Pinchuk v. Pinchuk

27 N.W.2d 81, 317 Mich. 523, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 508
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1947
DocketDocket No. 57, Calendar No. 43,258.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 81 (Pinchuk v. Pinchuk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinchuk v. Pinchuk, 27 N.W.2d 81, 317 Mich. 523, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 508 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

' Minnie Pincbuk, plaintiff, and Jack Pincbuk, defendant, were married in 1920 at Pinsk, Bussia. Tbe parties moved to tbe United States in 1923 and established their home in Detroit. Two daughters are tbe issue of the marriage, one born in Pinsk in 1921, tbe other born in Detroit in 1928. Tbe parties ceased living together as husband and wife some time prior to tbe instant suit. Plaintiff filed a bill for separate maintenance, but tbe suit was discontinued. Subsequently, in June, 1943, she filed tbe bill in tbe instant suit, in which she alleged nonsupport and extreme cruelty on tbe part of defendant, and asked for alimony and a division of property. Although titléd a “Bill for Separate Maintenance,” tbe prayer for relief did not specifically request separate maintenance. Tbe testimony presented, however, was for tbe purpose of obtaining such maintenance and tbe trial court suggested that tbe bill be amended to conform with its general purport. Notwithstanding that plaintiff’s counsel *525 agreed to amend, no such amendment was ever filed. This defect, however, is unimportant in view of the fact that defendant filed an answer and cross bill charging plaintiff with extreme and repeated cruelty and seeking an absolute divorce. After hearing the testimony, the trial court denied plaintiff separate maintenance and granted defendant an absolute divorce on his cross bill. Plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff testified that the home was a comparatively happy one until, in February, 1940, defendant’s refugee sister-in-law, Trudy Pinchuk, and her 12-year-old son, Rene, arrived in this country and took up residence in Detroit. The sister-in-law is the wife of defendant’s only brother who at that time was a prisoner in a German .concentration camp. The newly-arrived relatives moved into the Pinchuk home and, almost immediately, friction began to develop between the parties herein, to which the children contributed in no small measure. Plaintiff stated that she soon detected a change in defendant’s attitude toward her and their children; and that defendant began to neglect his own family while showering attention on the sister-in-law and her son. She further testified that defendant failed to provide adequately for the needs of his own family while contributing generously to the support of the si*ster-in-law; and that even while being treated for rheumatism of her back and hands she was compelled to take a job in a war plant as a press machine operator in order to. make ends meet. Plaintiff alleges that defendant was guilty of infidelity and testified that one summer when the sister-in-law was vacationing near Tawas, Michigan, the defendant stayed there with her, commuting daily to his business in Detroit.

Defendant testified that his home life was unhappy before his sister-in-law appeared on the scene; that plaintiff was a careless housekeeper; *526 that he was compelled to wash dishes and scrub floors; that he had to make his own bed and clean his own room; that his clothes were never mended; that he had to do the family shopping; that his meals were' irregular; that plaintiff was argumentative and was constantly scolding and nagging; that she repeatedly accused him of infidelity; that she refused to speak to him for months at a time; that she had shown him no wifely attention since 1939; and that he had long since ceased to entertain any love or affection for her but had continued to live at home in order to raise his children until they were able to care for themselves. He stated that he was an electrician by trade and was operating a modest electrical contracting business; that in connection therewith he received telephone calls at his home which his wife either garbled or refused to convey to him. He further stated that he had always supported his family to the best of his ability, had built them a substantial home in an excellent residential district at a cost of $8,700, and had provided them with fine clothes and frequent vacations, while denying such to himself. He complained that his eldest daughter had adopted her mother’s attitude and had refused to speak to him for over a year. The daughter testified that she had not spoken to her father for abjut four years. Defendant emphatically denied that there was anything improper in his relationship with his sister-in-law and stated that he had only accorded her and her minor son the courtesy and consideration owing refugee relatives who were strangers in the country. He admitted having visited his sister-in-law three or four times during the summer that she was vacationing near Tawas, Michigan, where her son was enrolled at a summer camp. He denied having commuted daily between Detroit and Tawas and observed that the distance was 185 miles each way and that it would have been *527 physically impossible for him to have made the trip daily and attend to his business in Detroit at the same time. Finally .he ascribed plaintiff’s antagonism toward his refugee relatives as being due largely to the fact that they were converts to a different faith from that of -the parties litigant. It would serve no useful purpose to further detail the crimi-nations and recriminations of the parties herein. Suffice it to say that the record indicates that the parties are estranged to a degree that does not admit of much, if any, possibility of reconciliation.

The sister-in-law testified on behalf of defendant. She stated that plaintiff took a personal dislike to her and her son from the very beginning and resented their presence in the Pinchuk home, which she ascribed largely to religious differences; that this attitude was soon adopted by plaintiff’s daughters ; and that having been treated with undisguised hostility by all the Pinchuks, excepting only defendant, she moved into rented quarters but because of straitened circumstances found it necessary to leave her minor son with the Pinchuk family where he remained for over a year until she was able to provide for him as well as for herself. She further testified that plaintiff was jealous of her personally and not because of defendant’s kindness to her and her son; that she had been rebuffed in an attempt to effect a reconciliation between the parties; and that plaintiff was so vindictive toward her as to threaten to make a complaint about her to the immigration authorities and on several occasions had jeopardized her livelihood by contacting her employers and maligning her.

It appears from the record and the opinion of the trial court that the sister-in-law is a person of considerable charm, refinement and ability. She is a college graduate and has studied medicine. Although fluent in five continental languages, she had *528 no command of English when she arrived in the United States. Despite this handicap, she was able to find employment, maintain herself, master a strange tongue ' and acquire 98 credit hours at Wayne University — all of this in a new environment and with a minimum of outside assistance. She had been employed at various times as a governess, librarian and instructor in foreign languages; and at the time of the hearing she had a position with a newspaper. Under her tutelage, her minor son succeeded so well at school as to receive a scholarship to one of the finest private academies in the midwest. Judge Neuenfelt, the trial judge, concluded that the witness was an eminently respectable person. The judge made the following observation : *

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 81, 317 Mich. 523, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinchuk-v-pinchuk-mich-1947.