Koufasimes v. Koufasimes

293 P.2d 200, 206 Or. 400, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 368
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 293 P.2d 200 (Koufasimes v. Koufasimes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koufasimes v. Koufasimes, 293 P.2d 200, 206 Or. 400, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 368 (Or. 1956).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff (wife) from a decree of the circuit court which dissolved the bonds *401 of matrimony that had united the parties in wedlock and which also made distribution of most of the property, real and personal, which the two had acquired. The single exception was the household furniture. The decree granted the plaintiff-appellant no alimony. Upon appeal, she does not attack the parts of the decree which awarded to her the divorce. Her dissatisfaction is with the provisions which pertain to the property distribution. More particularly she is dissatisfied with the omission to grant her alimony and the household goods.

The couple were married in 1937 when the plaintiff (wife) was 53 years of age and the defendant was 41. At that time the plaintiff lived in a small hut adjacent to the business district of Oswego. A witness referred to the little hovel as a shack. It stood upon a lot 50 by 120 feet in size. She paid for the property $250. The defendant, who was born in Greece, worked as a laborer with a section crew that laid track for a railroad. He still followed that occupation at the time of the trial but had advanced to the rank of foreman. The plaintiff’s wretched dwelling, which lacked even the convenience of running water, became the couple’s place of abode when they were married.

This case constitutes another chapter in the simple annals of the poor. It has, however, a modern touch given it by the fact that, a few months before the plaintiff’s application for a divorce, the couple purchased a secondhand automobile and at other times embraced the installment method of payment.

Notwithstanding the singular age disparity between husband and wife, the marriage was successful for 17 years. In those years the harmony which attended their relationship was interrupted only by occasional minor *402 misunderstandings. The defendant, in mentioning the fact that during those years his wife did not argue with him and he employed no provocative words in discussing matters with her, concluded in this vein: “Yes. Before, honest to God, for seventeen years, never say a word; I never say a word at all.” He meant, of course, that neither argued with the other.

In those 17 years thrift, industry and lack of domestic bickering enabled the couple to add materially to the meager financial resources with which their matrimonial venture was begun. It is clear that neither was afraid of hard work and both toiled to accumulate something for old age. The plaintiff, before her marriage, had engaged in such menial tasks as the scrubbing of floors, and the defendant, while upon the witness stand, in order to evidence the hard labor by which he earned his daily bread, punctuated his testimony with these ejaculations: “Look at my hands, look at there” and “Look at my hands, look over here.”

Through the couple’s toil, the hut, which became their home upon marriage and which the defendant described as “only four walls,” was expanded and materially improved. Its mud sill foundation was replaced in part with a crude concrete foundation constructed by the defendant. Two rooms were added to the little structure and whereas it originally lacked the prime necessity of running water, it had by the time discord brought the couple to the divorce court, the luxury of a bathroom. Evidently the little habitation did not originally have even a chimney, for the defendant mentioned with pride more than once that he built for it a brick chimney. The house in' fact had undergone such material overhauling through the couple’s industry that it was producing $40 a month rent at the *403 time of the trial. Since the plaintiff owned the property-before the marriage, both she and the defendant referred to it as hers although the defendant avowed an “understanding” that he was entitled to an interest in it. The property is situated upon Second street in a business zone of Oswego. A competent appraiser estimated its value as $4,500 to $5,000.

After the couple had improved the Second street property the defendant purchased eight lots totaling in area 120 by 208 feet on Third street in Oswego. Upon it they erected a dwelling house. It seems that the defendant was both architect and builder of the structure, but his competence in those vocations evidently was not as impressive as the determination with which he pursued the project. The appraiser whom we have mentioned, after going through the house, described it in this way: ‘ ‘ Oh, it’s nothing that you’d come up and brag about; * * * it’s good enough, I guess.” In its erection the defendant used whatever scrap materials came to hand and in the construction work was helped by the plaintiff. The appraiser estimated the value of the lots and house at $7,500. It required the couple four years to complete the house. In 1947 they moved into it and thereupon rented to tenants the Second street property.

While the parties were improving their properties in the manner just described they began a systematic plan of saving whereby they purchased, every three months, a government savings bond of the maturity value of $25. They possessed 48 of them at the time of the trial. The plaintiff, who had been married before, was the mother of four children one of whom died while serving with the armed forces. On account of his death she received for a while a pension of $40 monthly, *404 but when good fortune had rewarded the couple’s industry she had the pension stopped upon the defendant’s request. A few months before the trial they purchased a secondhand automobile for the sum of $1,350. An initial payment of $600 was made upon the purchase price. The plaintiff, in speaking of her husband’s ability to handle the car, described it in this vein: “He was steering it around the streets, if you call it driving; I’d like to know what you call it. ’ ’

We see from the foregoing that thrift, toil and the keeping of a tight leash upon the tongue advanced the material interests of the couple to the point where they had the luxuries of an automobile, a brick chimney and a bathroom. Then came a by-product of the taxation era in which we find ourselves—a tax refund. Although the couple’s matrimonial bark had ridden with safety and equanimity over all previous troubled waters, it proved incapable of coping with the benefaction of the tax refund. The plaintiff testified:

“Q Now, this check, Mrs. Koufasimes, you said that that started your trouble. What is that for ?
“A Well, that’s return back off of the taxes.
“Q Federal taxes?
“A Yes. Last year when it come, why he had me sign it, and he cashed it; this year, I asked him to sign it and me cash it, and he pounded on my wrist and broke my watch, and you can see how crooked my wrist is from the fix of it.”

The defendant, without challenging his wife’s account about the source of that item of dissension, gave a different account of the origin of the couple’s discord. It, too, centered in the circumstance that husband and wife had accumulated property. When they struggled with want and adversity, their mutual hankering to get *405

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Bluebook (online)
293 P.2d 200, 206 Or. 400, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koufasimes-v-koufasimes-or-1956.