Matthews v. Matthews

148 S.W.2d 3, 24 Tenn. App. 580, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 17, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 3 (Matthews v. Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Matthews, 148 S.W.2d 3, 24 Tenn. App. 580, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 67 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

JOB C. HIGGINS, S. J.

Appellee, complainant below, filed this her bill for divorce in the Chancery Court of Davidson County on the 18th of July, 1939. In her bill she alleged among other things that the appellant named as defendant below was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment toward her and had offered many indignities to her person and had rendered her condition intolerable and made it unsafe and improper for her longer to cohabit with him and be under his dominion and control.

The original bill is quite lengthy. It would serve no useful purpose to recite and recall herein the somewhat nauseating charges of wrongful conduct embraced in the pleadings. It will suffice to state that those allegations replete with incidents and occurrences were such, if true, as to justify a divorce from bed and board in accordance with the prayer of her bill.

The ill treatment and inhuman and intolerable conduct consisted of discourtesies, humiliations, criminations, acts of violence and other occurrences rendering her condition unbearable.

Appellee alleged in her bill that two certain separate agreements which had been entered into between appellant and herself were fraudulent and void, for the reason that they were unfair and procured by fraud and by coercion and undue pressure; and she prayed that those agreements be set aside and that she be decreed support and alimony, and that the fees of her solicitors be paid by appellant.

She alleged that appellant was a man of great wealth and enjoyed an income of several hundred dollars per month, and that the provisions of the settlement agreements were as to her inadequate.

*She sought an attachment and an injunction against the estate of appellant and prayed for a discovery respecting his assets.

Defendant answered denying in the main the allegations of cruel and inhuman treatment.

Appellant in his answer set out many extenuating circumstances attendant upon many incidents mentioned by complainant in her bill. He likewise averred many acts of provocation and of mitigation for his conduct. He denied the allegation that he was a rich man, but admitted that he had considerable business and some investments of a speculative nature, and that he did enjoy an income of several hundred dollars per month.

*584 Complainant below amended lier bill in several particulars, and appellant also amended bis answer and converted it into a cross-bill, in which he claimed that appellee had been guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment such as justified the awarding of an absolute divorce to him.

The cause was heard by the Honorable W. A. Guild, a learned member of the Bar of Nashville, sitting as Special Chancellor. The hearing was an oral one.

Appellant disclosed in his amended answer that he had procured a divorce from appellee in the courts of the State of Nevada and lie prayed that this decree be upheld as a valid and binding severance of the matrimonial ties between the parties.

His alternative prayer was that if for any reason the Nevada decree should be held void, he nevertheless be decreed an absolute divorce because of appellee’s cruel and inhuman treatment of him.

The decree of the Chancellor was in substance that complainant below, appellee had sustained her charges of cruel and inhuman treatment or conduct such as rendered cohabitation of cruel and inhuman treatment made by appellant were not sustained by the preponderance of the evidence; that the Nevada decree of divorce was invalid and would not be recognized in this jurisdiction; that the so-called separation agreements between appellant and appellee, bearing dates of April 14,1939, and July 6,1937, were fraudulent and void for the reason that appellee had been induced to sign the same upon the representation on the part of appellant that the parties would resume their marital relations within a period of two or three months thereafter, and that he would not seek or apply for a divorce from her —the Court finding that said representations were false and fraudulent and were made by appellant with no intention to keep them; that at the time of the agreement of April 14, 1939, appellant was worth at least $100,000 and had an annual income of $20,000, and that the provision made in the aforesaid agreement was grossly inadequate.

The court further found that at the time of the execution of the April 14, 1939, agreement complainant had an intense love and affection for defendant, which influenced her in making the settlement, and especially in her conversation with appellant wherein he induced her to believe that he would not file a bill for divorce, and that he would resume relations with complainant, all of which representations and inducements the subsequent conduct of appellee showed he intended to violate.

The decreeing portion of the decree was that the original bill of appellee was sustained and that she be granted and tvas decreed a divorce from bed and board, and that separate maintenance be allowed to her, which was fixed by the court as $400 per month, beginning in the month of February, 1940, and payable on the 5th day of each month thereafter.

*585 The court further adjudged that the separation agreements of April 14, 1939, and July 6, 1937, as well as an accompanying trust agreement, were all void and of no effect, and that they did or would in no way embarrass appellee with respect to her right to maintenance and alimony; and the court gave certain directions respecting the return to appellant of certain parcels of real estate which had pursuant to the agreement of April 14, 1939, been conveyed by appellant to appellee.

The court further declared that appellee was under no obligation to refund or restore any of the money or personal property or rents paid to her or received by her under the settlement of April 14, 1939.

. The writs of attachment were dissolved but the temporary injunction was continued in force pending the disposition of any appeal which might be taken.

Appellant was ordered to pay the costs of the cause, including a fee of $750 to Messrs. Weldon White and Carmack Cochran, complainant’s solicitors.

Defendant below excepted to all the provisions of the decree, especially the action of the court in finding and decreeing Jhat defendant was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment, and 1$. the action of the court in finding that defendant had failed to sustain his cross-bill, and also to the decree of the court declaring the separation agreement of July 14, 1939, to be invalid, and decreeing of $400 per month to complainant as alimony and taxing appellant with the costs of the cause.

Appellant is here with six specifications of error. These will be treated by us in the order which seems most conducive to brevity and clearness.

By his fourth assignment of error appellant assails the decree of the learned Special Chancellor sustaining complainant’s original bill and its charges of cruel and inhuman treatment such as justified a divorce from bed and board, and in decreeing that species of divert to her.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 3, 24 Tenn. App. 580, 1940 Tenn. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-matthews-tennctapp-1940.