Panther v. Panther

1931 OK 10, 295 P. 219, 147 Okla. 131, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 726
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 20, 1931
Docket21509
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1931 OK 10 (Panther v. Panther) 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
Panther v. Panther, 1931 OK 10, 295 P. 219, 147 Okla. 131, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 726 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

OULLISON, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the district court of Ottawa county, Okla., granting defendant in error, plaintiff below, Amy Panther, an absolute divorce from her husband, Thos. Panther, plaintiff in error, defendant below. The parties to this appeal will be hereinafter referred to as they appeared in the lower court.

On October 29, 1929, the plaintiff, Amy Panther, commenced action for divorce from the defendant, Thomas Panther, in the aforesaid court, and as disclosed by plaintiff's original and amended petition, alleged as Legal ground for said divorce that defendant, since the date of his marriage to plaintiff, had been convicted of a felony and sentenced to serve 15 years in the state penitentiary, which, as alleged by plaintiff (and it is not here disputed), is a Legal grouhd for divorce in this state. The prayer ot plaintiff’s amended petition was that she be granted an absolute divorce from defendant, and that she be decreed and given the permanent care, custody, and control of two minor children of plaintiff and defendant.

The defendant answered, denying generally the allegations of plaintiff’s original and amended petition, and pleaded affirmatively acts of condonation by plaintiff subsequent to the date of the filing of the petition for divorce herein, and further alleged certain acts of adultery and drunk-, enness committed by plaintiff subsequent to the filing of her petition for divorce herein, and pleaded that by reason of such aforesaid acts and conduct on the part of plaintiff, she (plaintiff) was not a proper and fit person to have the care, custody, and control of said minor children. Defendant’s prayer was that the plaintiff Do denied a divorce and that the court make an order placing the children of plaintiff and defendant in the care of some suitable person in order that they might receive proper care, custody, and control. No other affirmative relief was prayed for by defendant in his answer.

Upon the issues thus joined, the case was heard by the trial court. At the conclusion of the evidence introduced by the parties in support of their respective contentions and allegations, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, granting her an absolute divorce from .defendant and awarding plaintiff the care, custody, and control of said minor children, subject, however, to reasonable and seasonable visitation periods by the defendant.

From the foregoing- judgment and decree the defendant comes to this court on appeal.

Defendant first assigns as error the trial court’s order overruling defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence; contending- that there was no evidence tending to prove that the defendant, Thomas Panther, herein was the same Thomas Panther who had been convicted of a felony and confined in the state penitentiary,, as alleged by plaintiff in her original and amended petitions.

For the purposes of determining whether the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrer, we must accept as true all the facts which the evidence adduced by plaintiff in support of her original and amended petitions in the slightest degree tends to prove, and all reasonable inferences and conclusions to be logically drawn therefrom. Marshall Mfg. Co. v. Dickerson, 55 Okla. 188, 155 Pac. 224.

An examination of the record discloses that plaintiff in her original petition sued “Thomas Panther”; that she also in her amended petition sued “Thomas Panther,” alleging therein that said Thomas Panther, her husband and defendant therein, was serving a sentence of 15 years in the state penitentiary for first degree rape, which sentence had been approved by a jury and trial judge in the superior court of Pottawatomie county and affirmed by the Criminal Court of Appeals of Oklahoma. The record as introduced by plaintiff in support of her petition also discloses that an alias summons directed to Thomas Panther, convict No. 20812, in- the state penitentiary, at road camp No. 1, Stringtown, and the officer’s return thereon shovvs that the same was served upon Thomas Panther by the sheriff at McAlester. In response thereto, *133 the record shows that defendant’s counsel filed his first pleadings, to make more definite and and certain, and the defendant is therein designated as “Thomas Panther,” and in his next pleading, by demurrer, defendant is also designated as “Thomas Panther,” and, again, in his answer the defendant is designated in the caption as “Tom Panther,” while in the body of the answer he is denominated as “Thomas Panther.” It is also admitted in defendant’s answer that the same “Thomas” or “Tom” Panther, defendant héfein, married the plaintiff and that two children were born as alleged by plaintiff.

Iii the criminal dockets introduced in evidence by plaintiff, it is noted that both the caption and the body of the warrant of arrest call for the arrest of “Thomas Panther,” and that in subsequent criminal proceedings he is variously designated as “Thomas” and “Tom’’ Panther.

Notwithstanding this record confronting the trial court at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant complains that there is no evidence, nor circumstances, tending to establish that “Thomas Panther,” the defendant in this divorce action, is the same “Thomas Panther” convicted of a felony and incarcerated in the state penitentiary, and that, therefore, his demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence should have been sustained.

We are of the opinion that there is no merit in defendant’s contention. Accepting as true, as indeed we must, all the facts, which the evidence introduced by plaintiff in support of her petition in the slightest degree tends to prove, affd all reasonable inferences and conclusions to be logically drawn therefrom, we are of the opinion there was no error in the trial court’s order overruling defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence.

Furthermore, the defendant, when examined as a witness in his own behalf, testified that his name is “Thomas Panther”; that he is a convict in the state penitentiary working at road camp No. 1; that he is the husband' of plaintiff; that he is the same “Tom” Panther who was convicted and is now serving a sentence as alleged by plaintiff. If the order of the trial court in overruling defendant’s demurrer had constituted error, the same in our opinion was cured and became harmless by reason of the defendant’s own admissions, as set forth above,

2. It is next contended by defendant that plaintiff condoned his conviction for the crime as aforesaid, by reason of her cohabitation with him during his leave from the penitentiary pending the hearing on the divorce action herein. Defendant in his brief, at page 13, says:

“That, as a matter of law, after she had condoned the offense and had lived and cohabited with the defendant, she was not entitled to a divorce.”

It is true, as contended by defendant, that:

“Resumption of cohabitation by parties to a divorce suit is an abrogation of any cause of action for divorce by condonation.” Bell v. Bell (Ala.) 108 So. 37-5, 45 A. L. R. 935.

And, as a general rule, the condonation of a marital offense deprives the condoning spouse of the right of thereafter seeking a divorce for the condoned' offense. 9 R. C. L. 379; Cumming v. Cumming, 135 Mass. 386, 46 Am. Rep. 476; note, 6 L. R. A. 548.

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 10, 295 P. 219, 147 Okla. 131, 1931 Okla. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panther-v-panther-okla-1931.