Jones v. Jones

10 S.W.2d 821, 226 Ky. 264, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 13, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 10 S.W.2d 821 (Jones v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Jones, 10 S.W.2d 821, 226 Ky. 264, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 62 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion oe the Court by

Judge Logan—

Affirming.

Appellant, Lizzie Y. Jones, and appellee, John W. Jones, were married on the 1st day of January, 1899. They resided for a while at Williamsburg before moving to Corbin, where they have since resided. About the year 1920 appellant became suspicions and jealous of appellee because of his reputed association with a woman. As this was her only serious complaint against him until near the conclusion of this litigation in the lower court, we deem it necessary to briefly state the facts. About the year 1920 appellee, with other gentlemen, organized a garage company in the city of Corbin. $20,000 or more was paid in as capital. The husband of the woman who aroused the suspicion and jealousy of appellant contributed $5,000 to the capital investment. He was a member of the board of directors. His wife occasionally went to the office of the garage company, and it is testified to that there was some talk about an intimacy between her and appellee. Appellant testified that she had a subconscious feeling that there was something wrong between them, and that she had observed a guilty look on their faces when in the presence of each other. On one occasion the woman requested appellee to make some slight repair on her automobile. Appellant saw this, and it occurred to her, so she testified, that the woman should have called' a mechanic to do the work. At another time appellant saw her husband hand the woman a towel with which to *266 wipe the face of a small child whose face the woman had washed. Again appellant caught her husband watering some flowers which the woman had left in the office of the garage. Others saw appellee standing by the automobile of the woman, while she was sitting in it, with his foot on the running board, apparently' talking to her. Another witness testified that she . saw appellee' and the woman talking together on the street, and as she passed the woman turned her face away. It was of frequent occurrence that the husband of the woman, in company with her, and with appellee and appellant, drove together in the automobile of one or the other of the parties. A friendliness seemed to exist between the two families. Appellant testified, however, that during the period between 1920 and 1922 she had a subconscious feeling that something was wrong, and she acted accordingly.

The husband of the woman died in 1922, leaving her all of his property by will. She thereby became interested in the garage company, and took the place of her husband in that organization, with the addition that she was employed as a bookkeeper to work in the office. Appellant was more deeply suspicious after 1922, and, either consciously or unconsciously, she put spies to work. Some of the neighbors, both men and women, became interested in the domestic relations existing in the home of appellant and appellee. They commenced watching with careful scrutiny the conduct of the woman and appellee, but with all of their diligence there is no witness who testified that he saw any act on the part of the woman which in any way reflected on her standing as a' good woman. ' It may also be said that there is no statement in the evidence reflecting upon the morals of appellee.

It is testified that the woman often took appellee in her car and drove him to and from his home, or that he took the woman in his car and drove her to and from her home. There is also testimony that they were seen together in an- automobile in the city of Corbin on more than one occasion, but the evidence is not very definite about the automobile activities of appellee and the woman in the city of Corbin. There was. considerable evidence that the woman had been seen ón more than one' occasion driving, on the public roads leading out of Corbin’, and. that soon thereafter appellee had-been .'seen *267 driving on the same road. On One occasion witnesses áhW the-'-woman on-the road when something had gone wrong with her automobile, and appellee came along, stopped and fixed it for her, and then got in his automobile and'drove away in one direction and she drove away in another! A number-' of witnesses-testified that they had seen them bn the. public road driving at the time between Corbin and London, but whether the trips were one with many witnesses along the road, or many with few witnesses, cannot be determined from the evidence. Witnesses all up and -down the road testified, and as none of them identified the particular date, or dates, on which they saw these two driving together, the court is left in much doubt, as to how frequently they drove out on .the public road. There were some .witnesses particularly active in trying to find out what was going on between appellee and the woman: One of these was some kind of doctor, and shé testified that she had heard much and knew much which she could not reveal because of the professional manner in which she received' the gossip relating to her neighbors, but she was-frank enough to admit that she did some looking about on her own responsibility,' and she made known to the court her discoveries'on her. expeditions.' On one occasion, she testified with directness that she saw appellee and the woman sitting in an automobile late at night in the mouth of an alley back of-the Masonic-Building. She passed by -as they were thus sitting and recognized them at the time, but she desired to be certain'beyond the per ad venture of any doubt, so after- she had passed them she-turned back and approached the automobile and took a closer view. She ■testified that she could not-be mistaken about what and whom she saw, although she did not claim that they-were ■doing anything other than talking.

Two witnesses at least testified that they saw appellee and-this woman On a railroad train- going towards •'Louisville,' sitting fronting each other in one- of the . coaches. Another witness testified that he saw-them one - day in Lotiisville walking on Fourth street-."

■ • These incidents,, suspicions, and surmises constitute the bulk Of the evidence in favor'of appellant up to'the real crisis which was reached in 1926 when'there came ;'i’ntoT her possession certain pictures of the womah' in" a *268 .bathing suit, and also pictures of appellee in a bathing-suit. She testified that the postman delivered to -her home a package addressed to her husband which she opened. She discovered a number of pictures of the woman dressed in a bathing suit, and also pictures of her husband dressed in a bathing suit. She immediately carried these pictures to her attorney, as well as the films which were inclosed in the package. In some manner appellee learned of her having obtained possession of the pictures, and he made complaint at the post office, and a postal inspector was directed to investigate. He obtained the pictures from appellant, but did not obtain the films. Appellant caused new pictures to be made from the films, and they are placed in evidence. Appellant left her home and went to the home of a relative, where she has since remained.

For five years before she instituted hér suit for alimony she jadmits that she had been rather vigorous in her protests to her husband about his association with this woman, and the matter became so acute that her husband occupied a room separate from her for a time. Again he took a room elsewhere and remained away for some months. While he was away from home she was ill, and the neighbors had to look after her wants.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 821, 226 Ky. 264, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-jones-kyctapphigh-1928.