Iverson v. Iverson

241 N.W.2d 583, 90 S.D. 374, 1976 S.D. LEXIS 217
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1976
DocketFile 11605
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 241 N.W.2d 583 (Iverson v. Iverson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iverson v. Iverson, 241 N.W.2d 583, 90 S.D. 374, 1976 S.D. LEXIS 217 (S.D. 1976).

Opinion

WOLLMAN, Justice.

Defendant husband has appealed from the property award and child support provisions of the judgment granting plaintiff wife a divorce for the fault of defendant. We affirm.

The parties were married on September 19, 1968. Plaintiff was nineteen years old at the time; defendant was twenty-two. *376 One child, a daughter, who was four years old at the time of trial in July of 1974, was born during the marriage.

After her marriage to defendant, plaintiff, who had been born and reared in Pierre, South Dakota, moved to a ranch some twelve miles northwest of Murdo, South Dakota, where she and defendant lived with defendant’s father, John Iverson, who died in April of 1970. Plaintiff testified that notwithstanding her urban background she enjoyed life on the ranch and assisted defendant in such activities as catching and tagging newborn calves on the range during the spring of the year as a part of defendant’s livestock production testing program. Indeed, at one point during the marriage plaintiff borrowed money from a bank in Kennebec in order to buy some livestock. At the time of trial she owned thirteen cows, two heifer yearlings, and ten calves.

The marriage was destined not to be a smooth or happy one inasmuch as defendant frequently left plaintiff and her young child at the ranch for extended periods while he journeyed to places such as Winner and Pierre, where he spent considerable time drinking in bars. As plaintiff described the situation, defendant would leave the ranch on a Thursday or Friday, not to be seen again by plaintiff until she returned from church with her daughter on Sunday morning, at which time defendant would express remorse for his activities and promise not to repeat them. He would then spend several days recuperating from his jaunts to town, all the better to be prepared to leave the following weekend. During the time that he was present at the ranch defendant frequently slept until noon and would quite often ask plaintiff to tell the hired man that he, defendant, was not available when the hired man came to the ranch house to ask for instructions about the work that he was to do on the ranch.

In addition to his frequent unexplained absences from home, defendant began mistreating plaintiff physically. For example, plaintiff and defendant went to California to visit defendant’s sister and brother-in-law during the 1973 Christmas vacation season. While they were there, defendant came home from a trip to Tijuana, Mexico, in an intoxicated condition. Upon being questioned by pláintíff about his absence, defendant became *377 angry. He slapped plaintiff, striking the young daughter in the process, grabbed plaintiff by the hair and threw her to the bed, leaving a large bruise on her arm. On another occasion, plaintiff became upset with defendant when she found him talking to a go-go girl in a Fort Pierre, South Dakota, bar. After plaintiff and defendant went out to their car, defendant slapped plaintiff and pulled her hair, leaving plaintiff with bruises on her arms and a split and swollen lip.

On an occasion in September of 1973, plaintiff observed defendant’s car parked behind still another bar in Fort Pierre. Upon going into the bar in search of her husband, plaintiff found him sitting with a woman, as it turned out, a child psychologist from Denver, who informed plaintiff that she should not feel threatened or upset if she, the child psychologist, slept with defendant that night. Not desiring to participate further in this conversation, plaintiff left the bar after informing defendant that she would meet him at the Holiday Inn in Pierre after attending her sister’s wedding shower. When she went to the appointed place to meet defendant, plaintiff found him talking on the house telephone and heard him say, “I really want to go to bed with you,” at which time plaintiff hung up the phone and asked defendant whom he was talking to. Defendant replied that he had just received the call, didn’t know who it was and hadn’t yet said a word to the calling party. Defendant then left plaintiff and walked directly to a room at the motel. Plaintiff left and returned to the ranch home. Defendant arrived home at about four o’clock the following morning.

As a result of other dalliances on defendant’s part, plaintiff suffered adverse physical consequences more serious than those detailed above, requiring her on at least two occasions to seek medical treatment, the nature of which we deem it unnecessary to detail here.

As might be gathered from the foregoing summary of a portion of the evidence regarding plaintiffs claim of extreme cruelty, defendant does not contest the fact that plaintiff had grounds for divorce. We recount this evidence to illustrate some of the factors that the trial judge justifiably took into account in making an *378 equitable division of property between the parties. As far as the record indicates, plaintiff was not guilty of any misconduct, either of a sexual nature or otherwise, during the course of the marriage. We will not dwell upon the contents of a post-trial brief filed by defendant’s trial counsel (defendant’s present counsel did not represent him at trial).

By the terms of his father’s will, defendant stands to inherit all of his father’s real and personal property, subject to a bequest to defendant’s sister in the amount of $50,000, which is to be paid by defendant from his father’s estate at the rate of $1,000 per year for a period of twenty years, and then at the rate of $1,500 per year until the balance is paid in full; and subject further to a bequest to defendant’s mother,j payable by defendant at the rate of $100 per month until defendant’s mother reaches the age of sixty years (she was born in 1926). At the time of trial in 1974, the only matter that remained to be completed prior to the entry of a decree of distribution was the payment of some $36,000 in federal estate taxes, an amount that defendant was in the process of attempting to have reduced.

Including the property that defendant purchased at the partition sale held in response to this court’s decision in Iverson v. Iverson, 87 S.D. 628, 213 N.W.2d 708, defendant owned in his own name and by reason of the imminent decree of distribution in his father’s estate some 5700 acres of farm and ranch land in Jones County, South Dakota. Plaintiffs expert witness placed a trial-date value on this real estate of $150 per acre. The trial court placed a value of some $100 per acre on the land for purposes of determining defendant’s net worth. After taking into account defendant’s other assets, which consisted of livestock, farm machinery and other personal property, and deducting a mortgage to the Federal Land Bank in the amount of approximately $149,000, together with other smaller indebtednesses to other creditors, the trial court determined that defendant had a net worth of some $500,000.

The trial court awarded plaintiff child support in the amount of $350 per month. To insure payment, the judgment provides that defendant’s interest in the real estate described above be *379

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 N.W.2d 583, 90 S.D. 374, 1976 S.D. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iverson-v-iverson-sd-1976.