Novak v. Novak

24 N.W.2d 20, 74 N.D. 572, 1946 N.D. LEXIS 85
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1946
DocketFile 7010
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 24 N.W.2d 20 (Novak v. Novak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Novak v. Novak, 24 N.W.2d 20, 74 N.D. 572, 1946 N.D. LEXIS 85 (N.D. 1946).

Opinion

Nuessle, J.

In 1934, plaintiff brought this action for a divorce. The defendant, answering, denied the allegations of the complaint on which plaintiff predicated his demand for relief and, interposing a cross-complaint, asked for a decree for separation. The case was tried on the issues as thus made. The *574 court found for the defendant, denied the divorce and decreed a separation pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 14-06 §§ 14r- 0601 to 14-0606, both inclusive, Revised Code 1943. The decree awarded the property of the parties to the plaintiff but required the plaintiff to pay to the defendant the sum of $2000, to be paid either in a lump sum or in installments of $15 per month, with interest on the unpaid portions thereof at the rate of four per cent per annum. Thereafter the parties lived apart. In 1939, plaintiff applied to the court for the revocation of the" decree for separation, and for a decree of absolute divorce pursuant to the provisions of § 14-0605, Revised Code 1943, on the ground that more than four years had elapsed since the decree for separation was entered and that the parties had lived apart continuously during all of the time subsequent thereto. Upon hearing the application was denied. Again, in 1944, the plaintiff applied to the court for a revocation of the decree for "separation, for a modification of the order entered in the first instance requiring'Him topayjthe. su'm.of $2000 to the defendant, and for an absolute,divorce. The application was resisted. A hearing was had and- the court again denied the application. Whereupon the-plaintiff perfected the instant- appeal.

Shortly stated, the record fairly shows the following facts: Plaintiff and defendant .were, married in Nebraska in 1900. Plaintiff then was 23 years old, defendant 25. They moved to North Dakota :in: 1-902,• where plaintiff .filed upon a homestead. At the. time of the marriage plaintiff had some farm equipment and the defendant about $500 in cash. Apparently they were moderately prosperous in their new home. They bought additional land. The defendant was frugal and hard-working and accumulated some $1300 from the sale of chickens, turkeys, etc., which she deposited in a local bank. Hard times came. The bank failed. Plaintiff owed the bank and an adjustment was made whereby the defendant’s deposit was set off against his obligation. Two daughters were born of the marriage. Both of them married and established homes of their own. In 1930, plaintiff left the farm and moved to a small town. He refused to support the defendant and to provide living quarters for her. *575 In 1934, plaintiff brought this action for divorce, with the result heretofore stated. Thereafter the parties continued to live ' apart. Plaintiff, disregarding the provision of the decree for separation requiring him to do so, made no payments to the defendant. She was without means and was compelled to maintain herself by working as a housekeeper and scrubwoman. This she can no longer do because of ill health. At various times she wrote the plaintiff, and on one occasion in 1943, when she was ill and had to undergo surgery, she wrote and told him of her condition and asked for financial assistance. In no instance did the plaintiff reply to her letters. In 1939, plaintiff applied to the court for a revocation of -the decree for separation. This application was resisted and, after hearing, was denied. Again in 1944, a similar application was made, plaintiff asking for the revocation of the decree for separation, for a modification of the provision requiring him to pay $2000 to the defendant, and for an absolute divorce. At the time of making the application in 1939, plaintiff offered to pay $10 per month for the support of the defendant if the application were granted and a. divorce decreed. And when in 1944 he made his second application for revocation of the decree, he offered to pay $100 if it were granted and to make further payments in the future. The defendant resisted the application for divorce because of religious scruples. She is and has been willing to effect a reconciliation. Plaintiff, however, says .that he is not, and that a reconciliation is not only improbable but impossible. Though at the time of making his applications for revocation of the decree and. for a divorce plaintiff offered to make payments for the benefit of the defendant, he has at all times contended that he has been unable to comply with the requirements of the original decree as to payments on the ground he has no means and is unable to make them. As stated above, pursuant to the original decree he was given all the real and personal property owned by the parties. This property, however, was subject to mortgage and he has since lost the real property on mortgage foreclosure and disposed of the personal property. But it further appears that in the meantime he has worked at various occupations, includ- *576 ixxg the operation of a saw mill, that he has held the office of county commissioner of the county of his residence, that he has served as a member of the welfare board,- and during all of this time he has received a pension from the government of the United States during the greater portion thereof in the sum of $50 per month. At the time he made the instant application he was earning in addition thereto $25 per month and his board and room. And there is room for the inference that he has acquired some property which he has concealed by one device or another.

Chapter 14-06, Revised Code 1943 (§§ 14-0601 to 14-0606, both inclusive) deals with the subject of separation from bed and board. Section 14-0601 provides: “A decree of separation from bed and board forever, or for a limited time, may be decreed by a district court of this state, upon such evidence as shall be deemed sufficient, on complaint of a married woman or a married man for any cause for which a divorce might be decreed.” And § 14-0605, provides:

“When a decree for separation, forever or for a limited period, shall have been pronounced, it may be revoked at any time thereafter by the judge by whom it was pronounced or by his successor, under such regulations and restrictions as the judge may impose. Application for revocation may be made by either party to the decree. At least ten days’ and not more than twenty days’ notice of such application must be given to the other party to the decree by service of the moving papers to be used on such application. Service of the moving papers may be made in the same manner as service of a summons in a civil action. If it shall be made to appear on the hearing of such application that the original decree has been in existence and force for more than four years and that reconciliation between the parties to the marriage is improbable, the judge may revoke the separate maintenance decree and, in lieu thereof, may render a decree absolutely divorcing the parties, and at the same time may make such final division of the property, or may direct the payment of such alimony, and make such orders with reference to *577 minor children, if any, as justice and the merits of the case and the circumstances of the parties shall warrant.”

Plaintiff predicates error on the court’s refusal to revoke the decree of separation and grant him a divorce.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 N.W.2d 20, 74 N.D. 572, 1946 N.D. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novak-v-novak-nd-1946.