Hasselschwert v. Hasselschwert

145 N.E.2d 224, 103 Ohio App. 202, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 269, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 585
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1956
Docket187
StatusPublished

This text of 145 N.E.2d 224 (Hasselschwert v. Hasselschwert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hasselschwert v. Hasselschwert, 145 N.E.2d 224, 103 Ohio App. 202, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 269, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 585 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Middleton, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant on questions of law from a judgment awarding alimony to the plaintiff.

*203 The parties to this action were married in 1924 and separated in 1947. The defendant moved to Illinois and plaintiff remained in Ohio. In August 1948, plaintiff filed an action for divorce in Defiance County and obtained service upon the defendant by publication. The defendant did not appear to contest the action and did not file an answer or a cross-petition. Upon hearing, a decree of divorce was granted plaintiff. No mention was made in the divorce action as to any property owned by either of the parties, and no order concerning the disposition of property rights of the parties was made by the court.

At the time of the separation in 1947, the defendant deeded to the plaintiff her undivided one-half interest in the farm owned by plaintiff and defendant, and transferred to the plaintiff all personal property and bank accounts which had theretofore been jointly owned by the plaintiff and defendant. At the time of the filing of the divorce action by plaintiff, so far as the record reveals, the defendant owned no property, either real or personal, in the state of Ohio.

In 1950, the defendant filed an action against the plaintiff, in Defiance County, in which she asked that the deed executed and delivered to the plaintiff in 1947 be set aside, and for partition of the property.

. In the petition, she set forth that at the time of separation from plaintiff she was the owner of an undivided interest in certain chattels and bank accounts, and that part of the chattels were sold by plaintiff, and the bank accounts transfe red to plaintiff; and she asked that an accounting by plaintiff be ordered for the property sold and that partition be made of that portion of the property remaining in plaintiff’s possession.

In the partition action the defendant herein claimed that the transfer of the real estate and personal property to the plaintiff herein was made without consideration and as the result of threats against her life and that as a result of these threats the defendant did not enter her appearance or file pleadings in the divorce action brought in Ohio.

Upon the hearing of the partition action on appeal to the Court of Appeals, the defendant herein was found to be the owner of the undivided one-half interest in the real estate, the *204 deed from defendant to plaintiff was set aside, an accounting by plaintiff herein for the rents and profits of the real estate from July 29, 1948, and an accounting of the proceeds received from the sale of chattel property were ordered by the court, and partition was ordered as prayed for.

The present action was filed by the plaintiff in January 1954. In his petition he avers, among other things, that the defendant, before and after their separation, was guilty of gross neglect of duty, extreme cruelty toward the plaintiff and adultery; that on August 24, 1948, he filed his petition for divorce against the defendant, alleging as his grounds gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty; that defendant was a resident of Illinois at that time and not amenable to personal service of summons in Ohio; and that service of summons was made upon the defendant by publication.

Plaintiff alleges also that upon trial of the divorce action on November 5, 1948, he was granted a divorce from the defendant on the grounds alleged in the petition; that at the time of the filing of the petition for divorce, during the pendency of the action, and at the time the decree of divorce was granted, the defendant did not, to the knowledge of the plaintiff, have or claim to have any right or interest in any property, real or personal, situated in Ohio; and that in 1953, the Court of Appeals decreed that the defendant was the owner, as the beneficiary of a resulting trust, of a one-half interest in the real estate theretofore transferred to plaintiff, and the owner of certain rights, claims and choses in action described in the decree, which property was subject to the jurisdiction of the court.

The prayer of the petition is for alimony and that, pending the action, the defendant be enjoined from selling, encumbering or transferring the property set out in the petition.

The defendant, by way of answer to plaintiff’s petition, admits the averments of the petition, the divorce action, her residence in Illinois at the time of the divorce, and that service was obtained upon her in the divorce action by publication. Defendant admits that upon the hearing of the divorce action, the plaintiff was granted a divorce upon the grounds of gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty. All other averments in the petition are denied in her answer.

*205 By way of further answer, defendant states that at the time the divorce action was instituted the property out of which it is sought to allow alimony was located within Defiance County, Ohio, and could have been brought within the jurisdiction of the court in that cause, and that all matters set forth in plaintiff’s petition herein were adjudicated and determined in the divorce action. By further answer, defendant claims that all matters set forth in plaintiff’s petition were adjudicated and determined in the action for partition filed by the defendant in 1950, in which action the Court of Appeals awarded her the property out of which the plaintiff now seeks alimony. The answer further recites the manner in which the property owned by the parties prior to the separation was acquired, and the circumstances surrounding the transfer of her interest in the property to the plaintiff at the time of their separation.

Plaintiff’s reply denies all the material averments of the defendant’s answer.

Upon trial, the court found that the plaintiff was granted a divorce from the defendant by reason of her aggression and that the defendant had been guilty of adultery, and that the facts and circumstances of the case entitled plaintiff to alimony out of the personal property and estate of the defendant. The court awarded to the plaintiff, as and for his alimony:

“All the personal property of the parties, and all rights and claims thereof, adjudged to said Eleanora A. Hasselschwert by the Court of Appeals for Defiance County in case number 163, by entry filed June 8, 1953, to wit: The defendant’s one-half of the proceeds of public sale by Raymond M. Hasselschwert of November 17, 1948, with interest thereon from date of said sale; the defendant’s one-half of the joint accounts with the State Bank of Defiance and The First Federal Savings and Loan Association, as said accounts stood on July 29, 1948, with interest from July 29, 1948; also the defendant’s one-half of the rents and profits accruing from the real estate of the parties herein from July 29, 1948, to the date of this entry.”

At the time the divorce action was filed, Sections 11979 to 12003, General Code, dealing with divorce and alimony, were in effect. In 1951, these sections were repealed and replaced by Sections 8003-1 to 8QQ3-23 of the General Code (124 Ohio Laws, *206 178, 184, 201). These sections are now a part of Chapter 3105, Revised Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 N.E.2d 224, 103 Ohio App. 202, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 269, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasselschwert-v-hasselschwert-ohioctapp-1956.