Perry v. Perry

202 N.W. 572, 199 Iowa 685
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 202 N.W. 572 (Perry v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Perry, 202 N.W. 572, 199 Iowa 685 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

De Graee, J. —

On October 18, 1923, plaintiff filed his petition for a divorce, predicated on the statutory ground of cruel and inhuman treatment, and on March 17, 1924, obtained a decree. The defendant on this appeal challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the decree entered. "With this contention this court agrees.

Plaintiff and defendant intermarried January 23, 1923, and at the time of the trial, each of the parties was about 22 years of age. Plaintiff was employed as a locomotive inspector in the Burlington shops in . Crestón, Iowa, and earned approximately $170 per month. Plaintiff weighed about 140 pounds; the defendant wife, 106 pounds, and “is about up to my [plaintiff’s] shoulder in height.” After the marriage, and until May 1, 1923, they lived with the wife’s mother in Crestón. They then went to live in what is termled the Patt Flats, remaining about a month, when they returned to the home of defendant’s mother, and continued to live there until plaintiff left, on October 11, 1923.

*686 Two questions arise on this record: Has the plaintiff sustained the allegations of his petition by the preponderance of the evidence'! Is the testimony of plaintiff corroborated, within the purview of the statute l Two factors must be considered in making answer: (1) the language and intent of the statute, and (2) the record facts applicable thereto. The statute provides that the husband may obtain a divorce from the wife when she is guilty of such inhuman treatment as to endanger the life of her husband. Sections 10475, 10476, Code of 1924. Furthermore, no divorce shall be granted on the testimony of the plaintiff alone. Section 10474. With these provisions we are concerned in the instant case. Here the husband is plaintiff, and he must present a case of violence and mental suffering injuriously affecting him. 19 Corpus Juris 142, Section 367; Moir v. Moir, 182 Iowa 370; Helmich v. Helmich, 199 Iowa 267; Cole v. Cole, 23 Iowa 433. Plaintiff, therefore, must fail unless the evidence of alleged cruelty charged to the wife caused the impairment of his health or endangered his-life, with reasonable apprehension of danger in the future. Knight v. Knight, 31 Iowa 451; Veeder v. Veeder, 189 Iowa 912. We therefore pass to the record, to discover the facts which sustain, or tend to sustain, the plaintiff’s claim that the defendant “has treated him in such a cruel and inhuman manner that his health has been injured and his life endangered thereby.”

Two acts of alleged cruelty are involved, the first of which is claimed to have occurred immediately prior to the return of the parties to live in the home of the wife’s mother. The plaintiff testified:

“My wife said she was going back there whether I did or not, and said I had to go along with her. She kept arguing; and her temper got the best of her; and she started in kicking me and pulling my hair; and she got to quarreling about the furniture, and said it wasn’t fit to use; and she had a butcher knife when she commenced quarreling, and she cut up the davenport; and I took hold of her and told her to cut that out; and she said: ‘Let go of me,- or I will cut you.’ I took the knife away from her. She cut the varnish off the library table.”

This happening is positively denied by the defendant, and there is no corroboration whatsoever of this occurrence. Shortly *687 after this transaction, the plaintiff: and defendant moved to the home of the wife’s mother, and there lived until the plaintiff left the defendant, on October 11, 1923.

The other incident to which plaintiff’s testimony .relates involves a quarrel between the parties and an alleged assault on the plaintiff by the wife. Apparently plaintiff had placed some of his money in the possession of his father, and this was the provocation for the quarrel. Plaintiff testified:

“She demanded that money-, or she would get the sheriff and have him come down there; and I told her to^’o on; and she began pulling my hair and slapping my face and kicking me. Her kicks were very severe, and she grabbed my hair in both of her hands and pulled it as hard as she could. She loosened my hair. I combed out nearly a handful; and she kicked me on the knees and the testicles. She had on shoes at that time. It made me sick! During this row, she had a clothes brush with a handle 12 or 13 inches long, and she hit me over the head with that before I got it away from her. When I was combing my hair the following morning after I left, I combed out a clot of blood from my hair.”

This transaction is also emphatically denied by the defendant, who testified:

“There wasn’t any quarreling or hair pulling. There was never any trouble at all, the day before he left. I never struck the plaintiff or pulled out his hair. I never took the butcher ’knife and tried to cut him. I never threatened to kill the plaintiff. I never threatened to cut-him. I did none of these things he mentioned. The afternoon of the day before he left, he went down to his mother’s and stayed there until about 4; and about 4:30 we ran the car awhile; and we went home and had supper; and he had to go back to work at 6 :30.”

It appears that no one except the parties was present dum ing the second transaction; but it is shown that the defendant’s mother and brother lived in the home, and were in the house during the time. The mother testified that there was no trouble of any kind between them on the day before he left. The brother testified that he was at home in the afternoon of October 10th, and observed no trouble between plaintiff and defendant. He was in a position to have heard “anything -in the way of a *688 struggle. I did not hear any commotion 'that attracted' my attention downstairs'. 1 heard no loud talking or anything of that kind.”

It does appear that a. Mrs. Kingery claims to have overheard the quarreling between the parties to this suit on the day in question. Since this testimony is the only testimony that possesses a semblance of corroboration, we quote:

“I heard loud talking. I couldn’t hear anything much that Mrs. Ludydg said, but I could hear her talking; but I heard what I stated from Mrs. Noel Perry, and I heard him say, ‘I love my mother,’ and she says, ‘Well, I don’t hate her,’ and I heard him say, ‘ I can take my clothes and go, ’ and, she says, ‘You can’t have your clothes,’ and he says, ‘Oh, yes, I will' get my clothes.’ Then I heard a noise, — sounded like they were pushing chairs around. I heard a part of the talk when they went upstairs. This talk seemed to be angry on her part.”

On cross-examination, she said:

“He left that evening or’ the next day. This ,was in the afternoon. I didn’t see him'there the next morning. I am not friendly with Mrs. Ludwig [mother of defendant], and I don’t care who knows it. * i:‘ From what I heard afterwards, it must have been her struck him. Well, I heard the licks, and I heard him say, ‘Talk away, Beula, — you can’t hurt me.’ That is what I heard. I was not watching and listening after that. I heard blows struck. I heard a slapping noise, like a woman would slap. You know about how a woman would strike, and T know, too.”

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.W. 572, 199 Iowa 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-perry-iowa-1925.