Pappas v. Pappas

294 S.W.2d 605, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 163
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 18, 1956
DocketNo. 29215
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 294 S.W.2d 605 (Pappas v. Pappas) 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
Pappas v. Pappas, 294 S.W.2d 605, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 163 (Mo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

<SAM C. BLAIR, Special Judge.

This cause originated as an action for divorce by Pete Pappas against Victoria Pappas who countered with a -cross-bill for separate maintenance. The sufficiency of the pleadings stands unquestioned and it suffices to say that they were adequate. The trial court adjudged that neither party was entitled to the relief prayed and en[606]*606tered its decree denying Pappas a divorce ■and denying Mrs. Pappas separate maintenance. Pappas does not appeal. Mrs. Pappas appeals to this court to grant her the decree of separate maintenance which the trial court refused.

Mrs. Pappas contends that Pappas forced her from their home by offering her indignities which rendered her life intolerable and that thereafter he failed to contribute to her support. Section 452.-130, V.A.M.S. Pappas does not claim that he contributed to her support after her departure and failure to support as an issue ■drops from the case. What remains for Mrs. Pappas to show us by a preponderance of the evidence, if she is to obtain separate maintenance from us, is that Pappas actually was guilty of indignities forcing her from the home and justifying her in refusing to live with him longer. Moreover, she cannot prevail unless she can establish indignities that would entitle her to a divorce if that were the relief sought. Forbis v. Forbis, Mo.App., 274 S.W.2d 800, 807 [24-28].

The parties were married on August 6, 1949, and lived together until June 22 or 23, 1953. Mrs. Pappas was 25 years of age and Mr. Pappas was about 59 years of age. The marriage was never one of contentment or peace. Pappas owned a home in Crystal City. They moved into this home. Mr. Pappas believed the home was a suitable habitation, but Mrs. Pappas seems to have regarded it as rather a hovel. There is little question that it needed repair. Although she had visited in the home about five times before the marriage, and had expressed no disapproval, she told Pappas she could not live in it, “colored people live better than I do,” and she insisted on making improvements at once. Pappas testified that he authorized her to make the improvements she wanted and she testified that he refused to allow almost all of them. Pappas built a new kitchen, bathroom, utility room, and two closets at her request. Mrs. Pappas does not dispute this. She made much of spending money of her own on these improvements, but cross-examination disclosed the sum she spent was “close to $50.00.” She claimed that the gas stove and water heater leaked gas and were dangerous, and had been declared so by the gas company. Pappas denied this. However, he stated that he and she selected a new gas stove and ordered it delivered to the home but that Mrs. Pappas and her mother countermanded the order. He did not know why. Mrs. Pappas denied that she countermanded the order but gave no explanation why the stove was not delivered or why she did not insist on delivery. Pappas said he was ready to buy her what she wanted and did buy a new hot water heater, a washing machine, and a sewing machine. He said she asked for new kitchen cabinets and he ordered them and she refused them. Then she demanded a $30,000 home. She said Pappas had indeed promised to build a new home. She said she wanted the cabinets, ordered Youngstown cabinets, and then Pappas “fussed” and said, “What do you want with all those G. D. cabinets? What do you need them for?” The record is not clear but the import of her testimony is that she did not get the cabinets. Mrs. Pappas testified that Pap-pas was miserly and refused to give her money for herself and the household needs. He testified he gave her “whatever she asked for.” “Many a time I gave her $50, $100, $20. I gave her money to buy everything.” He said he did not know what she did with the money. Mrs. Pappas was very critical of the furniture in the home, but when the parties finally separated she took virtually all of the furniture with her, including the living room suite about which she had been most critical.

Mrs. Pappas testified that she was a good housekeeper and kept the house as neat and clean as its condition permitted. Pappas testified that she was careless and neglectful, and spent two or three days of almost every week in St. Louis after the first year of their marriage. She denied [607]*607this, and she claimed her only substantial absence from home was one of three weeks “when he run me out with a gun.” When cross-examining counsel called her attention to the testimony of “four or five witnesses who live close there, who have testified you would be gone three or four days at a time very frequently,” and asked her if their testimony was true, she answered, “It is not.” When asked if any of these witnesses who were neighbors had anything against her, she said she hoped they did not. She only stated she did not know why they would “give false testimony.”

She charged Pappas with abusiveness and with cursing her frequently. Pappas said it was she alone who was abusive and that she cursed him frequently. “Many a time,” he said, “I would walk away, go lay down some place so I could get out of the way, like a dog does when he goes away.” Mrs. Pappas denied that she abused and cursed Pappas and said she always called him “Honey.” She said she never showed any temper. “I was always very sweet and kind to him, very patient.” Pappas admitted that he was “no angel” and sometimes “talked back” when his wife abused and cursed him.

Mrs. Pappas charged Pappas with assaulting her while she was in a closet. Pappas denied this and said it was Mrs. Pappas who made an assault on him in the closet and that he had to hold her arms to keep her from beating him up. He said she also called him a “son-of-a-bitch,” a thief, and a crook. She denied this and stated that she merely said to Pappas that some of the household articles were missing and that the locks ought to be changed.

She said Pappas chased her with a gun on Palm Sunday, and Pappas denied that he did so. She said, “He was always going to kill me and kill himself.” He threatened to do so “about two, three, or four times a month.” Pappas denied that this ever happened. He testified that Mrs. Pappas assaulted him on a public street of Crystal City while he was in conversation with the county sheriff and others and cursed him and called him a “son-of-a-bitch.” She had tried to buy some gasoline from a service station and been refused credit. She told Pappas, “You son-of-a-bitch, I can’t buy $2.00 worth of gasoline on credit.” Apparently she laid the cause of this refusal at Pappas’ door. Pappas testified, “They sell nothing on credit.” He said, “I walked away and never said one word. She said, T am going to follow you in your place, if you> go in I am going to kill you.’ ” Mrs. Pap-pas admitted the encounter and said this was the only exception to her gentle and patient treatment of Pappas.

Pappas owned a tavern building in Crystal City and a farm outside the city. The tavern building and the farm were leased to tenants. Pappas testified that Mrs. Pappas interfered with his business, that she ordered the tenants out of the tavern, and that she and her mother interfered with the operation of the farm and drove workers away. The tension seems to have been increased by the blatant meddling of her mother who arrogated to manage the farm tenants and frequently told them, and told Pappas, that she would show Pap-pas who was the “boss.” Mrs. Pappas herself publicly made the same statement more than once. That she and her mother both made these statements was attested by disinterested witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W.2d 605, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pappas-v-pappas-moctapp-1956.