McCallister v. McCallister

229 P. 687, 113 Or. 124, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 19
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 P. 687 (McCallister v. McCallister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCallister v. McCallister, 229 P. 687, 113 Or. 124, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 19 (Or. 1924).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is a suit by a wife to secure a divorce from her husband. It is admitted that they *125 were married at Galesburg, Illinois, February 23, 1901, and that about nine years prior to the commencement of this suit in 1921 they moved to Eugene, Oregon, from which time continuously they have both resided in Lane County, of this state. In the amended complaint, upon which the cause was tried, was alleged the marriage and residence of the parties and that the plaintiff has kept to her marriage vows. The plaintiff charges that the defendant was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment, rendering her life burdensome as follows:

“That the defendant is excessively jealous and of a very jealous disposition, and for several years last past has been, without cause or provocation, excessively jealous of the plaintiff, and generally, in the matter of social relations of the plaintiff with acquaintances and friends, has constantly nagged the plaintiff by claiming that she would be ill thought of and be believed to be guilty of improper conduct; and such jealousy on the part of the defendant has steadily grown worse until during the month of March, 192Í, the defendant, without any cause or provocation, accused the plaintiff of being guilty of improper relations and of adultery with a personal friend of the defendant who resides at Eugene, Oregon, and whose name is well known to the defendant, and that the defendant knows who is referred to herein, and the name of the person referred to can be inserted herein if the defendant so requires; and that during the month of March, 1921, the plaintiff herein made a visit to her former home in Knox County, Illinois, and shortly after the plaintiff went to Knox County, Illinois, the defendant followed her to said place and renewed his accusations against the plaintiff, charging the plaintiff with adultery, and demanded that the plaintiff execute an agreement to relinquish any and all dower interest in the defendant’s property hereinafter referred to, and providing for a property settlement between plaintiff and defendant; and *126 threatened the plaintiff that if she did not execute said agreement, that he would sue her for a divorce on the ground of adultery and create a scandal in Eugene, Lane County, Oregon, and cause her to lose her good name and reputation among her acquaintances and friends in Eugene, Lane County, Oregon, and to lose her membership in the church of which plaintiff and defendant were and are members at Eugene, Lane County, Oregon; and the defendant remained in Knox County, Illinois, for several weeks and at Gilson in said county and at Knoxville in said county repeated his said accusations and stated the same to H. Huggins, who was and is a business agent of plaintiff and defendant in Knox County, Illinois, and generally circulated scandalous reports to the effect that the plaintiff had been unfaithful to the defendant; and plaintiff and defendant had resided for many years in Knox County, Illinois, and the plaintiff has a large circle of friends, acquaintances and relatives in Knox County, Illinois, and that the plaintiff is unable to state the names of the other persons other than H. Huggins to whom defendant repeated said accusations, but alleges that the defendant repeated said accusations against the plaintiff to divers persons in Knox County, Illinois, and whose names are known to the defendant and are not known to the plaintiff, and to such an extent that his said charges became known to their acquaintances and to relatives of this plaintiff, and all to her great humiliation.”

It is further averred in the amended complaint that the accusation and charges made by the defendant against the plaintiff are wholly false and without cause or provocation, and were made with the purpose and intent of humiliating plaintiff, intimidating her and compelling her to relinguish all her dower interest in the land belonging to the defendant. It is also stated in substance that after the return of the parties to Eugene, from a visit to Illinois, the defendant renewed his demands for a property settle *127 ment, removed his effects from their home and has refused and neglected to provide for the plaintiff’s support in any manner whatever, so that she has been compelled to labor for her own maintenance. Other allegations follow as to the property owned by the defendant in Illinois. There are no children of the union. The prayer is for the dissolution of the marriage contract and requiring that the defendant be ordered to convey to the plaintiff an undivided one-third interest in the property in Illinois, or pay a gross sum mentioned as permanent alimony and for other relief.

The answer merely denies the charges of the complaint without attempting to justify or palliate them, although some issue is made about the condition and amount of the defendant’s property. The Circuit Court refused to grant a divorce and dismissed the suit. The plaintiff appealed.

The plaintiff is fifty-two years of age. The defendant is five years older. They had been married more than twenty years at the commencement of the suit. They were brought up from early childhood on adjoining farms in Knox County, Illinois, and were well acquainted with each other during all that time. It is in testimony that the plaintiff was married June 5, 1892, at the age of twenty-two years to H. M. Bow-sin, who was twenty-three years of age, and it is found by construction of a decree for the child’s guardianship that to this unión there was born a son in less than nine months after the marriage. Bowsin deserted her afterwards and she obtained a divorce from him. On April 21, 1898, at the age of twenty-seven she was married to L. A. Burr, aged thirty-five years. It appears in the testimony that after they had been, married some time, Burr demanded that she go to Chicago to live with him and she refused *128 to do so, and that on this basis he procured a divorce from her for desertion. All these things happened in Knox County, Illinois, and the defendant was familiar with all of them at the time. The parties to this suit were married February 21, .1901, he at the age of thirty-six and she thirty-one. They moved to Eugene, Oregon, about twelve years after their marriage. Arriving there, they were met at the train by I. P. In-man, aged fifty-nine years at the time of the trial, whom the defendant had known from boyhood as an intimate friend. Inman was a married man living in Eugene, being a postoffice employee there for fifteen years and had a family. The two families became quite intimate, living awhile in the same block, called each other by their given names and very frequently visited back and forth from house to house. One season they went together to a seaside resort and occupied the same cottage there. They were often together on picnics and excursions, in fact were more than usually intimate and associated together, all with the consent and participation of the defendant.

Having been absent from her old home and kindred in Illinois for several years, the plaintiff desired to return there for a visit and to look after some property interests in some land which she had in Knox County of that state. According to his own statement to her, the grounds of his objection to her going were,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 P. 687, 113 Or. 124, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccallister-v-mccallister-or-1924.