Kontner v. Kontner

145 N.E.2d 495, 103 Ohio App. 360, 74 Ohio Law. Abs. 97, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 384, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 598
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 7, 1956
Docket5333
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 145 N.E.2d 495 (Kontner v. Kontner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kontner v. Kontner, 145 N.E.2d 495, 103 Ohio App. 360, 74 Ohio Law. Abs. 97, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 384, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 598 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

OPINION

By HORNBECK, J:

This is an appeal from a decree of divorce to defendant and an award of alimony to him. The ground upon which the decree was granted was that the plaintiff had a husband living at the time of the marriage to the defendant and the judgment entry recites “that in lieu of alimony” defendant is awarded certain real estate known as 141 Mill Street, Nelsonville, Ohio, and “all furniture and household furnishings in the house and garage in the foregoing real estate” except an electric washer, dryer, three level table, hall desk and chair, and one unfinished chest of drawers.

Three errors are assigned:

(1) In overruling the motion of plaintiff for new trial.

(2) Decree is contrary to law, and

(3) Is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

It is seldom that a divorce case presents so many questions of law as does this one. We cannot discuss all of them.

May, 1953, the plaintiff instituted her action for divorce against the defendant, charging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty and praying for alimony, temporary and permanent. On August 3, 1953, defendant answered generally denying the allegations of the petition with the exception of formal averments as to residence of plaintiff and in a cross-petition alleged that a ceremonial marriage was performed for himself and plaintiff on January 29, 1939, at Greenup, Kentucky; that at the time the marriage ceremony was performed, plaintiff had a husband living and that he is still living; that his marriage with plaintiff *99 has never been terminated. He further alleges that on February 13, 1939, plaintiff having failed to make full disclosure of circumstances concerning her prior relationship with her husband, Ross Watkins, induced the defendant to convey to her certain described real estate in the City of Nelsonville, Ohio, and also induced the defendant to cause his brother to convey to plaintiff certain real estate described in petition, the brother holding said real estate in trust for defendant. Defendant specifically avers that the transfers of the real estate to plaintiff were made by him with the mistaken belief that he and the plaintiff were lawfully married and that there was a total failure of consideration for said transfers. He avers that he has made all the payments that have been made on mortgages encumbering the described real estate and improvements thereon. He alleges that he first had conclusive evidence concerning the existing marital relationship between plaintiff and Ross Watkins at the deposition hearing wherein the plaintiff testified under oath on August 1, 1953. Concerning this deposition, it is plain that in one answer plaintiff indicated that she had a choice of divorcing Watkins or leaving him. The implication may be drawn that she recognized that there was no impediment to her marriage to Watkins. The answer in its entirety is uncertain in meaning. However, within a few minutes after this statement, and after very few succeeding questions, the plaintiff reiterated the contention that she had at all times maintained, viz., that she had been advised that because Watkins was married when he married her, no divorce was necessary as a prerequisite to her marriage to the defendant.

Plaintiff, in her answer to the cross-petition, after admitting certain of the formal averments of the cross-petition, generally denied the other allegations. As a first defense, she avers that she and defendant had resumed marital relations on July 9 and July 26, 1953, which defendant and his counsel well knew when the cross-petition was filed.

As a second defense, she alleges that at the time of her marriage to defendant, he had not been divorced from his former wife, Anna Kontner. On this last averment, the record discloses that in the divorce hearing of defendant’s first wife, the trial judge had orally announced a decree of divorce in her favor. The entry journalizing the order did not go on until later. The parties herein were married before the formal decree of defendant’s divorce had been spread upon the record. Thus, the plaintiff had the same cause of action against the defendant for a divorce as he had against her.

When the cause eventually came on for trial, the evidence as developed by the plaintiff disclosed that when quite young (she says fourteen years of age; defendant insists that she was sixteen), because of the breaking up of her home, she was sent by her mother to visit her aunt, known as Mrs. N. B. Stewart, who was then living with her purported husband in West Virginia. This arrangement not being satisfactory, plaintiff’s mother suggested that she go to live with another relative. Plaintiff had started to make the trip to the home of this relative when her uncle, Stewart, requested her to meet him in Bluefield, West Virginia. When they met at Bluefield, Stewart represented to plaintiff that he had not been married to her aunt and that he desired to *100 marry her, whereupon they went to some office where an individual, whom the plaintiff took to be a judge, went through the form of a ceremonial marriage. Immediately thereafter, Stewart changed his name to Watkins. The parties lived together as husband and wife for sixteen years, one child (a daughter), having been born, who was of age at the time of the trial in this action and had lived with her mother at all times since her birth.

After the marriage to Stewart, alias Watkins, the parties moved to Dayton and afterwards to or near Nelsonville, Ohio, where they lived together as husband and wife for a period of ten years. During this residence at Nelsonville, plaintiff traded with defendant at his grocery store, charges were made against her as Mrs. Watkins, he so knew her, delivered groceries to her home, discovered that Watkins was untrue to plaintiff, so notified her, advised her to get a divorce. Defendant became enamored of plaintiff, carried on a courtship of two years and then, in 1939, married her.

Plaintiff testified that when she confronted Watkins with the charge that he had been unfaithful to her and that she proposed to divorce him, he informed her that such procedure was unnecessary because when he married plaintiff, he was then married to her aunt. Plaintiff says that she fully informed the defendant of all of the facts and circumstances respecting her relationship with Watkins. This the defendant denied.

Plaintiff says that defendant consulted a lawyer respecting her status and reported that he advised that she would not be required to secure a divorce from Watkins before she could legally marry the defendant. Defendant insists that he did not consult a lawyer but that plaintiff did so and reported that she had been advised respecting the invalidity of her purported marriage to Watkins.

Without quotation from the witnesses, the evidence is overwhelming in corroboration of the contention of plaintiff that defendant was fully informed as to the marital relationship between Watkins and plaintiff when the defendant married her, and that he and not the plaintiff consulted a lawyer. Mrs. Kelso, the wife of the lawyer, whom it is asserted defendant visited, states that he was a client of her husband. Mrs. Taylor testifies that the defendant told her that he had consulted a lawyer respecting the necessity of divorce.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 N.E.2d 495, 103 Ohio App. 360, 74 Ohio Law. Abs. 97, 3 Ohio Op. 2d 384, 1956 Ohio App. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kontner-v-kontner-ohioctapp-1956.