Rickus v. Rickus

158 N.W.2d 540, 183 Neb. 140, 1968 Neb. LEXIS 507
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1968
Docket36732
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 N.W.2d 540 (Rickus v. Rickus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rickus v. Rickus, 158 N.W.2d 540, 183 Neb. 140, 1968 Neb. LEXIS 507 (Neb. 1968).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

Charles O. Rickus, hereinafter referred to as plaintiff, and Rena Irene Rickus, hereinafter referred to as defendant, filed separate actions on June 29, 1965, praying for absolute divorces. The actions were consolidated by order of the court into the one filed by the plaintiff, which was the.first one filed. The plaintiff later filed, an amended,.petition to which the defendant filed an answer and a cross-petition.

Plaintiff alleged that the parties owned real estate and personal property in their joint names which had been acquired through the sole efforts of the plaintiff, most of which had been accumulated prior to the marriage, and prayed that all such property be quieted in him. Defendant alleged that she had substantial prop>erty at the time of the marriage which had enhanced the *141 joint property of the parties, and prayed for restoration of the property she had at the time of the marriage, together with a share of the property accumulated during the marriage.

The parties were married July 12, 1963. Their marriage of less than 2 years was a very turbulent one. During that period the parties lived together as husband and wife for less than a year. Plaintiff filed a petition for divorce January 4, 1964. The parties were separated for 60 days or longer, and then resumed marital relations. The plaintiff filed a second petition June 26, 1964. The defendant had moved back to Sheridan, Wyoming, in May 1964, and did not return to Scottsbluff until the middle of September 1964, at which time the' parties again resumed marital relations. On November 3, 1964, the defendant filed a petition for divorce and the parties did not resume marital relations until April 1, 1965, and, as stated, both parties filed separate divorce actions on June 29, 1965.

This was the plaintiff’s second marriage and the defendant’s fourth or fifth. The defendant failed to answer an interrogatory as to her previous marriages. The complaint in the divorce action in defendant’s last marriage alleges she had been married at least four times. The decree in defendant’s last divorce was filed September 28, 1962. Plaintiff married defendant soon after his first divorce decree became final.

It will serve no useful purpose to detail the evidence adduced in the six-volume record herein. Plaintiff’s original petition alleged extreme cruelty, and the amended petition alleged extreme cruelty and adultery. Defendant alleged extreme cruelty, both mental and physical.

The Saturday night before the petitions were filed herein, the parties had a violent argument and the plaintiff struck the defendant. While plaintiff’s provocation may have been great, this does not excuse him. Ordinarily, acts of personal violence by the husband toward *142 his wife are not justified by conduct on the part of the wife that does not threaten bodily harm. Humann v. Humann, 180 Neb. 719, 144 N. W. 2d 723. Plaintiff admits he slapped the defendant, and alleges she ran into the bathroom and slipped, at which time she may have bruised her left side. He went in to pick her up and she screamed, which brought her daughter to the scene. Defendant alleged plaintiff knocked her down and kicked her in the left side. We do not deem it necessary to discuss this incident further, other than the reference hereafter to defendant’s alleged injuries.

The record amply sustains the plaintiff’s allegation that the defendant continually called him vile and obscene names and held him up to ridicule. The record, except for the fact that the trial court who observed the witnesses did not so find, would sustain the allegation of adultery. In any event, it can be said that the record does sustain a finding of extreme indiscretion on the part of the defendant.

Defendant questions the sufficiency of the corroboration to support a decree' for plaintiff. It is impossible to lay down any general rule as to the degree of corroboration necessary in a divorce action as each case must be decided on its own facts and circumstances. Applegate v. Applegate, 182 Neb. 342, 155 N. W. 2d 337. We find the corroboration sufficient herein.

Defendant argues that the acts of cruelty testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses were condoned when the parties resumed marital relations after a reconciliation agreement in March 1965. Condonation is dependent upon future good conduct and a repetition of the offense revives the wrong condoned. Fletcher v. Fletcher, 182 Neb. 549, 156 N. W. 2d 1. On the record herein, we find there was no condonation.

Defendant at the time of the marriage owned a residence in Sheridan, Wyoming, which she sold during the marriage for $12,000. At the time of the sale the balance due on the purchase money mortgage was $7,352.88. *143 The sale expense was $1,418.51. The proceeds were put into bonds which defendant testified she later cashed and used during the marriage.

Defendant had two teen-age children by a previous marriage. These children lived with the parties but were not adopted by the plaintiff. Defendant at the time of the marriage was receiving child support in the amount of $100 a month from the father of the children. This! subsequently was increased to $150 a month.

One of defendant’s chief contentions is that she had $18,000 in cash at the time she married the plaintiff, much of which she loaned to the plaintiff at various! times before the fall of 1964. She testified she kept this $18,000 in a locked suitcase in her bedroom, and that no one, including the plaintiff or her children, had ever seen it. She further testified that she had never used a' bank until she borrowed $150 from the First National Bank at Scottsbluff on June 26, 1964. Her testimony on having $18,000 in cash at the time of her marriage at the very least puts a severe strain on credulity.

Defendant testified that she had this $18,000 in cash when she divorced her previous husband, but that it was not considered in the divorce because he had no claim to it. Defendant married that husband June 7, 1960. The divorce petition was filed by the husband but the parties entered into a property settlement, and by agreement the decree was entered on the defendant’s cross-petition. It is of interest to note that the former husband alleged that the defendant had liabilities which she failed to disclose until after the marriage. In answer to an interrogatory in that action, the defendant stated as follows: “* * * Plaintiff has not been asked to pay any of Defendant’s debts due and owing prior to marriage as all said debts that accrued prior to marriage were totalled and money borrowed from Pacific Finance, and were paid off with child support checks received from Warren Gilbert. The Defendant is merely *144 requesting that all present bills that were incurred during the marriage to Plaintiff be paid by Plaintiff.”

Plaintiff testified his wife told him before the marriage that she was without funds and was having difficulty meeting her obligations, and that he gave her money to help on expenses. The day after the marriage plaintiff gave her $1,500 for repairs on her Sheridan, Wyoming, house. Defendant admits receiving this $1,500, but alleges it was to pay back money she had loaned him.

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Related

Sims v. Sims
176 N.W.2d 683 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1970)
Rickus v. Rickus
172 N.W.2d 628 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1969)

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Bluebook (online)
158 N.W.2d 540, 183 Neb. 140, 1968 Neb. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rickus-v-rickus-neb-1968.