Petersen v. Petersen

267 N.W. 719, 221 Iowa 897
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 19, 1936
DocketNo. 43441.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 267 N.W. 719 (Petersen v. Petersen) 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
Petersen v. Petersen, 267 N.W. 719, 221 Iowa 897 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Hamilton, J.

The plaintiff, who was 56 years of age and had been chief of police in the town of Clear Lake, Iowa, for *898 eleven years, and the defendant, who was 47 years of age, or thereabouts, were united in marriage on April 20, 1934. Bach of them had been previously married. Plaintiff’s former wife was dead. The defendant had been the wife of a doctor from whom she was divorced. She had a high school education and had received some nurse’s training. Plaintiff had accumulated considerable property, while the defendant had nothing but a few household goods and her personal belongings. She had a daughter in school, and the plaintiff had a grown daughter who was living in the home and was a stenographer in a local office. There is nothing in the record to detract from the good character or standing of either of these parties. There was no evidence of discord. They each say that the other was kind and considerate and no overt act of misconduct is charged against the other. She would have liked it better had he laid aside his armor as a policeman when off duty and had been more loquacious while in and about the house. But there is no claim of any threat or purposeful intimidation because of the firearms which he habitually carried in the holster strapped to his person, or that his long periods of communion with himself were for the purpose of annoying her. And while in his petition for divorce the alleged ground is cruel and inhuman treatment, the allegation is in the form of a legal conclusion, unsupported by any fact allegations, and from his own testimony we gather that the one and only thing that ruffled the waters on the sea of matrimony and kept his cup of connubial bliss from running over was his wife’s failure, as he claims, to meet his requirements and expectations in the performance of her marital duty in satisfying the carnal man. No reason or explanation for her negative conduct in this respect is disclosed by the record. While he admits that they had no discord or trouble over the matter, he claims in his testimony that they had at different times discussed the matter and that he had earnestly requested her on several occasions to be, as he termed it, “a wife to him”; that she persisted in her refusal and said that she could not. And he further contends that because of this matter, the question of divorce was talked over, and that they had agreed upon a divorce, and that in response to this agreement, he went to his attorney and had the papers prepared, took them to her while she was ailing and in bed (she had had several operations and was suffering from adhesions), and told her what they were and asked her to sign *899 them, and that she willingly affixed her signature thereto. He admits that she did not have her glasses, but he claims she read them. He then states that on the afternoon of the same day she went over to visit a friend in a neighboring town seven or eight miles distant, and that as she left he kissed her good-bye and she said to him: “You have been awfully good to me.”

The original notice was in the usual form and required defendant to appear on or before the second day of the January, 1935, term of the court which commenced on the 7th day of January, 1935. Attached to this notice was the following:

“Acceptance of Service of Original Notice and Waiver of Time of Filing Petition.
“I, Lena O. Petersen, do hereby accept due, timely and legal service of the original notice in the foregoing entitled action for the January, A. D., 1935 Term of the District Court of Iowa, in and for Cerro Gordo County, in which A. R. Petersen is plaintiff, and Lena O. Petersen, who is myself, defendant. I do hereby acknowledge receipt of a copy of said original notice, together with a copy of plaintiff’s petition, and I do hereby enter my appearance in said cause for the January, A. D., 1935, term of the District Court aforesaid, and I expressly waive the time of filing the petition herein, as provided by law, and consent that said petition may be filed at any time during the January, A. D., 1935, term of the District Court aforesaid, or any subsequent term, and I further waive the filing of an answer or any other pleading whatsoever, and I consent that the Court may hear this matter at any time during the January, A. D., 1935, Term of the District Court of Iowa, in and for Cerro Gordo County, or at any subsequent term.
“Dated this 27th day of March, A. D., 1935.
“ [Signed] Lena O. Petersen, Defendant.”

It will be observed that the paper bears date of March 27th, but it was actually signed on March 29, 1935. The petition for divorce was not yet on file but was, together with the notice and acceptance of service, filed on the 2nd of April following, and on the 4th day of April he obtained his decree of divorce by default for want of plea. At the same time that she signed the acceptance of service, she also signed a property stipulation, by which she was to have her household goods and wearing apparel, which already belonged to her, and relinquished all claim to *900 his property. This was never filed in the case and was not presented to the trial court, and so far as the record discloses, the trial court had no knowledge as to what property settlement had been made at the time he granted the decree.

Mrs. Petersen’s version of what happened on this day is somewhat different. She said that she was ailing and had gone upstairs and was in bed when the plaintiff came in and told her that he had some papers which did not concern her, and asked her to sign them; that she understood that they related to a loan; that she had signed some papers shortly before in reference to a loan; that she did not have her glasses and could not read readily without her glasses; and that she did not read the papers, but took his word as to their contents. She said: “Mr. Petersen never talked about his business very much. If he wanted me to sign any papers he would come to me and tell me to do it. That was all there was to it, and I would sign. Mr. Petersen said when he brought the papers to my bedroom that they were in regard to a loan, and that it was nothing that would affect me, and asked me to sign. I took his word for it and signed. I did not ask Mr. Petersen to read them to me when I signed. I relied upon what he told me they were when I signed •them. ’ ’ In reference to the divorce matters which he said- had been talked over between them, she testified:

“I heard Mr. Petersen’s testimony concerning the conversation with reference to my not being a wife and getting a divorce. I had no such talk or conversation with him. I tried every way that I knew how to be a good and dutiful wife to him at all times, and when I left that day it is true he kissed me.
“Q. Was there anything in leaving the home that day that indicated to you that there was any domestic discord in the home at all? A. No.”

The court, under this record of the testimony of these two witnesses, parties to this suit, is confronted with the paradoxical situation of two apparently reputable persons flatly contradicting each other as to material facts perfectly obvious to both of them, and as to the truth of which there is and was in reality no basis for dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
267 N.W. 719, 221 Iowa 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petersen-v-petersen-iowa-1936.