Richardson v. Richardson

270 S.W.2d 68, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 316
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1954
Docket22002, 22004, 22039
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 270 S.W.2d 68 (Richardson v. Richardson) 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
Richardson v. Richardson, 270 S.W.2d 68, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 316 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BROADDUS, Judge.

The plaintiff brought this suit for divorce against his wife. His petition alleged in *69 dignities' which he asserted rendered his condition intolerable. Defendant filed an answer and a cross-petition asking for separate maintenance. A decree was granted to plaintiff. Defendant appealed. Said appeal is designated on the docket of this court as No. 22039.

The trial court awarded to the defendant wife temporary alimony, attorney’s fees and suit money. From those orders and judgments plaintiff appealed and those appeals are numbered 22002 and 22004 on our docket.

Plaintiff and defendant were married on April 1, 1945. They separated about January 1, 1951, became reconciled April 1, 1951, and thereafter .lived together until December 1, 1952. Plaintiff had been previously married and a daughter was born of that marriage. Defendant also had been previously married and she too had a daughter by her first marriage. At the time of the trial in March, 1953, plaintiff was 55 years of age, defendant 53.

Plaintiff, an electrical contractor in Columbia, has resided all of his life in Boone County, Missouri. He testified that defendant was cool and indifferent toward him, and would not speak to him or go out with him alone, or have anything to do with him at all for weeks at a time; that during the last few years of their married life she embarrassed him time after time by preparing meals supposedly for both of them, and then refusing to call plaintiff to eat with her; that on many other occasions she refused to prepare his meals, and he would go in after she had left the kitchen and prepare his own evening meals; that for weeks at a time she refused to make his bed and clean his room; that she was wasteful and extravagant, spending her allowance which varied from $165 to $200 before the end of each month; that she grew more quarrelsome during the last three years of their married life; that she was very indignant toward him most of the time; that once when he tried to talk to her she began screaming to attract the attention of others and threatened to call the police and the sheriff; that on another occasion when he tried to lie down beside her on the bed for the purpose of talking to her she scratched his face and shoulders and screamed so loudly that a roomer, Mrs. Venable, who resided upstairs, came down. Plaintiff was bleeding when she arrived. Plaintiff further testified that on one occasion defendant angrily struck him in the face with a house slipper when he tried to talk to her; that on another occasion he put his arm around her while she sat on the piano bench and she started screaming loudly and threatened to call the police.

Plaintiff further testified that defendant repeatedly complained of the attention shown by plaintiff to his daughter, Laverne, falsely charging that Laverne was trying to separate them; that “any time she (defendant) would mention Laverne’s name it would be in anger or some disrespect of trying to pull my leg for what she could get and then throw me away. She wouldn’t mention the child’s name except in that respect. I don’t think she mentioned the child’s name in 8 years except in that respect. And that was continuously just at various times over a period of the last three or four years.”

Plaintiff also testified that defendant objected to his home located at 217 Waugh Street in Columbia, which he had remodeled and redecorated at great expense immediately before their marriage; that she became discontented in that home within a few months and also with the neighborhood, although it was in a fine part of Columbia; that she harrassed him until he purchased a house at 308 Broadway, and reconditioned it at great expense; that within a year she was again dissatisfied and forced him to sell the house and purchase the apartment which she was occupying at the time of the trial; that he spent $1,000 reconditioning the apartment; that within a year after they had moved into the apartment she wanted to sell it and move somewhere else; that during the last two years of their married life defendant repeatedly urged him to give her a good property settlement and obtain a divorce from her; that she wanted him to give her a $16,000 apartment building; that she made insistent and con *70 tinuous demands during the last three years of the marriage for the conveyance to her of a part of his property.

In the summer of 1952, plaintiff was made a member of the Boone County Fair Association. When defendant learned of this fact she couldn’t understand why they had appointed plaintiff since, as she said he “had no friends.” During the same summer, the Tiger Shrine Club gave a show for crippled children at a theatre in Columbia. Plaintiff was asked by the committee to take five of these little children from a hospital to the theatre, which he did., When he told the defendant that it had been necessary for him to carry some of the children in his arms she said “the only reason you did that was to impress the people and make a showing for your part of it.”

Plaintiff further testified that defendant refused to associate with his people; that “she never felt comfortable around them,” and didn’t consider them to be in her “higher circle”; that defendant repeatedly told him that he was crazy and should consult a doctor; that one time in the presence of Mrs. Venable the defendant said that she was afraid that plaintiff would kill her. We need not recite other matters which plaintiff asserted caused him to be embarrassed and humiliated.

Defendant was born in Macon, Missouri, and lived there continuously until she moved to Columbia in July, 1943. After arriving in Columbia she managed a dress shop and later worked at the Crown Drug Store there.

Defendant testified that she and her husband got along fairly well during the first year of their marriage; that plaintiff gave her an allowance of $100 a month with which to pay all of the household expenses, including her clothing, “and then he expected me to save out of that so that’s when our trouble started.”

Defendant also testified that there were times when she was cool and indifferent toward plaintiff, but that she “was driven to it”; that at the time she scratched him “he had proposed an indecent sex act”; that it was his fault that she did not speak to him for weeks at a time; that he would pout and sulk; that he used profane language ; that when they went to dances plaintiff was always “patting artd loving” some other woman; that plaintiff would be gone over the week-ends and when she would inquire as to where he had been he would reply: “It’s Hone of your God damn business, I will go and come as I please”; that she found lipstick on his clothing many times; that on the night of December 28, 1952, she saw plaintiff with another woman in a car; that it was plaintiff’s car and that the car was coming around a corner and when the woman in the car saw defendant on the street corner “she ducked immediately,” and defendant was unable to identify her. Defendant stated throughout her testimony that plaintiff is sexually confused. She proposed “that he see a psychiatrist.” She admitted that she said to plaintiff, “I’m not the one that is crazy; you are the one that is crazy”; that plaintiff had become so “repulsive” to her that “I don’t think it would be humanly possible for us to live together * *

Defendant denied that she had been unkind to plaintiff’s daughter or to any of his people.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.2d 68, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-richardson-moctapp-1954.