Krauss v. Krauss

111 So. 683, 163 La. 218, 58 A.L.R. 457, 1927 La. LEXIS 1622
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 28, 1927
DocketNo. 27858.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 111 So. 683 (Krauss v. Krauss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krauss v. Krauss, 111 So. 683, 163 La. 218, 58 A.L.R. 457, 1927 La. LEXIS 1622 (La. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment granting the wife a separation from bed and board.

The grounds asserted as a basis for separation are substantially as follows:

That said defendant not only neglected your petitioner and his children, but likewise neglected his business and personal affairs until finally he withdrew entirely from all business affairs, devoting his entire time, thought, and attention to the pursuit of new and strange religious teachings.

That said defendant has left petitioner for months at a time, only recently having returned after an absence of over nine months spent in California in a religious school, where he was pursuing these new and strange religious teachings.

That since returning to the matrimonial domicile during the last few days, the conduct of said defendant towards your petitioner has been more unusual and unnatural than- ever before. He has forbidden petitioner to associate with her friends or to take part in any of the social activities to which she has been accustomed and to which said defendant has been accustomed prior to the time when- this change came over him.

That said defendant has forbidden petitioner to leave the house or to take part in any of the temporal affairs of life to which she was accustomed and to which her and her said husband’s station in life entitles her.

That the conduct of said defendant in the particulars above set forth, and many others, has been such as to bring great humiliation to her, and in the eyes of her family and friends to degrade her.

That said defendant, obsessed as aforesaid with his strange spiritual ideas, has continually found fault with petitioner, accusing her of leading an empty life, speaking to her in the presence of her family and friends in •a manner calculated to humiliate and embarrass her, and even accusing petitioner of being unfit properly to rear, educate, and train their said children.

All of which it is alleged constitutes such cruel and inhuman treatment as to render their living together insupportable.

The couple were married in this city on December 23, 1914.

They were both of the Jewish religion, and were married in that faith. At the time of the marriage the husband was established in business, being the president of the Krauss Bros. Lumber Company, and as such drew a salary of $12,000 per year with an additional income from the earnings of the company.

During the period of six or eight years following the marriage the domestic relations were all that could be desired. They were devoted to each other. They moved in the best and highest social circles. They visited and mingled with their large circle of friends of all religious faiths.

They had their friends and the members of. their respective families- visit them at *221 their home. They attended together picture shows, theaters, and other places of innocent amusement and recreation.

In the course of time two girl babies came to bless and to further cement, if possible, their already happy union.

The salary of the husband enabled him to maintain a home with some five servants, an expensive automobile with a hired chauffeur, and to make an allowance to the wife of some $800 or $1,000 per month to meet household expenses.

In the early summer of 1922 the defendant abandoned the Jewish faith and became a Christian, accepting Christ as his Savior.

Following this change of heart the defendant became neglectful of business affairs and particularly of the interest in the business of which he was the practical head, and devoted a large part of his time to religious work and study.

This brought about a severance of all business relations between himself and his father and brothers.

On an adjustment of the business the defendant was let out and his interest was fixed at $25,000, which amount it was agreed should be retained by one of the brothers at an annual interest of 10 per cent, to be paid to the defendant.

Thereafter the defendant ceased all business pursuits, abandoned all temporal and worldly affairs of life, and devoted his entire time to his religious study and work. He did not earn a dollar from the time he-left his former business up to the trial of this case, covering a period of some four years. The interest on his capital was not sufficient to support himself and family at the former standard of living, if such had been maintained, and he was forced even under the changed circumstances and conditions of living to draw upon his capital.

He allowed all fire insurance on household property and a policy on his life of some $17,500 to lapse.

He turned over his apartment in this city to his wife’s sister and went to Philadelphia to attend a Bible school. His wife and daughters soon joined him in that city.

While attending this school the defendant was stricken with the flu, and on the eve of his recovery the family was summoned back to New Orleans on account of serious illness of the wife’s father.

The defendant had bought a house in this city in which he conducted religious services, but finally sold it, and after his return from Philadelphia his services were held at various places, sometimes on the streets and in the living room at his home.

There was admittedly an entire reversal of the former style and manner of living and an entire change in the domestic relations between husband and wife. The defendant was no longer the companion to his wife that he had been in the past.

He abandoned all purely social activities and manifested a total lack of interest in the business affairs of the world.

He gave up all of his friends and insisted on his wife doing the same. He did not want his wife to go out with her friends, nor-to have any of them come to the house.

When friends did come he absented himself and acted so rudely that his. wife was forced to forego the pleasure of entertaining her friends -in her own home. He forbade his wife to go to shows, theaters or concerts. He accused her of leading an empty life and of being unfit properly to rear, educate, and train their children. He held audiences in the living room composed of people of all stations in life — people with whom neither he nor his wife had theretofore associated.

All of which conduct on the part of the husband had the effect of keeping away from the home many of their former friends and associates and of degrading and humiliating *223 'the plaintiff in' the eyes of her friends, former associates, and the respective families ■of both husband and wife.

In September, 1923, the defendant went to Los Angeles, where he attended a Bible school for some nine months. His wife begged him not to go, and declined to go with him, giving as a reason that she had “undergone so many hardships in her stay with him in Philadelphia she did not ■ wish to experience a like condition by following him to Los Angeles.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Muhammad v. Muhammad
622 So. 2d 1239 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1993)
Pater v. Pater
7 Ohio App. Unrep. 22 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1990)
Batiste v. Batiste
548 So. 2d 14 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1989)
Dooley v. Dooley
478 So. 2d 564 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1985)
Daigle v. Breaux
477 So. 2d 798 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1985)
Mahlen v. Mahlen
420 So. 2d 509 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1982)
Miller v. Miller
398 So. 2d 1162 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)
Bennett v. Deweese
398 So. 2d 16 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)
Guin v. Guin
378 So. 2d 1022 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Gibbon v. Gibbon
337 So. 2d 298 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1976)
Burnett v. Burnett
324 So. 2d 622 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)
Kuchta v. Yarbrough
296 So. 2d 326 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Phillpott v. Phillpott
285 So. 2d 570 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)
Mollish v. Mollish
494 S.W.2d 145 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1972)
Williams v. Williams
240 So. 2d 795 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1970)
Sinclair v. Sinclair
461 P.2d 750 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1969)
Rogers v. Rogers
430 S.W.2d 305 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1968)
Weiss v. Weiss
53 Misc. 2d 262 (New York Supreme Court, 1967)
Swartz v. Swartz
191 So. 2d 753 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)
Fleming v. Lee
145 So. 2d 618 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 So. 683, 163 La. 218, 58 A.L.R. 457, 1927 La. LEXIS 1622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krauss-v-krauss-la-1927.