Randall v. Randall

29 So. 2d 238, 158 Fla. 502, 1947 Fla. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 21, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 238 (Randall v. Randall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall v. Randall, 29 So. 2d 238, 158 Fla. 502, 1947 Fla. LEXIS 557 (Fla. 1947).

Opinion

BUFORD, J.:

We have here for consideration under two appeals review of a final decree awarding separate maintenance, solicitor’s fees and the right to possession of certain shares of corporate- stock and also a subsequent order of sequestration of certain property of the defendant to enforce the payment of the sums of money required by the final decree.

The transcript of the record in these cases comprises more than 2200 typewritten pages when every material thing in it could have been shown by the use of less than 200 pages. There are hundreds of pages of testimony introduced only for the purpose of testing the credibility of witnesses and there is much other irrelevant and immaterial matter, all of which could have very properly been eliminated from the transcript under Rule 11, Sub-section (5).

*504 The appellant presents five (5) questions for our consideration under the appeal from the final decree. The first question presented is:

“If a husband is living in the home under the same roof with his wife and children, eating at the same table with them, mingling with them in the home, supplying them with the necessities and comforts of life and maintaining the home, could the wife under that statement of facts successfully claim that she was living apart from her husband so as to maintain bill of complaint for alimony unconnected with divorce under Section 65.09 of the Florida Statutes, even though it may further appear that the husband and wife sleep in different rooms and have discontinued sexual relations?”

This, question assumes that up to the time of filing of complainant’s bill of complaint which was filed on March 1, 1944, the husband and wife were continuing to eat at the same table and generally associating together after the last incident of cruelty of which plaintiff complains occurred on January 16, 1944. There is substantial evidence in the record to show that after January 16, 1944, the defendant barely spoke to plaintiff; that they ate no meals together and that they occupied different parts of the house and did not cohabit as husband and wife.

The necessary implication is that the Chancellor found that this was the true condition.

It is the contention of appellant that under the provisions of Section 65.09 Florida Statutes 1941 (same F.S.A.) the court was without jurisdiction to enter an award of separate. maintenance and attorney’s fees as long as the husband and wife were residing under the same roof and as long as the husband was providing the wife with the necessities of life. Appellant has cited several cases and authorities which appear to support this view but we do not think that these cases control in the instant case. There is ample substantial evidence in the record that the husband on numerous occasions had brutally beaten, kicked, choked and otherwise assaulted the plaintiff. That during several months immediately prior to the filing of this suit defendant’s mistreatment of the plaintiff had become progressively worse and *505 that on several, occasions he had inflicted great , physical, pain and injury upon her. The parties had become entirely estranged; had slept in separate rooms, had eaten no. meals together and had discontinued all cohabitation because of the defendant’s cruel and brutal mistreatment of the plaintiff. That the home in which they lived was owned by them as an estate by the entireties; that plaintiff had no available money and had no other place where she and her four children could live..

We think the presence of the defendant in the house where: the plaintiff was also living did not constitute a living together as husband and wife but that she, in contemplation of the statute, supra, was then living apart from her husband.. This view is supported by note in 6 A.L.R. 66 and by opinions, and judgments in the cases of Buckman v. Buckman, 176 Mass. 229, 48 L.R.A. 735; 57 N.E. 343; McIlroy v. McIlroy, 108 Mass. 458, 94 N.E. 696, Am. Cases 1912A 934; Polster v. Polster, 145 Mo. Ap. 606, 123 S.W. 81; Anshutz v. Anshutz, 16 N. J. Equity 162; Smith v. Smith, 172 Iowa 329, 151 N.W. 1085.

So we hold that there was sufficient evidence to support the right of the plaintiff to maintain the suit under Sec.. 65.09, supra.

The second question presented is:

“If a wife sues her husband for alimony unconnected with divorce under Section 65.09 of the Florida Statutes, does the Chancellor in such suit have jurisdiction to determine husband and wife and require the husband to deliver up and hand over to the wife the personal property of disputed ownership, especially if the ownership of the personal property and the right of the wife to the possession thereof were not in the issues?”

There may be some doubt that generally there may be a decree for a division of property entered in a separate maintenance suit, but that is not the question presented here. In this case the wife filed her bill of complaint against the defendant for separate maintenance. The defendant answered the bill and in his answer he included counter claims, first alleging that he was entitled to a divorce against the plaintiff *506 on the ground of extreme cruelty and in connection therewith alleged that between November, 1942, and March, 1943, he had purchased 1000 shares of common stock of Champion Paper & Fiber Company which he had placed in his wife’s name only temporarily with the intention of transferring it back to the husband’s name, when and if he should return from overseas where he went in the service of the armed forces. He alleged that the shares of stock were placed in his wife’s name in the contemplation of death resulting from oversea duty.. He alleged that the securities are the property of the husband and not the property of the wife and that the same was not intended as a gift to the wife. He also alleged that certain real estate was in the name of the husband and wife as an estate by. the entireties but that the wife had no interest in it and prayed that the court decree the securities to be .the. property of the defendant and that the plaintiff be required to assign and transfer the securities to the defendant. He further prayed that the lands described in the counter-claim be adjudicated to be the lands of the defendant and that plaintiff be required to execute and deliver to the defendant proper deeds conveying to him the entire title, estate and interest in the said lands.

The plaintiff answered the counter-claim and, in regard to these matters, averred:

“Answering paragraph 25 of the counter claim, the plaintiff admits that the defendant has heretofore assigned and given to her one thousand shares of common stock of Champion Paper & Fiber Company, and plaintiff asserts that such gift of said stock by the defendant to her was absolute and complete, and plaintiff denies that said, securities were merely placed in her name in contemplation of the death of the defendant. The plaintiff states that said one thousand shares of common stock of Champion Paper & Fiber Company have been duly and legally assigned and transferred to the plaintiff on the stock books of said corporation, and that all of said stock has been for several years past and now is duly issued and standing in plaintiff’s name on the stock books of said corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 238, 158 Fla. 502, 1947 Fla. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randall-v-randall-fla-1947.