Hodges v. Hodges ex rel. First Trust Co.

435 P.2d 784, 150 Mont. 413, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 306
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1967
DocketNo. 11309
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 435 P.2d 784 (Hodges v. Hodges ex rel. First Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodges v. Hodges ex rel. First Trust Co., 435 P.2d 784, 150 Mont. 413, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 306 (Mo. 1967).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Two years after a decree of divorce and two years after the death of the divorced husband, the surviving party, through her guardian, filed a petition to set aside the divorce decree on the ground she was mentally incompetent. The hearing to set aside the decree was heard by the same district judge who granted the divorce and resulted in his refusal to grant the motion to set aside the divorce. The defendant-appellant alleges error as a matter of law.

The divorce action was filed by the husband in March of 1964 and came before the district court on August 27, 1964, on a show cause order and restraining order issued earlier to the defendant wife. The parties to the action stipulated that the district judge, in hearing the testimony, could also hear the divorce matter and decide all issues before the court.

In view of the allegations of the appellant that her mental condition at the time of the divorce was such that the original decree should be set aside, we will set forth the evidence of all the hearings. The material facts are not in dispute; we recite them only in enough detail in order to make the issue involved more clear.

Wesley and Nina Hodges were married February 4, 1952. Both had previously been married, and both had children of the previous marriages. Wesley had three children and Nina had two. Their marriage brought two more children into the [415]*415family. While little or no evidence was produced concerning Wesley’s previous marriage background there was considerable background material about Nina that the trial court had for consideration. Nina was a part Indian girl who in her Senior year of high school married an alcoholic. This marriage lasted seven years ending in divorce. She married Wesley and this marriage lasted eleven years. Although the second marriage seems to have been a better marriage than the first it was subject to considerable stress after 1953 due to Nina’s inability to stay away from alcohol and the places where it was sold. By 1958 her husband, Wesley, testified he would no longer take her out at night because of her addiction to drink. However this did not prevent her going out and at times returning home intoxicated with other men. Her drinking became such that she was unable to do ordinary housework and it became necessary for-Wesley and the children to do both the cooking and the housework. During this period she not only became an alcoholic but added to her problem by taking numerous drugs.

Beginning in 1958, Nina was seen by a Doctor Buker of Chester and on his advice she went to Great Falls for treatment by several psychiatrists, first Dr. Gelernter in 1961 and 1962, and later Dr. Pierce. In addition, in 1962 she went to the State Hospital for treatment staying there only two weeks. Dr. Buker and others testified that during the 1958-1964 period she made several suicide attempts that were more attention getters than serious efforts to destroy herself. All of the medical and psychiatric testimony reveals that Nina was a sick and insecure human being. Dr. Gelernter describes her thus: “She is an extremely uncomfortable person, her ability to stand up under stress was extremely limited, under stress she came completely apart, at times I am sure she was psychotic, not able to deal with reality, the drugs and alcohol represented some respite, she escaped it.”

These facts and many bizarre incidents, all recounted by wit[416]*416nesses at the hearing, ultimately led to the filing of a complaint for divorce by Wesley on March 9, 1964. The complaint was based on grievous mental suffering by a course of conduct by the defendant (Nina) existing and persisted in for a period of more than one year preceding the commencement of the action. Upon being served, Nina immediately secured counsel in William Hunt of Chester and on May 7, 1964, an answer was filed denying the allegations and a counterclaim seeking a divorce in her own right. On August 24, 1964, Nina obtained a temporary restraining order and an order to show cause was issued to be heard on August 27, 1964. As previously set forth the hearing on the order to show cause was by agreement of both counsel and became a hearing on the divorce matter.

The August 27th hearing was a full hearing on the merits with some 12 witnesses, including both Wesley and Nina, testifying. Nina’s testimony, some six pages, covered a number of subjects, including her finances, her husband’s ranching operations, the difficulties encountered during the marriage and what she intended to do in the future. At the conclusion of the testimony the court took the matter under advisement and a month later on September 30, 1964, granted the decree of divorce to Wesley, awarded him the custody of the children and dismissed her counterclaim.

During the month between the hearing and the granting of the decree of divorce, all was not well with Nina. On September 19th she was admitted at the Chester Hospital by Dr. Buker who describes her condition as follows: “She was completely depersonalized and I think overdosed but I never found out what she was taking. I held her here in the hospital for a day and she was much brighter and clearer so I let her go.” On the 22nd he stated she was in the hospital again “having made a suicide gesture, good deep cuts down to the muscle.” She was hospitalized and on the 28th, sent to the State Hospital ‘on an emergency admission basis.’ ” The record of the diagnosis at the hospital, was “Psychoneurotic, Reaction, Depres[417]*417sive Type with Hysterical Features.” She was discharged from this admission on December 18, 1964, after being home on visit. At the time of her discharge she had improved. However, counsel for the appellant emphasizes that because she was committed before the decree, but a month after the hearing, that the decree must be set aside.

On November 11, 1964, (less than a month and one-half after the decree) Wesley Hodges was killed in an automobile accident, and it was then learned that at the time of the divorce from Nina he had not changed the beneficiaries on his life insurance policies. Nina suddenly became possessed of the sum of $103,047.04 plus a vehicle valued at $1,663.75. Due to the fact she was at the State Hospital, her attorney Mr. Hunt had a guardian, a Mr. Shaeffer of Chester, Montana, appointed to protect her estate. One year later on November 24, 1965, the First Trust Company of Great Falls became Guardian for Nina Hodges and Avithin four months moved to set aside the divorce so that Nina could further benefit from the estate as a widow. Two hearings Avere held by the district court, on September 22 and 28, 1966, and testimony was heard from Dr. Buker, Mr. William Hunt, Leland Hodges and Nina Hodges. Mr. Hunt testified that from the time he was employed as Nina’s attorney to contest the divorce, March of 1964 to the time of the divorce, his records disclosed that he had conferred with her 29 times and had numerous telephone conversations; that during the time he acted as attorney for the guardianship, a period of one year, he conferred with her about 15 times and based on his dealings with her during this period he answered the folloAVing question:

“Q'. Without going into privileged communications I Avould merely ask this question, during the year you acted as counsel did you discover any facts which you felt properly should have been presented to this court at the time of the divorce hearing in August 1964. A. I discovered no information that should have been brought to the attention of this Court.”

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

Related

Connie Stockton v. Veral Stockton
532 P.3d 735 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2023)
Mitchell v. Gales
61 A.3d 678 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2013)
In re J.H.
640 P.2d 445 (Montana Supreme Court, 1982)
Matter of JH
640 P.2d 445 (Montana Supreme Court, 1982)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
435 P.2d 784, 150 Mont. 413, 1967 Mont. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodges-v-hodges-ex-rel-first-trust-co-mont-1967.