Heinen v. Heinen

186 P.2d 770, 64 Nev. 527
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1947
Docket3490
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 186 P.2d 770 (Heinen v. Heinen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heinen v. Heinen, 186 P.2d 770, 64 Nev. 527 (Neb. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

The respondent, Frances Rowley Heinen, commenced her action for a divorce from the appellant, Richard Carl Heinen, on July 11, 1946, upon the grounds of the defendant’s extreme cruelty pleaded in the words of the statute, and for the custody of the minor children of the parties, two sons of the respective ages of five and three years. Appellant answered, attacking the plaintiff’s claimed residence in the State of Nevada, denied her allegations of cruelty and prayed that she take nothing by her complaint. He sought on his part no affirmative relief. The cause was tried to a jury which rendered the following verdict: “We * * * do find for the plaintiff and against the defendant, and do grant a divorce to the plaintiff.” The court thereafter rendered judgment dissolving the marriage. Additional evidence was adduced before the court without a jury on the issue of the custody and support of the minor children, and the court rendered its decision awarding such custody to the respondent subject to right of visitation in the appellant. *529 The court then made its findings and conclusions and entered its judgment and decree, wherein it reserved jurisdiction as to custody and support of the children and all matters concerning property rights. Defendant appealed from the judgment and from the court’s subsequent order denying his motion for new trial.

Appellant recites seventeen distinct specifications of error. Of these, specifications Nos. 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 have to do with rulings on the admissibility of evidence. Specifications Nos. 9 to 13 attack the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings with reference to the plaintiff’s residence and the defendant’s cruelty. Specifications 14 and 15 allege error in the court’s denial of the appellant’s motion for a new trial. Specification 16 attacks the findings and specification 17 attacks the court’s right to reserve jurisdiction over the property rights of the parties, it being asserted that not only was the issue of property rights not raised but that it was specifically excluded by the recitals in the pleadings of both parties.

As we are satisfied that the judgment and the order denying appellant’s motion for a new trial must be reversed and a new trial ordered by reason of appellant’s specification No. 3, it will not be necessary to pass upon the other specifications. Specification No. 3 reads as follows: “That the trial court committed error in limiting the number of depositions offered by defendant on his case in chief and in refusing to admit depositions concerning which an offer of proof was made.”

In order to determine the propriety of the court’s order denying appellant’s offer of additional depositions and in order to appraise the effect of such order, an analysis of the case up to the point of the offer of these depositions is necessary. Plaintiff called as her first witness Richard Carl Heinen, the defendant, as an adverse witness. He was examined as if under cross examination, N.C.L. sec. 9420, and the examination comprised almost entirely his consistent denials of any improper *530 conduct or of any act that could be said to constitute either physical or mental cruelty. There was next read in evidence the deposition of John Rowley, a brother of the plaintiff wife, who testified to his presence at numerous small gatherings, shows, dancing parties, vacations, visits exchanged between the two families, etc.; that he particularly noticed on numerous occasions that defendant was unsympathetic, bitterly sarcastic, lacked understanding of his wife, ridiculed her about the children, her cooking, etc., took a superior attitude and seemed to delight in emphasizing her mistakes in front of the witness’ family or other friends; that he appeared to be very cold and lacked husbandly affection and understanding; that his conduct was such as to cause her to become emotionally upset to the point of crying; that his sarcasm, lack of sympathy and understanding, and his public ridicule of his wife were sufficiently numerous and constant to become a subject of discussion between the witness and his wife and the mutual friends of the plaintiff and the defendant. Although a few specific instances were recited he testified, when asked on direct examination to specify as to dates and places and persons present and the substance of the words used by the defendant, that the defendant’s conduct was frequent and not limited to any time, place or circumstance, that it happened in the home of the witness, in the home of the parties and at any other public gathering where the fancy struck the defendant, but that he observed this attitude “manifestly” in the presence of the witness’ wife and the witness’ mother and the defendant’s mother and father and brothers and sisters and mutual friends. When again asked (by written cross-interrogatory) to state as nearly as he could recall the place, date and persons present at each or any instance in which the plaintiff’s conduct was thought improper, he stated that the occasions were so numerous as to be impossible of detailing each one separately as to time, place or person.

Plaintiff then read in evidence the deposition of her *531 sister-in-law, Shirley Rowley, who testified to weekly visits interchanged for the past four years, and the frequent presence of both families at social gatherings at the homes of mutual friends and occasional dinners and theater parties. The testimony is general except as to specifying that on some of the occasions plaintiff’s mother, defendant’s sister, the latter’s husband and the witness’ husband were present, and that some of these occasions were in the witness’ home and some in the home of plaintiff and defendant; that most of the time he treated her with respect and kindness, but that there were occasions when he was sarcastic and appeared to be lacking in understanding by making her the butt of witticisms and jokes and holding her up to ridicule and would make some sarcastic remark or criticism of plaintiff so that she would become upset and cry. On the whole the testimony of this witness reflected favorably on the conduct of the defendant. Plaintiff then called her brother, Edward H. Rowley, Jr., who did not testify to any acts of cruelty, although he saw the parties several times a year at the home of the witness’ mother or the home of the witness’ other married sister or the home of the parties. She then called her mother, Juliette Looney Rowley, who testified to a few specific instances of objectionable conduct on the part of the defendant. She also testified to the instances in which she had assisted the defendant financially.

The plaintiff then took the stand herself and testified at length concerning financial matters from which it appears that the parties were living far beyond the earnings of the defendant and largely upon the income from some substantial trust estates created by the plaintiff’s father and mother, respectively. She then testified to numerous acts of “mental cruelty” on the part of defendant (sarcasm, ridicule, criticism, belittlement, etc.), but also generalized as did her brother. When asked how he treated her when they were out with friends, she stated that his treatment of her was so general that she could *532

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P.2d 770, 64 Nev. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinen-v-heinen-nev-1947.