Hughes v. Hughes

133 Ill. App. 654, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 320
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 13, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,258
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 Ill. App. 654 (Hughes v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. Hughes, 133 Ill. App. 654, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 320 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a cause matrimonial, in which hoth parties find the yoke which binds them irksome and galling and seek a divorce from each other under reciprocal charges of adultery. To her charge of adultery Mrs. Hughes adds one of extreme and repeated cruelty.

Before entering upon or discussing these recriminatory charges of adultery, we will dispose of Mrs. Hughes’ accusation of extreme and repeated cruelty against her husband. It is firmly settled by the law of this State that a charge of extreme and repeated cruelty does not constitute a sufficient recriminatory defense to a charge of adultery. Bast v. Bast, 82 Ill., 585; Stiles v. Stiles, 167 Ill., 576.

This being the law, we do not regard it as either expedient or necessary to enter into an examination of the evidence touching this charge, or to decide whether or not the proofs were sufficient to justify the jury in finding the husband guilty upon this charge, for in the ultimate decision of this appeal it is of no consequence.

The custody and nurture of the two children, the offspring of this marriage, are involved in this appeal, and it is of material importance to their welfare that they should be entrusted to the innocent party, and not to the one guilty of adultery.

The verdict of the jury exonerated hoth parties from the charge of adultery made by each against the other. On the verdict finding the husband guilty of the extreme and repeated- cruelty charged, the court gave to the wife a decree of divorce, the custody of the children, alimony, solicitor’s fees, and allowance for the-support of the children, permitting her to take the children out of the jurisdiction of the court and maintain them temporarily at Ann Arbor, Michigan, reserving certain privileges of visitation and temporary custody of them to the husband, and retaining jurisdiction for the purpose of changing the order as to the custody of the children and allowances for support and alimony. To reverse such decree this review of the record is sought. We will first dispose of the charge of 'adultery made by appellee against appellant.

The family of Clara .Beifeld, with whom appellant is claimed, by his wife to have been intimate, consisted of herself, her father, two sisters and one brother. They lived at 939 Ridgeway avenue, in a flat. The brother’s name was Hagan; one sister, single, named Josephine, and the other sister, married and detached from her husband, named Saunders, who is the family housekeeper. In this family appellant, after separating from his wife, took his evening meal on secular days and dinner and supper on Sundays. Detectives were set to watch his movements, but their testimony is barren of incriminatory acts. They saw him go into the Beifeld flat building in the evening, and on several occasions they left their spying without noticing appellant’s exit. Appellee says her husband took Clara Beifeld out riding, and that he once told her that he took Clara Beifeld to Ed Smith’s roadhouse, that he had the finest steak he ever tasted, and that it cost $2.75 a plate. Otto Goersuch testified that on September 3, 1905, appellant, on board the Eastland during its voyage from Chicago to South Haven, introduced him to a young lady as he was passing them on the boat, and that he saw no more of them. The boat incident appellant denies. Ho adulterous inferences from this casual incident, if true, can be indulged.

As to Clara Beifeld she emphatically and positively denies any intimate or adulterous relations with appellant at any time. Appellant himself makes a like positive denial. Hagan Beifeld, the brother of Clara, corroborates appellant in relation to his visits to the Beifeld home, taking his meals there, and says further that appellant often lingered and played cards with the various members of the family until as late sometimes as ten o’clock at night. That all such games were played in the presence of the family, and that appellant never stayed at the house over night.

While it has been said that a court will not presume that a man who visits a house of ill fame did so for the purpose of engaging in religious devotions, but that a strong inference of carnal acts on his part will, unexplained, be assumed to have followed upon such visit; so it may with equal propriety be assumed that when a man goes into the dwelling place of a respectable family at meal times and there continues for a reasonable space of time, that he partook of the meal served at the family table, and not do violence to all logic and decency by holding that adultery with a maiden, against whose reputation for chastity there is neither evidence nor suspicion, was upon such an occasion committed. Without any denial, such an inference would be wholly unwarranted. But there is no room for inferences in relation to this charge. There is no proof of it; and the evidence in denial is consistent, overwhelming and convincing. We unhesitatingly concur in the verdict of the jury that Leslie G. Hughes is not guilty of the adultery charged against him by his wife in her cross-bill, and that such charges are baseless, and Clara Beifeld innocent of any sexual indiscretion with appellant.

Having disposed of all the charges against the husband, there remains for our consideration and determination the guilt or innocence of the wife of the adultery charged against her. Unhappiness seems to have sat upon the threshold of the married life of the Hughes, for three days after their wedding the wife forsook the nuptial couch for the home of her mother, and did not resume the marital relation until five weeks thereafter. Between the ringing of the marriage bells and the final separation in 1904 this mismated couple were separated fifteen times. Two children were born of this unhappy union, a son and daughter, Vivian and Ever el, who were thirteen and eight years of age respectively at the time of the trial, both of whom are said to be with their mother.

While Mrs. Hughes was erratic in her domestic habit of living with her husband, yet no moral lapses smirch her wifely character until the blighting immoral influence of the co-respondent, Septimus E. Gauthier, crossed her path' in the summer of 1903. The Gauthier and the Hughes families lived within one block of each other, and became on very good terms, visiting in each other’s homes frequently.

The first occult evidence of an improper attachment between Mrs. Hughes and Gauthier developed in July, 1904, on a trip to Toledo, where Mrs. Gauthier was visiting. The parties visited besides Toledo, Grand Rapids and Detroit, Michigan. Mrs. Hughes exhibited on the journey a marked preference for the society of Gauthier, which he seemed to reciprocate in full measure. They were constantly together, seeking each other’s society and avoiding that of her husband and Mrs. Gauthier. At meals, in the cars, at the theaters, they were side by side. Appellant expostulated with his wife on her unmatronly conduct with Gauthier, and she thereupon retorted that she did not want to go home, that she did not care anything for her husband, that she was tired of him, and that she would go with Gauthier if she wanted to and he could not prevent her from so doing, whether he liked it or not. The parties reached their home abont August 1, 1904, and she next left her husband the twenty-first day of the same month. During these three weeks she was constantly seen with Gauthier.

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266 Ill. App. 277 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
133 Ill. App. 654, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-hughes-illappct-1907.