Pobst v. Pobst

317 S.W.2d 655, 1958 Mo. App. LEXIS 478
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1958
DocketNo. 30082
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 317 S.W.2d 655 (Pobst v. Pobst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pobst v. Pobst, 317 S.W.2d 655, 1958 Mo. App. LEXIS 478 (Mo. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Judge.

This is a divorce suit brought by Albert Pobst against Mary Pobst. A decree in favor of plaintiff was entered below, and defendant has appealed.

The grounds for divorce alleged in the petition were general indignities, and the particular indignities relied upon were: refusal of defendant to speak to plaintiff except when enraged; keeping dogs and cats inside the house; threatening plaintiff’s life with a butcher knife; and threatening to scald plaintiff with boiling water. The answer of defendant was a general denial.

The parties were married July 2, 1954. At that time plaintiff was seventy years of age, and defendant was sixty-six. Both parties had been married before. Plaintiff had four children by a former marriage, and two stepchildren. Defendant had six children by a former marriage. During their married life the parties lived in Dutch-town, Missouri, in a house owned by plaintiff, the purchase price of which was $1,200. The house contained five rooms. Plaintiff was not regularly employed, but received $38 per month from the state as old age assistance. Defendant received $66.30 per month social security.

Plaintiff testified that he and his wife began having trouble about four months after their marriage when she insisted he sell the house and move to St. Louis. Plaintiff did not want to do that. Later, defendant wanted plaintiff to sell the house and move to Cape Girardeau, and when he refused she began nagging him and “threatened to tear planks off of the house and fill the kitchen full of tin cans, anything to aggravate me and start trouble.” Defendant’s version of this affair was that she [657]*657wanted her husband to sell the house and move to either St. Louis or Cape Girardeau, “because I could have went hack to my job, he said he wasn’t able to work and I told him if he would go up there and do the cooking I’d go back to work and he wouldn’t have to work.” Prior to her marriage defendant worked as a curtain operator at the Superior Laundry in St. Louis, and she quit that job to marry the plaintiff.

Plaintiff further testified that he and his wife had trouble over a dog the wife owned, and stated the dog was mean and had bitten two women. Defendant kept the dog tied, but one night it got loose and defendant accused plaintiff of turning it loose. Plaintiff denied doing this and defendant called him a “damn liar”, and threatened him with a butcher knife, and to scald him with hot water. Plaintiff testified defendant said: “I’ll cut you all to pieces,” to which plaintiff replied: “Damn you, don’t you ever throw it, if you would I would be hard on you.” Plaintiff further testified: “Q. And, in fact, you never did answer her back even when she was quarreling at you, did you? A. Well, sometimes we fussed a little, you know. I couldn’t take it. I generally got up and walked out. I never hung around the house any more than I just had to. I didn’t want to have any trouble with her.”

When asked if she threatened to cut plaintiff with a butcher knife, defendant replied: “No, I shook the butcher knife at him. I was washing dishes and he was setting in by the heating stove * * * and he was calling me a son-of-a-bitch and was cussing and calling everybody a son-of-a-bitch, said he wouldn’t take a lick off no damn woman, and I just shook the butcher knife at him, I just said, ‘Don’t never try it on me.’ Now, that’s all I told him. I never threatened him.” Defendant denied that she threatened to pour boiling water on plaintiff. She testified: “No, I didn’t. I was talking to my daughter. My grandson was kinda mean to his wife and I told her, I said, ‘Before any man would hit me, if I didn’t have nothing to hit him with I’d pour boiling water on him.’ I didn’t say I’d pour scalding water on him. * * * It’s a lie. I’ll face him right in it. He knows I did not say it. I said I’d scald any man that tried to hit me and I still say it. I wouldn’t take a lick off of no man. I might take one, but I wouldn’t take the second. * * * Pie never touched me during the whole time we were married. He never tried to hit me, because I wouldn’t take it.”

On one occasion defendant asked plaintiff to buy her a new broom and mop. Plaintiff testified he could not do this because he had no money. Angered at this, defendant threw plaintiff’s spittoon out into the yard. Plaintiff went out onto the porch to look for the spittoon but could not find it, and later found it in the yard. Defendant told plaintiff not to get the spittoon or bring it into the house. It was raining at the time and plaintiff got wet and cold. Plaintiff built a fire in the stove and after-wards defendant poured water on the fire and put it out. Defendant testified: “Q. Now, did you get mad and throw his spittoon out in the yard? A. Yes, I did because he wouldn’t buy me no mop and told me not to mop and sweep and I did, a six quart stew pan and he had it full of ashes level to the top and he would spit in there and throwed his old tobacco in there and he taken the paint off of all my linoleum and he spit on the chair 'rounds and every time I would mop, the next day the floor would be all brown where he spit over the pan, and I throwed it out. * * * Q. And did he ever build a fire in the house and you poured water on it and put it out? A. Yes, that’s the Sunday that he went in and scattered ashes all over my kitchen, after I had mopped and swept with the old broom and mop I had, he spread ashes over there, he got the ash pan out, he was mad and he come on in the front room where I had mopped my front room and he jerked the ash pan out there and he scattered ashes all over the floor and I kicked the ash pan out of his hand. That’s when he raised up and cussed me and called me a [658]*658bad name and said he ought to blow my brains out with a shotgun and I throwed the pan outside and I commanded him not to bring it back.” Asked why she threw water on the fire, defendant replied: “Because I was mad because he wouldn’t get me a broom and a mop, and he told me not to mop or sweep.”

Plaintiff denied that the ashes in the can he used for a spittoon ever spilled out or got the'place dirty. He testified he “never missed the pan.” He stated: “I used tobacco all my life. She knowed that I was using tobacco before I married her. My daughter came there one day and she said: ‘Pop, you are still chewing your tobacco.’ I said, ‘Yeah.’ And she got up and told her, she said, ‘If it’s his pleasure to chew, let him chew.’ That’s what she told my daughter.”

Plaintiff testified: “I didn’t like the idea of the dogs and cats in the house all the time, I didn’t like that, that dog was scratching all the time, it’s a big dog. One time they thought he got the mange and her son brought a gallon of motor oil to grease him up with. The dog was in the house pretty near all the time and is yet — a dog with mange.”

Defendant owned two cats, a Persian and an “alley cat.” The Persian cat would sharpen its claws by scratching the wallpaper in one of the rooms of the house. This room, according to plaintiff’s testimony, was newly papered about a year prior to the time the parties were married. The cat “scratched plumb through the wall to the wood.” Plaintiff stated: ■ “I never did say anything, I didn’t think it would be any use if I would, I would just cause trouble and I didn’t want to do that, I just let them go.”

Mrs. Ora Stovall, a neighbor, testified: “Well, the cats did scratch the paper on the walls, just like Mr.

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Related

In Re the Marriage of Uhls
549 S.W.2d 107 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1977)
R v. M
383 S.W.2d 894 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
317 S.W.2d 655, 1958 Mo. App. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pobst-v-pobst-moctapp-1958.