Pettigrew v. Pettigrew

291 S.W. 90, 172 Ark. 647, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 90 (Pettigrew v. Pettigrew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pettigrew v. Pettigrew, 291 S.W. 90, 172 Ark. 647, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 93 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

■McCulloch, C. J.

The plaintiff, Mabel Pettigrew, and defendant, R. L. Pettigrew, intermarried, at Shreveport, Louisiana, in September, 1920, and lived together .until March, 1924, when the plaintiff left the defendant for causes, which she set forth as grounds for divorce. Each of the parties had been married before, and each had children. The. plaintiff has two daughters, who were approaching womanhood, but who were yet schoolgirls 'during the time that these parties lived together. They resided at Shreveport for a time after the intermarriage, and afterwards moved to Union County, and resided at Smackover until the separation.

The defendant built a hotel at Smackover, in conjunction with a man named Moore, and the same was operated by defendant, he and his wife and her two daughters residing at the hotel, and were there up to the time of the separation. In April, 1924, just about a month after the separation, plaintiff instituted this action against the defendant for a divorce and for alimony and suit money, and also to recover sums of money alleged to be due her by her husband for money loaned prior to their intermarriage. These sums were alleged to have been loans in the early part of the year of 1914, and evidenced by promissory notes falling due at various times up to the autumn of 1914. Plaintiff exhibited with the complaint four of these notes, aggregating $3,876.

The grounds set forth in the complaint for a divorce were that defendant had been “guilty of such cruel and barbarous treatment as to endanger the life” of the plaintiff, and that he offered such indignities to the person of the plaintiff as to render her condition intolerable. The complaint alleged acts of cruel conduct and various indignities, such as abusive language and physical violence.

It was also alleged in the complaint that the defendant had made indecent proposals to the plaintiff’s daughters. The complaint was answered by defendant with denials of all the allegations with respect to misconduct on his part, and there was also a denial of any indebtedness to the plaintiff. He admitted that he had borrowed small sums from the plaintiff before their intermarriage, but asserted that he had paid the same in full.

The complaint also set forth a list of items comprising, in part, furniture in the hotel, which plaintiff claimed to be her property, and in the answer of the defendant it was conceded that certain items in the list constituted property owned by plaintiff, but there was a denial of plaintiff’s ownership of other items.

On February 2, 1925, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint, reiterating the allegations of the former complaint and containing others with respect to misconduct of the defendant, also alleging that the plaintiff had, subsequent to the intermarriage with defendant, made loans of money to him aggregating $3,100, which sums remained unpaid, and for which there was a prayer for recovery. It was also alleged that the loans made at Shreveport in 1914 aggregated the sum of $6,000, and that evidences of the indebtedness, in the form of promissory notes, were executed to plaintiff by defendant, but that some of these had been lost, only those exhibited with the original complaint remaining in possession of plaintiff. It was also alleged that defendant had, by threats and violent conduct, secured from plaintiff a diamond ring and a diamond stud of the aggregate value of $500, which he was wrongfully withholding, and there was a prayer for the recovery of those items.

Defendant’s* answer and cross-complaint denied all the allegations with respect to misconduct on his part toward plaintiff or her daughters, and all allegations with respect to the indebtedness and the ownership e>f the diamond ring and stud, and the statute of 'limitations was pleaded against the notes and other alleged indebtedness for money loaned in the year 1914.. This plea of defendant was also made a cross-complaint against the plaintiff, alleging gross misconduct of plaintiff which amounted to such cruel and barbarous treatment as to endanger his life, and there was a prayer for divorce from the bonds of matrimony.

It was alleged that, on March 22,1925, plaintiff came to the hotel in Smackover, which the defendant was operating, and made a murderous assault upon him with a pistol, firing several shots at him. This last plea was objected to by plaintiff, and the objection was overruled, whereupon the parties stipulated that answer to the cross-complaint be waived and the allegation treated as denied.

The court heard the evidence, and rendered a decree against the plaintiff on her prayer for divorce, but granted a divorce on the cross-complaint of defendant. The court found for the plaintiff for the recovery of the sum of $3,100, alleged to have been advanced or loaned after the intermarriage, and for the recovery of $500, the value of the diamonds, and also for the recovery of the hotel furnishings set forth in exhibit to plaintiff’s complaint, and an allowance was also made by the court for attorney’s fees. The court found against the plaintiff on the prayer for recovery of money loaned at Shreveport, on the ground that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations. Each party has duly prose* cuted an appeal to this court.

It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff, in support of her appeal from the decree for divorce rendered on the cross-complaint, that a'cause of action which accrued to the defendant and cross-complainant after the institution of the action could not be pleaded, and that the court erred in overruling plaintiff’s objection and in granting the divorce on the cross-complaint. This contention is not well founded, for the cause of action set forth in the cros9*complaint was a separate one, in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff, which was mature at the time the cross-complaint was filed, and the defendant had the right to assert it against the plaintiff in this action, even though it had accrued since the commencement of the original action. Nelson on Divorce and Separation, § 744; Martin v. Martin, 33 W. Va. 695, 31 S. E. 12; Wilson v. Wilson, 40 Iowa 230; Armstrong v. Armstrong, 27 Ind. 186.

Mr. Nelson, in the section cited above, says: “It is convenient and practical to adjust all the marital rights of the parties in one proceeding and thus avoid a multiplicity of suits. No useful purpose could be subserved by compelling the defendant to prosecute separate proceedings for divorce or annulment of marriage when the issue in the first proceeding will involve the validity of the marriage and the causes for divorce set up in recrimination, and must be proved by substantially the same evidence.” And in the same section the author gives his approval to the statement of law contained in the authorities cited above.

In the ease of Slocum v. Slocum, 86 Ark. 469, 111 S. W. 806, we cited with approval the section above cited from Mr. Nelson, but the question of right to set up in a cross-complaint a cause of action which arose subsequent to the commencement of the original action was not involved. In that case we said:

“It is recognized and permissible practice for the defendant to file a cross bill and ask independent relief in divorce suits.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 90, 172 Ark. 647, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettigrew-v-pettigrew-ark-1927.