Renze v. Renze

72 N.W.2d 490, 247 Iowa 25, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 18, 1955
Docket48744
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 72 N.W.2d 490 (Renze v. Renze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Renze v. Renze, 72 N.W.2d 490, 247 Iowa 25, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 379 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

Plaintiff brought her action asking a divorce from defendant upon the ground of cruel and inhuman treats ment such as to endanger her life. The defendant answered and cross-petitioned, alleging the same ground. After a trial, the district court dismissed both actions. It was the holding of the trial court that neither party had produced evidence of such treatment by the other as to endanger life; and further, that each party was to some extent guilty of conduct contributing to the matrimonial discord. From the judgment of the trial court the plaintiff alone appeals.

I. Code section 598.8(5) provides that cruel and inhuman treatment of one spouse by the other is a ground for divorce if it endangers life. What endangers life is a subject much discussed in this class of cases, and the holdings of the courts are *27 as.various as the facts which come before them. No two mar-, ried couples have exactly the same incidents in their lives. Their ■ discords and dissensions differ so widely that it is impossible for the courts to say the determination of one divorce case governs, or even throws great light upon, the proper, decision in another. We have said this, in varying ways, many times. Fisher v. Fisher, 243 Iowa 823, 827, 53 N.W.2d 762, 765. It is repetitious, but true, to say that each case must depend upon its own facts. Klepper v. Klepper, 234 Iowa 1138, 1142, 15 N.W.2d 213, 215; Littleton v. Littleton, 233 Iowa 1020, 1024, 10 N.W.2d 57, 59. We must examine each case as it comes to us, and from the record determine whether such cruel and inhuman treatment as to endanger life is shown.

II. Plaintiff and defendant had each been married before, each marriage having been terminated by death. They were married to each other on August 28, 1948, and removed at once to defendant’s farm in Carroll County. Plaintiff had three children by her first marriage age-10, 8 and 7. Defendant had four daughters, the eldest of whom was married and living in Carroll. His second and third daughters were of high school age, and did not live on the farm but remained in Carroll. Only the youngest, Joyce, apparently about 10 years of age at the time of the marriage, made her home on the farm with' her father and stepmother. The defendant was 49 years of age, the plaintiff a few years younger. For a year or so all went well, but trouble developed and discord continued until the plaintiff and her children left, the farm, apparently in 1953.

•Plaintiff’s complaints are many and are detailed at considerable length. Her major grievances may be summarized' as these: The defendant often ignored her and did not talk to her; he made plans without telling her about them, and on occasion took trips without telling her in advance or asking her; to accompany -him, including one to a Minnesota lake and many times' to surrounding towns; he was given to the use of the expletive, “Oh, Hell!”, and another vex*y vulgar word; if he did xxot like what she had prepai*ed for sapper, he would take his daxxghter Joyce aixd leave, presxxmably to eat in one of the xxeighboring towxis (plaintiff’s daxxghter Rose Marie says this occurred only oxxce); he failed to purchase the kind of groceries *28 detailed on the lists she gave him, and the family would sometimes be without some needed staples; he complained if she wished to go to Carroll; he did not treat her children as well as he did Joyce; there was a disagreement about a trip to be made to Omaha by one of her daughters to keep a dental appointment-; he did not supply her with money when she requested it; he would not advise her and her children how they might help him with his farm work, and although she wished to make a garden, he planted it himself and kept its location secret until the vegetables came through the ground, when she discovered it in the midst of a field; he would not permit her to lie close to him in bed, but would jab her with his elbow and would roll up in a sheet or blanket; toward the- end of their life together he frequently asked her to leave. While this perhaps does not relate all of the areas of disagreement of which the plaintiff complains, it does give a general idea of her case and of the nature of the supposedly cruel and inhuman acts which she asserts endangered her life. She says that defendant’s conduct made her nervous, and she lost weight.

Such corroboration as the plaintiff has comes from her three children. None of them refers to many of the complaints set out above. They do corroborate the use by defendant of the profane and vulgar words as charged by the plaintiff, and they tell of numerous arguments, the cause of which they did not know. Some of their testimony seems to harm plaintiff’s case as much as it aids it. Thus, Rose Marie, the oldest daughter, said: “I don’t know whether she was afraid of him or not; she- didn’t exhibit any fear.” Phyllusann testified that the defendant never threatened her mother, but did tell her to leave. James said he never saw the defendant threaten his mother. She cried a lot, but he did not know what caused it. The children tell of an argument at the dinner table about chickens; apparently the plaintiff wished to raise them, and the defendant disagreed. The actual, although unintended, effect of the testimony of the three children of the plaintiff is to minimize the gravity of her complaints.

The defendant and his daughters say that plaintiff was a chronic complainer; that whenever she had an opportunity to *29 talk to one of the daughters when defendant was not present, she complained about their father’s conduct. They say she wanted to purchase clothes and household appliances which defendant could not afford, and her failure to get these things was the source of much of her dissatisfaction. There is as much credible evidence placing the responsibility for the marital dissensions upon the plaintiff as upon the defendant.

However, we do not think it necessary to weigh the evidence for the respective parties, to determine whether plaintiff carried the burden of proof necessarily resting upon her to support her charges. A fair analysis of the evidence she adduced, even if it had been undenied, fails to leave an impression that anything happened which could reasonably be thought to have -en: dangered her life. There was no physical violence, except for the elbow-jabbing she claims was inflicted upon her when she trespassed upon the defendant’s side of the conjugal bed. It is true we have often said physical abuse is not always essential to make a case of cruelty such as to require a divorce. Sullivan v. Sullivan, 244 Iowa 838, 56 N.W.2d 910; Murray v. Murray, 244 Iowa 548, 57 N.W.2d 234; Ernest v. Ernest, 243 Iowa 1249, 55 N.W.2d 192. Many other cases might be cited to the same point. But we think if they are studied carefully it will be found that in each of them there were circumstances which went far beyond anything made evident in the case at bar.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.W.2d 490, 247 Iowa 25, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renze-v-renze-iowa-1955.