Pitchford v. Pitchford

133 So. 718, 222 Ala. 612, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 12, 1931
Docket6 Div. 760.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 So. 718 (Pitchford v. Pitchford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitchford v. Pitchford, 133 So. 718, 222 Ala. 612, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 318 (Ala. 1931).

Opinion

*613 BROWN, J.

Tbe original bill, filed by the wife against the husband, sought a divorce on the grounds of cruelty, and prayed that the custody of the two minor children, the issue of the marriage, who were in the complainant’s custody at the filing of the bill and so remained until the rendition of the final decree, be committed to her.

The respondent answered, denying the alleged cruelty, but admitted that the complainant was a suitable person to retain the custody of their children.

Thereafter the complainant amended her bill, charging adultery on the part of the defendant with one Kate Gregory. The defendant thereupon amended his answer, making it a cross-bill, withdrawing his admissions that complainant was a suitable person to have the custody of the children, and alleging that the complainant had been guilty of adultery with one J. V. Forbes, and praying that he be granted a divorce.

On the hearing the trial court entered a decree denying the complainant relief and dismissing her bill. The defendant was granted a divorce as prayed in the cross-bill; the children were taken from the mother and committed to the custody of the defendant’s mother and step-father.

This appeal is prosecuted by the complainant, and errors are assigned, predicated on the denial of relief to. her and the granting of the relief on the cross-bill.

The evidence, in the main, was the testimony of witnesses taken orally in open court, and is quite voluminous. We deem it necessary to state only the controlling facts that influence our conclusion.

The defendant is a medical doctor, and at the time of the separation and for several years prior thereto was in the employ of one of the large industrial corporations in the Birmingham district. Just before the marriage, the complainant, then a young woman of 20, was graduated as a nurse, and the defendant had just finished his medical course and had entered upon the practice of his profession. For two years after the marriage they lived to themselves, away from the defendant’s parents, during which time the first child was born. In 1923, the defendant with his wife and child moved into the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Davis, in the city of Birmingham, where they lived until the separation, which occurred in the summer of 1929. The trouble which ultimately resulted in the separation was first manifested in 1928, when, according to some of the testimony, the husband began to display temper and irritability ; and there is also testimony going to show that the defendant’s parents, from the beginning, were not always kind and considerate of the complainant.

However, the testimony offered by complainant to sustain the charge of cruelty alleged in the original bill falls short of the requirements of the statute. It shows, at most, increasing incompatibility between the parties, characterized by impatience and violent displays of temper on the part of the husband. To sustain the charge of cruelty, it was incumbent on the complainant to shqw actual violence upon her person, attended with danger to life or health, or conduct on the part of the defendant affording reasonable apprehension of such violence. Code 1923, § 7409; Morrison v. Morrison, 165 Ala. 191, 51 So. 743.

Whatever may be thought of the testimony offered by the complainant supporting the charge of adultery made in the bill as amended, the judgment here is, assuming that the charge was established, that if has been condoned. Complainant’s testimony is to the effect that she learned of the defendant’s alleged infidelity through a letter written by the attorney of Gregory, the husband1 of Kate Gregory, addressed to the defendant in respect to a pending suit by Gregory against the defendant for alienation of his (Gregory’s) wife’s affection; that, after the receipt of this letter, she did not “live with” the respondent. Her evidence, however, goes to show that she remained with the respondent in the house of his parents, and that she implored him to move with her from their home. This in connection with the respondent’s testimony that he and complainant cohabited as husband and wife, after she became aware of the charges of Gregory through said letter, induces the conclusion that the offense was condoned. This necessitated a denial of relief to her, and her bill was properly dismissed. Code 1923, § 7413.

Much of the testimony offered by the defendant in support of the alleged infidelity of the wife charged in the cross-bill relates to “parties,” excursions to swimming pools, and the like, attended by the complainant. The purpose of this testimony was to show intimacy between complainant and Forbes, and also the use of intoxicants by the complainant. The sum total of this phase of the testimony serves to disclose the atmosphere of the home life of the Davises, into which the young wife was brought by the husband, and to bring into bold relief the personality of the dominating spirit, the husband’s mother. It shows her to be an active successful business woman, engaged in the real estate and insurance business, to which she devoted all of her time, leaving the care of the home in the main to negro servants; that she had a wide business and social acquaintance, *614 whom she entertained and by whom she was entertained in a social way. If she was not the instigator of or inspiration for the “parties,” the subject of this testimony, she was at least a moving spirit in them. Liquors of some sort were an incident of these entertainments, and the mother-in-law appears to be modern in her views, and partook of the beverages or not, as she expressed it, in substance, “as the etiquette of the occasion demanded.” Without notable' exception, every participant in these social functions was the friend of the mother-in-law and the husband, and the wife met them through the introduction of one or the other, not excluding Forbes.

The evidence relied upon, in the main, to sustain the allegations of the cross-bill as last amended, was testimony given by private detectives employed by the husband to spy upon the wife, and for whose services, for one in his circumstances, he agreed to pay a considerable fee.

After the separation, the complainant moved into ari apartment in the Southern part of the city near St. Yincent’s Hospital, where she lived with her children and a Mrs. Hoggle, a former girl friend who was taken as a roomer to aid in meeting her living expenses, supplementing the allowance of $100 per month by the husband. The evidence goes to show that, while the complainant, because of the alleged infidelity of her husband, had declared her purpose not to live with him, and though implored by him a few days before the trial to return to him on account of the children, she had refused to do so, yet she made no protest or effort to prevent the defendant from visiting the children and enjoying their conrpany as often as he might desire. The testimony of witnesses Dan Bodeker and Warren is to the effect that on Saturday, March 29, 1980', after the defendant had called and obtained the consent of complainant to take the children with him on a trip to Atlanta, they kept the complainant under surveillance, that they were parked in a Cadillac sedan at the back of her apartment, and that at 9 o’clock, complainant and Mrs. Hoggle with a man, drove up in a car and parked and entered the apartment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rowe v. Rowe
575 So. 2d 584 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 1991)
Russell v. Russell
211 So. 2d 894 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1968)
Maddox v. Maddox
201 So. 2d 47 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1967)
Chamblee v. Chamblee
49 So. 2d 917 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1951)
Weems v. Weems
50 So. 2d 428 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1950)
Gardner v. Gardner
28 So. 2d 559 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1946)
Brown v. Brown
158 So. 311 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
Hays v. Hays
139 So. 246 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 So. 718, 222 Ala. 612, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitchford-v-pitchford-ala-1931.