Parenteau v. Parenteau

305 S.W.2d 723, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 575
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1957
DocketNo. 7608
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 305 S.W.2d 723 (Parenteau v. Parenteau) 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
Parenteau v. Parenteau, 305 S.W.2d 723, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 575 (Mo. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

McDOWELL, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiff appeals from final judgment of the Circuit Court of Pulaski County, Missouri, denying him a divorce on his petition filed July 2, 1956, which was predicated on the ground of abandonment.

The petition alleged that on June 9, 1945, plaintiff was lawfully married to defendant and lived with her until on or about May 1, 1954.

[724]*724It stated that on April 14, 1955, plaintiff was sent to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, by the Army; that he requested defendant to come and live with him but she refused; that she told him she was no longer interested in continuing their marital relationship, and because of such refusal, defendant is now guilty of abandoning the plaintiff for the space of more than one year next before the filing of the petition.

The answer is a general denial and a plea that defendant is suffering from tuberculosis and under the care of a physician; thát plaintiff has actual knowledge of her physical condition and her inability to follow him from place to place in his various military assignments.

The cause was tried September 20, 1956, and, at the close of all of the evidence, the court ordered plaintiff’s petition dismissed.

Plaintiff’s evidence shows that on June 9, 1945, at Quincy, Massachusetts, he and the defendant were married. At the time of the marriage both were in the Navy; that in 1945 plaintiff was discharged from the service and defendant received her discharge from the Waves in 1946.

That after their discharge they made their home with defendant’s parents in Omaha, Nebraska; that while living there a boy was born to this marriage, now nine years old, who has since infancy, lived continuously with defendant’s parents.

On March 20, 1948, defendant was stricken with pneumonia, and, later, tuberculosis. During her illness she was confined to the County Hospital in Omaha, from which hospital she was transferred to O’Reilly Hospital in Springfield, Missouri, in May, 1948, where she remained a patient until July, 1952, at which time the Government closed the hospital and defendant was transferred to the V. A. Hospital in Excelsior Springs, Missouri, where she remained 22 months.

Plaintiff testified that two or three months after defendant was transferred to, O’Reilly I-Iospital, he came to Springfield and secured a job with the Electrical Union and later at the O’Reilly Hospital. He stated he resigned over a little incident, returned to Omaha in the early part of 1949 where he finished two years of High School and two years of College; that he got out of College in 1950 and joined the Police Force in Omaha.

He testified he belonged to the Reserves and in August, 1951, went east to see his mother; that he received orders to return to active duty and went back in the Army in Massachusetts in October, 1951. After entering the Army he was sent to Fort Dix, New Jersey, for about five months, at which time he was transferred overseas.

On April 5, 1955, he returned to New York. He testified he did not know when his wife got out of the hospital at Springfield. He stated he had received a letter while overseas from his sister or mother that the defendant had been transferred to Excelsior Springs.

Plaintiff testified that after he was discharged from the Army April 5, 1955, he went to Fort Dix and received orders dated April 14th, to proceed to Fort Leonard Wood; that he was granted a furlough for 45 days before reporting to Fort Leonard Wood, during which time he visited his mother and sister and wrote his wife stating "that I was home and I was coming to Omaha and wanted to talk things over, see if we could straighten things out,”. He testified he received a letter in answer to the one he had written in which defendant stated she preferably didn’t want to see him. He gave this answer as to the contents of the letter: “That we just weren’t alike and everything that had happened between us, we couldn’t make a go of it any way whatsoever”. He testified:

“Q. Then.you came down to Fort Leonard Wood? A. 'No, I went to Omaha from my mother’s house.
“Q. Did you see her there? A. I went and stayed at her mother's house, [725]*725where the boy is at, and I had to find out through them where she was actually living at. She was living in an apartment house on-1314 Park Avenue; and the time I was there, I think I just about went up there every day to talk to her, and there was no romanticism or affection whatsoever involved because she didn’t desire any at all to start with. And we talked and bickered, so to speak, and I told her that I didn’t particularly care to come down here and live the life I’d been leading all these years.”

Plaintiff testified that when defendant got out of the hospital at Excelsior Springs he didn’t know about it; that he hadn’t heard from her for almost a year and had learned through the Red Cross that she was in Omaha; that defendant hadn’t written him after she got out of the hospital and that was the reason he stated that defendant really abandoned him in May, 1954. He gave this answer: “I feel she should have let me know she was home”.

Plaintiff testified that defendant was paying $50 a month for the upkeep of the boy; that for about five years she had been receiving an allotment from him for $157.10 which had now been reduced to $137.00. He testified:

“Q. Now, when you came back there to Omaha and talked to her, did she tell you that she was not going to live with you and things of that kind? A. Well, it — it’s an answer that I got from her. It’s not definitely ‘No’, it’s all indications. She didn’t come down here to live on account of her health, and she needed a special maid and all that, and I couldn’t see that because I figure that a man is still capable of doing a lot of housework, and I wanted to keep the hoy and the family together.
“Q. Now, did you make an effort, after you got down here, to get quarters for her to live in out here? A. Yes, I did. Fact is I had a place all picked out and I had written her another letter asking her to come down, and I told her if she didn’t come down I’d apply for a divorce, and she wrote back to me not to issue her any ultimatums.”

Witness said after he came to Fort Leonard Wood he had received three letters from defendant. He stated that at the time he joined the Army, defendant was receiving from the Government approximately $150 a month and that she is now getting $181 from her connected service.

He stated he received about $125 for himself; that he was a Specialist Second Class which is equivalent to a Sergeant. When asked if he knew whether defendant’s health was such that she could drive from Omaha to the trial, plaintiff stated: “Frankly, I have been kept in the dark, as far as her health is concerned, for the — for about the past three years; a lot more than that.” He stated $60 was taken out of his pay for defendant’s allotment which is broken down for defendant and the child; that the Government pays $77. When asked if he knew how long defendant had been in the Veteran’s Hospital, plaintiff said she went to the hospital in March, 1948, when the baby was about nine months old and that he had found out through the Red Cross that she left the hospital in May, 1954. He gave this answer: “ * * * I do' know she has been under constant treatment at the Veterans Hospital in Omaha, but only as an out-patient, not as a direct-in-bed patient.”

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Bluebook (online)
305 S.W.2d 723, 1957 Mo. App. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parenteau-v-parenteau-moctapp-1957.