Pybus v. Pybus

147 S.W.2d 512
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1941
DocketNo. 5247.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 512 (Pybus v. Pybus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pybus v. Pybus, 147 S.W.2d 512 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Ruby Louise Pybus, the appellee, instituted this suit in the District Court of Wilbarger County against the appellant, William Wiley Pybus, to obtain a judgment for divorce, for a partition of their community property and to require him to account to her for one-half the rents and revenues derived therefrom.

The appellee predicated her grounds for divorce on an allegation of cruelty to the effect that shortly after they were married he began a course of unkind, harsh and tyrannical conduct toward her which continued until she finally separated from him on or about the 6th day of December, 1939.

The appellant answered by general demurrer and denied generally and specially that he had ever treated the appellee in an unkind, harsh or cruel manner or that he had ever questioned her fidelity or manifested a jealous disposition toward her.

The case was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury and judgment rendered granting a divorce and a partition of the property described and a finding that since the property was not susceptible of partition that it be sold and the proceeds be divided, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The appellant challenges as error the action of the court in rendering judgment dissolving the bonds of matrimony between him and the appellee for he contends the testimony is wholly insufficient to support such judgment.

The record shows the plaintiff had been married to a former husband from whom she had been divorced prior to her marriage with the defendant and that she and her first husband had three children whose *513 ages at the time of this trial were eighteen, sixteen and thirteen, respectively. After her separation from the first husband she was employed by the defendant to work in his cafe at $7 per week. Thereafter, the time not being shown, she became an equal partner in the cafe business which she and the defendant operated in the city of Vernon, Texas.

The defendant was divorced from his former wife in 1937 and he and the plaintiff were married to each other on May 26, 1938.

She testified that she had known the defendant six or seven years before their marriage and that they had been partners in the cafe for more than five years previous to their wedding. She worked at the cafe all the time after she was first employed by the defendant until she left him on December 6, 1939. In connection with the cafe they sold beer and the license authorizing the sale of the beer at the cafe was obtained in the name of plaintiff because the defendant’s license had been can-celled.

In contemplation of their marriage they purchased a place and furnished it for their home each advancing one-half of the payments made, presumably out of their partnership funds, however, this property was purchased partly for cash and partly on time and the unpaid balance was to be discharged in installments. After they married they secured possession of the property purchased for a home and occupied it for a while but she testified the defendant decided it would be to their advantage to move to a two-room apartment they had connected with the cafe and rent out the home since they would be nearer the business and their work, would not have to get up so early and could apply the monthly rent collected for the place on the deferred payments against the home and furniture which he anticipated they might not be able to meet otherwise. She says she would have preferred living at the home place but as they wanted to pay their debts and get the property in the clear she thought it best to move to the apartment, which they did, where they lived with some of her children and one of his boys who was there a part of the time. They both worked in the cafe, both had access to the cash register and both superintended the business. Some time previous to the date of their separation she' had a nervous breakdown, consulted a doctor who advised her she had overworked, overtaxed her strength, must rest and refrain from the use of all intoxicating liquors. They attended dances and other places together before they were married and he usually got mad if she danced with another man more than once because he was jealous, though without any cause. She thought if she married him they would get along better but they did not. The acts of cruelty which she testified to against him as grounds for divorce were that he would disagree with her whether she was right or wrong; he would get mad if she danced with another man as much as twice, fuss, jerk her around and want to go home; that on the occasion when she left him they attended a party, he got mad, began drinking, quarreled about her dancing with another man, wanted to go home and divide up their furniture and property saying he would not put up with her conduct any longer. She was not ready to go home and told him she would come later with friends and he said if any one brought her home it would be too bad for them and her; that he went home, packed her clothes, got his gun and reported to the officers that she had run off with another man; that this was not true, embarrassed and humiliated her and that she went home with a friend that night. However she testified his conduct and accusations did not impair her relation with her friends or her enjoyment of their society but she got angry about the way he acted and left but he didn’t know that she was leaving; that he had never accused her of infidelity except about her running off with this man this one night; that he never abused her or called her bad names. She says she drank a bottle of beer occasionally but admits that the doctor advised her that she must take a rest and refrain from drinking intoxicating liquor. After she left him he returned, apologized to her, said he had made a mistake, would take all the blame and had tried practically every day since to get her to make up with him and start over; that soon after she left him she went to East Texas and stayed a while and he came after her and brought her back; that he sent her groceries after she came back, paid the bills, hired some one to do her work and that she had been down to the cafe three or four times every week since she returned, had access to the cash register but exercised this privilege only two or three times for small amounts of money. She says she was frightened *514 when he got his gun the night she left him and that she did not believe she could live happily with him “because he never has been able to provide a place for me to live and me to stay at it, because he never could pay the bills; I always had to help work and pay the bills, and so he never has had a place for me to stay, and therefore, he is not in as good a shape as when I quit him, and he couldn’t make it now because he hasn’t got as good a business now as when I left him, and I don’t think I could live up there without having to work myself.” She also says that she has never recovered from her nervousness and is afraid that she would not get well and therefore could not be happy as his wife. The treatment of which she complains apparently occurred at parties or other public gatherings but no One present was put on the stand to corroborate her evidence.

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147 S.W.2d 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pybus-v-pybus-texapp-1941.