Lindsay v. Lindsay

189 Iowa 326
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 6, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 Iowa 326 (Lindsay v. Lindsay) 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
Lindsay v. Lindsay, 189 Iowa 326 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

Preston, J.

The parties were married in 1887. At that time, defendant was a young, practicing physician and surgeon, with little means. Plaintiff testifies that he was considerably in debt, and had very, little income. Prior to February 4, 1917, defendant had a breakdown, physically and mentally. On Sunday morning, February 4th, defendant was found in his office, with an ugly wound in his neck. He iras on the couch, partly clothed, and the body cold. He had attempted suicide. A few days thereafter, and on February 7, 1917, upon plaintiff’s undertaking to be responsible for his treatment, he was taken to a sanitarium at Hinsdale, .Illinois. He seemed to improve for a time, but afterwards became worse, and his condition was quite serious. Later, he ivas taken back to the town of his residence, but not to his home, or rather, plaintiff’s home. On February 20, 1917, plaintiff caused an original notice of this divorce proceeding to be served upon defendant at Hinsdale, and on February 28, 1917, she filed her petition for divorce, alleging cruel and inhuman treatment and habitual drunkenness. The petition goes somewhat into details as to the alleged treatment by defendant, some of which defendant, in the motion to strike, claims were frivolous and scandalous. She claims that defendant has handled her property, and has not accounted for the receipts, and that she has largely supported him; that defendant demanded that plaintiff should turn over to him money or property; that he circulated reports in the community that plaintiff and her daughter were spending-defendant’s earnings and income, and so on. Plaintiff, at her expense, caused the petition to be published in full in a newspaper in the town where the parties lived. On October 9, 1917, defendant filed his unverified answer, admitting the marriage, and so on, and denying all other [328]*328allegations in the petition; and, on January 8, 1918, he filed an amendment to his answer, setting up a cross-petition, which was verified, asking a divorce from the plaintiff, and alleging that, for several years, plaintiff had been guilty of such cruel and inhuman treatment as to endanger his life; that she continuously planned to secure from defendant all his property, and to transfer all his earnings to her; that, though they had a beautiful home, all furnished, she compelled him, for many months, to use the cellar as their abode, and refused to allow defendant to occupy other parts of the house; that, for many years, plaintiff defamed defendant’s character by mailing false and slanderous statements concerning him, and ruining his practice, and so on; that, because of such treatment, defendant became excitable and nervous, and is no longer able to practice his profession; that plaintiff was presented with considerable property by her father, in his lifetime, and under his will secured other property; and that plaintiff has secured all the net proceeds of defendant’s earnings; that plaintiff now has property of approximately $100,000, and defendant is entirely without means to defend plaintiff’s action and prosecute his cross-petition; that he is ill, and requires large sums of money, for the payment of- doctor’s bills, board, and the constant attendance of a nurse. The reply denies defendant’s claims. Motion for temporary alimony and suit money was filed, in which the allegations of the cross-petition were referred to, and the application was supported by the affidavits of defendant’s brother-in-law; who says that, from long association with defendant, he is familiar with his family life and financial history and present needs; that he has read defendant’s cross-petition, and believes the averments therein to be true; that plaintiff is the owner of a valuable homestead in the city of Manchester, Iowa, and another dwelling which is rented; also, two valuable farms in Delaware • County, one of 155 acres and another of 240 acres, and other property in Fayette County and in South Dakota, and a considerable amount of per[329]*329sonal property; that, before defendant had been-at the sanitarium a sufficient time to gain the required benefits, and be restored to his normal condition, plaintiff ordered the sanitarium to give defendant no further credit on her account, after February 28, 1917; that the expense of defendant at the sanitarium was from $35 to $85 per week, and that his expenses at Manchester at a private home are $20 per week, and are likely to continue so for a considerable and indefinite time. The defendant’s application was supported also by the affidavit of a Doctor Dittmer, who has been the attending physician of defendant in Manchester for a year. Defendant also alleges that, at the time of the filing of said affidavit, he was suffering from a nervous breakdown, which incapacitated him from earning a livelihood, and that there is little, if any, hope of his ever being able to earn a living; that, before said breakdown, and down to the time thereof, which breakdown occurred about a year before, -defendant had a lucrative practice. The plaintiff resisted defendant’s application, and supported the resistance by offering court records showing confession of judgment by defendant on his notes that were barred, given to some of his relatives, and the sale of defendant’s interest in an estate at about $4,500; also, plaintiff’s petition and answer to cross-petition, and her affidavit; the affidavit of her daughter Florence; the affidavits of Dr. Moyer and one Tompkins, an accountant, who examined defendant’s books, which books were quite incompletely kept, and which did not show that any of defendant’s individual income or property went into plaintiff’s property. She stated that, so far as the books show, defendant received from her properties, or from her, amounts at least equal to disbursements by him for repairs and improvements on her property; that the examination by the accountant was from the years 1904 to 1917, but that some of the books were missing, and for some of the years he did not mention the receipts from plaintiff’s farms;, that he examined all the books that were available. In rebuttal, defendant offered the evidence of his [330]*330sister and her husband, and other witnesses, and additional affidavits by some of them. The general tendency of the evidence is to sustain the claims of the different parties. We think it unnecessary to go into the details. The plaintiff denies that she is worth $100,000. The record does show, however, that she has considerable property, though the value of it is not given definitely by any of the witnesses. Dr. Moyer first visited defendant at the sanitarium, February 11, 1917, and expressed a view that it was a case of drug addiction, grafted primarily on an unstable nervous system, with certain physical defects that appeared later in life; that his teeth were bad, — had pyorrhea and several abscesses, which depressed the general health; that defendant refused to have his teeth removed. Plaintiff says that defendant had been troubled with infected teeth for several years. That, on February 21th, defendant had improved physically and mentally, and at that time, there was-no trace of illusion or aberration, with one special characteristic of alcoholic cases; that defendant said to him that, prior to the attempted suicide, he had been taking large quantities of bromides, and had used alcoholic liquors freely, and tobacco in large quantities; that, at that time, there was no good reason why defendant should remain in the institution, because he had gotten about all the benefit he would get; that,, at that time, the doctor advised that defendant leave the institution next week; that, thereupon, plaintiff gave notice that she would not be responsible for further expense at the sanitarium.

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

Related

In Re the Marriage of Winegard
257 N.W.2d 609 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1977)
In Re the Marriage of Prybil
230 N.W.2d 487 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1975)
Thorn v. Kelley
134 N.W.2d 545 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1965)
Mayer v. Wright
15 N.W.2d 268 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1944)
State ex rel. Jacobson v. Superior Court
207 P. 227 (Washington Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 Iowa 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-lindsay-iowa-1920.