Leupold v. Leupold

146 N.W. 55, 164 Iowa 595
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 N.W. 55 (Leupold v. Leupold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leupold v. Leupold, 146 N.W. 55, 164 Iowa 595 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Withrow, J.

I. This is a proceeding for a divorce tried upon the issues raised by the charge, in the petition of the husband, of cruel and inhuman treatment by the wife, a like charge of cruel and inhuman treatment made by the wife against her husband in a cross-petition, and the charge of adultery by the wife with one Fred Ruckman, made in an amendment to the petition, which was filed after the answer and cross-petition. The trial court found that the charges in the petition and its amendment were sustained, and granted plaintiff a decree; it also awarded to the parties the property then held by each, and made provision for the education and custody of the minor child, Myrtle. From the decree so entered the defendant, the wife, appeals.

1. divoecb : inment fafluítery: evidence. II. The ease presented is wholly of fact. The original transcript of the evidence is before us, and we have given to it careful consideration. Plaintiff and defendant were married in 1893, and for eleven years preceding the trial had lived in Emmet county, ^ par£ £keir resi¿ence had been on a farm owned by them, and for a short period their home had been in Estherville, the farm having been rented and occupied by one Peter Fank. Fred Ruckman, with whom the wife is charged with having committed adultery, is a cousin of William Leupold, the plaintiff and appellee. The Leupolds had lived in Illinois before coming to Emmet county, and Ruckman knew them there. Ruckman .was the owner of an eighty-acre farm lying near that of appellants in Emmet county, and was unmarried. Leupold was in poor health. In [597]*5971906 he went to Rochester, Minn., for surgical treatment, and during his absence Ruekman was at the home for the purpose of taking care of the chores. In the winter of 1906 Leupold arranged to go to Kansas to spend the winter, seeking relief from asthma. Before going, as he testifies, he wanted to get one Insley to do the work about the farm, as he lived across the road and was convenient, but Mrs. Leupold expressed a desire that Ruekman should be employed for that purpose, and the husband thereupon employed him to do the winter chores during his absence, at $10 per month. Prior to the first winter of his absence on account of his health, while the domestic relations of the parties had not been entirely free from discord, there had been a course of life in their home which presented no acute conditions so far as affected the relations of husband and wife and their confidence in each other. But following that absence, and arising, no doubt, from her association in the home with Ruekman, it is quite clear that upon his return from the west Leupold was not welcome in his own home, and it also is clear that there had arisen between Ruekman and Mrs. Leupold feelings of sympathy in likes and purposes which made their association congenial. The appellee noticed in different ways the change in his wife’s conduct towards him, and dates from that winter her refusal to occupy the same room with him, although, as we conclude from the record, there was not an absolute denial of marital rights, but they were unwillingly granted. In the winter of 1908-09 Leupold was again absent, and although as claimed by him he. had arranged with-another man to stay and look after the chores, Ruekman was at the home during the greater part of his absence, and this also was the ease in the winter of 1909-10, when the appellant was again in Kansas. In 1910-11 the home was in Estherville. In the fall of 1911 Leupold went to Wyoming, first having arranged with one Fank to do the necessary chores, and, as he claims, stating to his wife that he did not want Ruekman there at all, but this request did not have the effect desired. During the period [598]*598when appellee was at his home after these absences, the dislike and indifference of his wife to him was marked, growing as the time went on, as the association between Mrs. Leupold and Ruckman was continued. If the appellee had occasion to distrust the fidelity of his wife, he refrained from openly declaring it, but sought by different means to bring about such a state of family life as would permit the maintenance of the home and the care of the minor daughter. We will not in detail go into the evidence upon this point, but the entire record abundantly shows' that Mrs. Leupold transferred her affections to Ruckman, and that they were pleased and satisfied with the society of each other; that they were often alone together, and, especially during the absence of the husband their intimacies were such as to often occasion comment. Indeed, at times when he was present their conduct towards each other was such as to create in him'feelings which had expression in remonstrance. With this state of the relations between the appellant and Ruckman satisfactorily appearing from the evidence, we turn to that which bears upon the charge of adulterous conduct.

III. A witness, Josie Fank, testified that during the summer of 1911, with her brother, she went to the Leupold home. Ruckman’s automobile was standing in the front yard. She went to the kitchen door and knocked, but there was no response. Waiting for a few moments she again knocked, when the door was unlocked or unfastened, and she went in. Mrs. Leupold came to the door, barefooted, and wearing a sack apron without sleeves. The witness testified that she remained in the house for about a half an hour, and that Mrs. Leupold told her Ruckman was there on the bed in another room, resting. At one time Ruckman called to Mrs. Leupold, and asked her when she would be ready to go to town, but did not come out of the bedroom while the witness remained. The appellant claims that there was no improper conduct between herself and Ruckman, and that he was only resting, as he often, did when there. The witness, Miss Fank, is to [599]*599some extent corroborated by her brother as to the fact of her knocking at the door and receiving no response at first, and he also testified that the curtains to the windows were down. "Why the door should be closed and curtains down on a day in June, with the house occupied, is not satisfactorily explained.

Another instance related is by a witness, Mrs. Warner. She testified that she was at the home one time during a winter when Leupold was away, and when Ruckman was staying there. The women visited for a short time, and then upon the request of Mrs. Leupold they went upstairs together that the visit might be continued while the beds were made. Mrs. Leupold said she was going to make Ruckman’s bed, and Mrs. Warner went in the room with her. She testified that she saw in the bed a bunch of black combing hair, in a knot, which looked as if it had been fastened on the end of a braid, the way women use their loose hair for that purpose. No comment was then made upon it. The appellant denied that she ever had occupied the room with Ruckman, or that any other woman had done so. The same witness testified that on one occasion Mrs. Leupold told her that her husband, Leupold, was “no good.”

Henry Leupold, father of appellee, testified that he lived at the home of his son in Estherville in 1911 for a period of about six weeks. An incident which he claimed occurred while he was there he describes as follows:

One day when I went home just a little before noon I saw Fred Ruckman there. I know Fred Ruckman. I think it was in February. I usually went around to the kitchen door; this day I went to the kitchen door where I always went; I went by Mrs. Leupold’s bedroom where she slept; her little girl slept with her. It was icy on the sidewalk, and-I walked close to the house.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 55, 164 Iowa 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leupold-v-leupold-iowa-1914.