Lyon v. Lyon

1913 OK 509, 134 P. 650, 39 Okla. 111, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 6, 1913
Docket2832
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1913 OK 509 (Lyon v. Lyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Lyon, 1913 OK 509, 134 P. 650, 39 Okla. 111, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 467 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

THACKER, C.

The plaintiff’s petition for divorce alleges, and her evidence, with the inferences which might *113 reasonably be drawn from the same in her favor, tends to prove defendant guilty of extreme cruelty in that, without reasonable or justifiable cause, he abused her by using to and concerning her profane, vile, and opprobrious language, and guilty of gross neglect of duty in that, although able to do so, he refused to provide for her and their infant son, born in February, 1909, and has been in abandonment of her and their son since about September 6, or 7, 1910, notwithstanding he probably knew when he left her and their home that she was soon to give birth to another child by him. Admitting the evidence to be true in every particular, and drawing from it the reasonable inferences in her favor of which the same is susceptible, it appears that within two weeks after their marriage on December 7, 1904, he, upon being importuned as to the cause of his state of mental agitation, which she discovered when he entered their room at a hotel, admitted, in reluctant explanation, that he had thought there was another man in the room with her when she, being asleep or in the bathroom, failed to respond promptly to his demand for admittance when he arrived at the locked door of the room; but the evidence discloses no other instance of his suspicion against her marital fidelity, or of any jealousy on his part, until about the summer of 1908, when a man named Moore occupied, in their home in Oklahoma City, one of the three upstairs rooms in which she kept lodgers; that during that summer of 1908, upon his discovery of diminution or total exhaustion of their supply of suppositories, used to prevent conception,, he accused her, with much abuse, of having used them in sexual intercourse with said Moore, and persisted in such accusation notwithstanding she had only loaned them to the wife of another one of her roomers, and not only so informed him, but offered to and was only prevented by him from calling the woman to whom she had loaned them to corroborate her statement; that after this incident, and during the remaining few months of Moore’s stay at their home, defendant manifested intense jealousy and suspicion involving her in improper and adulterous relations with said Moore, notwithstanding she was and ever has been a chaste woman and loyal wife; that after *114 Moore left and a man named Hall took lodging in his place in their home,, this second lodger, in order of succession, became the object of defendant’s groundléss jealousy, and she was frequently the innocent victim of violent verbal assaults made by defendant in “fits” of jeahms rage; that, in connection with his accusation against her of .mproper relations with said Hall, defendant cursed and abused her, and one one occasion told her to go upstairs and sleep with Hall; that on two separate occasions he .committed a light assault and battery upon plaintiff and once threatened to choke her; that in the summer of 1910 she, and their said infant son, spent about two months in Colorado for the benefit of their health, her aunt, Mrs. Mary Stray-horn, occupying the same room at the hotel, and being constantly with her during all the time of her stay there; that during her .absence in Colorado defendant came into possession o.f a letter with a deed to real estate inclosed, which came through the mail, to Oklahoma City, and was intended for some other person' of her name, but, without inquiry of plaintiff, defendant assumed that the letter' or deed, or both, were intended for plaintiff,. and had come from some man or men with whom she sustained improper relations, and upon this assumption he wrote her a very offensive and accusatory letter; that about September 6, or 7, 1910, immediately after her return home from Colorado, some one giving his name as Bailey or Barley, at Springfield, Mo., was given phone connection with their residence number, whereupon defendant, who first answered the call, caused plaintiff to go to the- phone, although plaintiff did not know the party calling from Springfield, nor talk to him further’than to discover the call was not intended for her; that defendant, without reason therefor, became enraged against plaintiff, and charged that the man calling from Springfield was Moore; that plaintiff had been with him in adulterous relations at defendant’s expense during her stay in Colorado; that, under the assumed name of Bailey or Barley, Moore had attempted to talk with plaintiff by phone from Springfield at the time already stated, and, with cursing and abuse of plaintiff, abandoned her and their child and lióme; and that since so abandoning her *115 lie had not properly provided for .the support of herself or child, hut he frequently called her up on the phone and abused her; once at least when another lady was standing near enough to the phone to hear some of the conversation. . :

The answer, besides denial of extreme cruelty and gross neglect of duty, contains a cross-petition for divorce, in which defendant alleges against plaintiff extreme cruelty, in that she cursed him and used abusive language and vile and opprobrious epithets to him, .and gross neglect of duty, in that, without his consent and in one or more instances or respects, notwithstanding his express objection, she went away from home, went buggy riding with other men, received suggestive post cafd.s. from and was guilty of improper conduct with said Moore, also that said phone call was from said Moore, and she refused to make satisfactory explanation of same, which immediately caused his leaving her and their home. The answer further .alleges that she is an unfit person to have the care and custody of their child.' . .-

Upon the trial counsel for defendant, before concluding his first cross-examination of plaintiff, asked if she would accept a proposition of reconciliation and, after being answered that she would not, pursued this cross-examination to its conclusion without making such proposition ;• but, during a subsequent cross-examination, when plaintiff was again and finally -upon the witness stand, he formally proposed a’ reconciliation, suggested-a dismissal of the cross-petition, and asked plaintiff if she would accept it, to which she responded that she could -and would. not; After plaintiff had rested, defendant demurred to the evidence as insufficient in respect to each ground alleged for divorce in plaintiff’s petition, and especially in that there is a material' variance between the allegations of the petition and the evidence, and in that the offer of reconciliation made by defendant and rejected by plaintiff is a bar to the granting of her prayer for divorce. After argument the court announced that the demurrer would be sustained, and that judgment would be for defendant for costs; but, except an order overruling a motion for a new trial, no further order, judgment,'or decree was given or entered in the case.

*116

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 509, 134 P. 650, 39 Okla. 111, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-lyon-okla-1913.