert Robinson, whom she had married in Marion, Arkansas, in 1914, and that neither Robinson nor complainant had ever been divorced; that Robinson was still living and the complainant had known the whereabouts of said Robinson ever since they separated. He denied the other allegations in regard to cruel and inhuman treatment, failure to support and abandonment, and insisted that complainant had really run him away from their home.

The cause was heard before Judge A. B. Pittman upon oral testimony and the deposition of Robert Robinson taken at Walls, Mississippi. The Court sustained complainant’s bill and granted the decree giving her the relief sought, as heretofore stated allowing her $100 as alimony. The defendant filed a petition to rehear which, he states, the Court did not consider; that it was in the nature of a motion for a new trial. This paper is not preserved by bill of exceptions. Thereupon the defendant prayed an appeal and the same was granted upon his executing a bond with proper securities. He executed an appeal bond and his counsel has assigned five errors.

It is insisted (1) The decree is against the law; (2) The decree is against the weight of the evidence; (3) The Court erred in construing section 4188 of Shannon’s Code and holding that under this section of the Code the former marriage of the appellee to Robert Robinson was dissolved for the purpose of this case; (4) The Court *685 erred in refusing to allow counsel for appellant to complete cross-examination of the witnesses; (5) The Court erred in not granting the continuance of the cause on the second day of the trial when it was announced to the Court that appellant’s attorney had suffered injuries on the night before which prevented him from returning to complete the trial of the cause. We will dispose of these assignments in reverse order.

It is insisted that the Court should have granted a mistrial when counsel for the defendant did not appear on the second day of the trial, or granted a continuance as a matter of common courtesy to the attorney. The record does not sustain this assignment in the slightest way. What really took place is reflected from the bill of exceptions as follows: On page 57 of the record, which page is not cited by counsel in his brief or assignments of error, and which, according to the rules of this Court, is bad, and we would not consider the assignment if it was not insisted that as a matter of common courtesy to an attorney at the bar this consideration (meaning the continuance as insisted by the assignment) should have been granted or a mistrial declared.

“Defendant’s counsel, Charles P. Powell, was injured on Thursday evening and was unable to be present the next morning when Court conveyed. This fact was announced to the Court the next morning by the Honorable Thomas J. Walsh, an •attorney- at the bar, and a law partner with Charles P. Powell. Mr. Walsh asked that the case either be continued or that he be informed of what had gone before when he was then given an opportunity to talk with witnesses and statement was made to him of the substance of all the testimony that had been given. Whereupon, hearing was resumed and proceeded with and the following evidence heard.”

The bill of exceptions shows that while Mr. Charles P. Powell was unable to be present the next morning when Court convened and the ease was on trial, Mr. Thomas J. Walsh, a law partner with Charles P. Powell, did appear and asked that either the case be continued or that he be informed of what had gone before. He was then given an opportunity, talked with witnesses and a statement was made to him (Walsh) on the substance of all the testimony that had been given. Whereupon hearing was resumed and proceeded with and the following evidence heard: Then follows several pages more of testimony offered by the defendant. Walsh, it appears, was Powells’ law partner and the Court was requested to either grant a continuance or that Walsh be informed of what had transpired in the trial. The latter request was granted. It results that the fifth assignment is overruled; it is without merit.

*686 The fourth assignment is not a good assignment because no page of the record is cited where the Court refused to let the defendant’s counsel further examine, or complete cross-examination of the witnesses. What really took place and is complained of appears as follows: THe Court refused to permit defendant’s attorney to further cross-examine plaintiff’s witness, Charles Kinder, because counsel “persistently asked irrelevant and immaterial questions, which, in the opinion of the Court, was accomplishing nothing except the unnecessary waste of time.” As we have not the questions before us, or what further information, if any, defendant’s counsel was seeking to obtain from the witness Kinder, we must assume that counsel Was asking irrelevant and immaterial questions and was accomplishing nothing except the unnecessary waste of time. Attorneys are given very wide latitude in the cross-examination of witnesses, but trial, Judges have the right to make proper rulings as to the limit or extent of the cross-examination and when the trial Judge is of the opinion that an attorney is only wasting time by his cross-examination, and he so rules nothing further appearing we hold that the trial Judge was ruling properly, and was but expressing his sound discretion as to when the cross-examination ceased to be material and became irrelevant and immaterial. The fourth assignment is overruled.

We will dispose of the other three assignments together. By a preponderance of the evidence the complainant established the fact that the defendant had given her a very severe beating, that at-one time just a day or two before the bill was filed he threw a tea cup at the complainant, aiming at her face or head; she warded off the blow from the cup by throwing up her hand, the cup broke and cut the complainant’s hand. One witness saw him down on the complainant, beating her in the little store that the complainant and defendant operated.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 683, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-hall-tennctapp-1931.