Ridky v. Ridky

198 N.W. 229, 226 Mich. 459, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 557
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1924
DocketDocket No. 29.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 198 N.W. 229 (Ridky v. Ridky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ridky v. Ridky, 198 N.W. 229, 226 Mich. 459, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 557 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Steere, J.

The two above-entitled chancery suits were by consent of counsel' consolidated and heard together. The parties to them are husband and wife, elderly people above 60 years of age, who were married in 1886 and lived together until about the time this litigation arose. The bill filed by Charles J. Ridky, on July 1, 1919, is to reform a deed given to his wife, Theresa B. Ridky, of their home in Detroit, now valued at about $16,000, which he claimed it was agreed should be put in the name of both to hold by entireties as husband and wife.

The bill filed by her is for a divorce from him on the ground of extreme cruelty. In his answer and cross-bill to her bill for divorce, he charges that she is a woman of ungovernable temper who on frequent occasions flew into a rage and would abuse and berate him without cause, refuse to get his meals and otherwise misuse and make life miserable for him to an extent amounting as related to extreme cruelty, for which reasons he also asked for a divorce. The cases with answers to bills, cross-bills and answers to cross-bills were duly brought to issue and ultimately heard on pleadings and proofs taken in open court. A carefully considered opinion was filed by the circuit judge who heard them. After reviewing the testimony at length he granted a divorce between the parties, awarded the wife $500 in lieu of dower and gave to the husband a decretal judgment against her for $7,000 less the $500 granted to her in lieu of dower, or in effect $6,500, and made it a lien upon the *463 property in question, which the court said was the real “bone of contention in the family” and had been “acquired largely, if not entirely, through the fruits of his labors.”

The most serious question raised in her appeal relates to division of the property. When these parties were married they practically had no money or property. She admits that she had none and he that he had but little, saying that a small lot for which he paid $200 was “probably the sum total of my possessions at that time.” He was a tailor by trade and worked at that calling for some time after they were married. While following his trade during the earlier years of their married life his average earnings were not large and employment was uncertain. What he earned during that period is not clearly shown. He testified that he always supported his family and regularly turned his wages over to his wife for family purposes, except a small amount kept for his personal needs. The most he tells of earning as a tailor was $20 to $25 per week at a time when he got a job at piece work in St. Clair. He later quit his trade and found steady employment in Detroit. He worked for some time at the University building as an elevator man and night watchman, afterwards at the Free Press where he remained for about 9 years at $60 per month, and then found employment at the Ford automobile factory where he had been for 5 or 6 years, receiving $5 per day. Five children were born to them. Two died in infancy. They have 3 adult daughters. Two of them are married. The third, Viola, has suffered poor health from childhood and always remained in the family home. The two who are married received good educational advantages. One of them learned stenography and was employed in that line for some time before her marriage.

The property in controversy is the third home which *464 these parties have had. Early in their married life they bought on contract with a small payment' down a house “on Dubois and Harper” where they lived for a number of years and then sold their equity in it at a profit of $600. Their second purchase was at 945 Joseph Campau avenue. This they also bought on contract for $1,800 with a payment down of $600. It was their home for about 15 years, during which time they made improvements upon and paid for it. This property was conveyed to them in their joint names as husband and wife by the former owner, on June 25, 1913. Each of those properties was bought and held by them jointly, in the names of both, although she had a memorandum of agreement signed by them, dated June 16, 1913, which provided amongst other things that the Campau avenue property where they then lived should be put in her name and authorizing the party from whom they held a land contract for it to convey the same to her on payment of the unpaid balance. This agreement related to her withdrawal of a divorce suit she had commenced against him for which the trial court found there was no just cause and no conscionable consideration for the agreement, which he signed under a “species of duress” in order to effect “a reconciliation for the sake of the family.”

In 1916 they sold their home on Joseph Campau avenue for $3,600 and she purchased the property in controversy here, known as 209 Montclair avenue, for $7,200, paying thereon the $3,600 received for the Campau avenue property and giving a mortgage for the balance. The business was done by her and the title taken in her name.' At the time of hearing these cases $1,650 yet remained unpaid on the purchase price mortgage she gave on the property which the undisputed testimony showed was worth $16,000 When this litigation developed.

*465 The story of the domestic life of these parties during the many years they lived together discloses as it runs in this ample record the not uncommon trials, disappointments and troubles, with occasional friction, incidental to sickness in the household, low wages or lack of employment for the wage earner of the family. In her testimony Mrs. Ridky apparently charges all this to her husband, and magnifies it beyond credulity to an extent which renders it difficult to place any .reliance upon many of her statements unless corroborated, or inadvertently made against her interests. She evidently is a woman of dominant disposition with a violent temper when aroused. Early in their married life she took her place as head of the household and handled the purse strings, in which capacity it may be conceded she was more forceful and far-sighted than her husband. He early recognized this adjustment of their domestic relations and as a rule turned over his wages to her, generally acquiescing in her management of their limited financial affairs though in certain particulars not always complacent. He frankly admits that she sometimes irritated him to profanity but claims that she was equally proficient in that line of verbal contest, which she denies. It is shown to have been on her initiative that they purchased a home and made the changes which followed, and that in those transactions she took charge of and conducted the business. It is also fairly shown that when his conduct was not to her liking she did not hesitate to resort to the courts to suppress him. The trial court found this was the fourth suit for divorce she had begun against him although she “has not now, and never had, any just cause for divorce.” With which we do not disagree.

Mrs. Ridky begins her story of their domestic infelicity with the statement — “My husband and I always had trouble through his people. We always *466 had trouble. This is the fourth time I have had trouble with him. We had trouble all our lives.

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Bluebook (online)
198 N.W. 229, 226 Mich. 459, 1924 Mich. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridky-v-ridky-mich-1924.