Mayor v. Mayor

351 S.W.2d 810, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 501
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1961
Docket30493
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 351 S.W.2d 810 (Mayor v. Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor v. Mayor, 351 S.W.2d 810, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 501 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

DOERNER, Commissioner.

Plaintiff instituted this action for divorce, alleging indignities on the part of defend *812 ant which rendered plaintiff’s condition intolerable. Defendant filed an answer and cross-bill. At the conclusion of the trial, the court found that the plaintiff was the innocent and injured party and entered a decree granting plaintiff a divorce, alimony in gross of $7,500, an attorney’s fee of $200, and $50 for a real estate appraiser’s fee. On appeal defendant disputed both the allowance of alimony and the appraiser’s fee, and since the total of those sums exceeded our then monetary jurisdiction the appeal was transferred to the Supreme Court, 340 S.W.2d 142. That court found that the item of the appraiser’s fee had not been properly preserved for appellate review, and retransferred the matter to us, 349 S.W.2d 60.

With the ever troublesome question of appellate jurisdiction thus eliminated, the first of defendant’s remaining assignments is that plaintiff’s evidence was not sufficient to justify the decree of divorce in her favor. This requires a review of the evidence favorable to plaintiff.

Plaintiff and defendant were married on May 31, 1916, and separated on April 26, 1959. Throughout all of their married life they lived on an isolated farm located about five miles southwest of Richwoods, Missouri. In the main, plaintiff’s evidence primarily concerned the defendant’s refusal or reluctance to provide proper medical care for the plaintiff, or to pay for it when it was obtained. It was shown that plaintiff underwent an hysterectomy at the hands of a specialist in St. Louis in 1943, and that from time to time thereafter she required medical attention. Plaintiff testified that the defendant would never do anything when she asked him to take her to a doctor. According to plaintiff, the specialist’s bill for the operation in 1943 was $400, of which the defendant paid but $75, the rest having been paid by two of their daughters. Inferentially, defendant conceded that that was all he had paid, but stated that he didn’t think the bill was $400. Defendant testified that he bought the “older girl” a $100 bond for what she had paid, which she guessed would cover it. Defendant also stated that Lillian, a younger daughter, who was working, had paid part of the bill, “ * * * maybe quite a bit * * but when repeatedly pressed as to whether he had ever asked Lillian what she had paid he stated that Lillian never mentioned it to him, that she was under age, that he didn’t “ * * * think it was any more than right that she help her mother,” and finally, that the subject was never mentioned.

A prior separation between the parties occurred in 1951, which lasted for a year. According to plaintiff the immediate inducing cause was that she asked defendant for money to get her glasses changed, and the defendant told her to go to hell. Plaintiff further testified that about two years before the final separation her son or son-in-law was about to take her to the doctor for a check-up, and the defendant stated that whoever took plaintiff to the doctor would have to pay the bill. On another occasion, about the same time, trouble arose over a $15 balance on a medical bill, owed for almost a year, originally for $50. When defendant failed to pay it, plaintiff did so by writing a check, and when defendant learned that she had done so he told her that if she ever touched his check book again he would take his rifle and she would never write another check.

The events culminating in the final separation on April 26, 1959, appear to have transpired during the two weeks preceding that date. Plaintiff testified that she had been ailing for about a year, and was suffering from high blood pressure, nervousness, and a bloody discharge. Plaintiff asked her sister to take her to a doctor, and on a Wednesday or Friday the sister took her. On that occasion plaintiff went to a Dr. McKinstry, who advised her that she had high blood pressure and would have to be treated for the blood she was losing. Pie asked her to come back in two weeks. When plaintiff returned home the defendant didn’t ask her how she was. On the following Sunday one of the daugh *813 ters came out to the farm with food and prepared dinner. Plaintiff’s brother resided with the parties and helped defendant with the work. The daughter told the brother to see that plaintiff got to the doctor. The next day, Monday, plaintiff was in bed and couldn’t get up. She testified that she asked defendant to milk the cows, as she couldn’t do so, and that the defendant told her she was a burden on his back; and that when she asked him what he was going to do about it, defendant said “ * * * T will have to get rid of you some way or other.’ * * * ”

After the defendant had gone to work that day plaintiff’s sister came to the farm and took the plaintiff to a Dr. Cresswell, as defendant, according to the plaintiff, didn’t like the first doctor. Since the defendant didn’t know she was going a note was left for him. Plaintiff was delayed because of the absence of the doctor from his office, and didn’t return until 8:00 P.M. She was accompanied by her brother, who informed defendant what the doctor had found wrong with plaintiff, and that plaintiff would need better care. According to plaintiff defendant became angry and “ * * * told my brother for the whole God damn bunch of its to get out. * * * ” She took the three dresses that she owned and went to her sister’s home, half a mile away.

Plaintiff testified that subsequently she moved to the home of a married son and at the time of the trial was assisting him in the operation of his tavern and cafe, for which she receives $20 per week, as well as her room and board. Since the separation her blood pressure has returned to normal, and she is required to go to a doctor only every three months to have it checked.

In addition to the foregoing plaintiff also related other instances in which the defendant had called her a “dirty name,” particularly once when the defendant, mad at a cattle buyer, had, in a fit of anger, jerked plaintiff’s clean curtains down and stamped ■on them; and testified that the defendant had nagged at her, and had been cold and indifferent.

Defendant denied or sought to explain away much of plaintiff’s testimony, but as has been said many times by our appellate court, great deference should be paid to the findings of the trial court, who had the parties and witnesses before him and was in much better position to judge of their credibility. Doll v. Doll, Mo.App., 327 S.W.2d 501. The plaintiff’s evidence showed that she had been ailing and in ill health for years. Defendant admitted that plaintiff didn’t “feel good” and that she was not in good health immediately prior to the separation. The evidence shows that throughout all of those years the defendant did not once bestir himself to take plaintiff to a doctor, although requested to do so. Whatever medical attention plaintiff obtained was through the assistance of her children or her relatives, over either the opposition of the defendant or, if with his consent, begrudgingly given.

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Bluebook (online)
351 S.W.2d 810, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-v-mayor-moctapp-1961.