Ritayik Ex Rel. Piskulic v. Ritayik

213 S.W. 883, 202 Mo. App. 74, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 98
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 883 (Ritayik Ex Rel. Piskulic v. Ritayik) 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
Ritayik Ex Rel. Piskulic v. Ritayik, 213 S.W. 883, 202 Mo. App. 74, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 98 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

*76 REYNOLDS, P. J.

Action for divorce by plaintiff against his wife. Plaintiff, a minor, suing by his next friend, averring that he was married to defendant on October 31, 1918, in the city of St. Louis, avers that at the time of the solemnization of the marriage defendant was pregnant by a man other than plaintiff without his knowledge at or before the time of the solemnization of the marriage; that plaintiff first learned of the condition of the defendant on the day of his marriage and thereupon left her and had not lived with her since.

The answer is a general denial.

There was a decree, on trial before the circuit court, dismissing plaintiff’s bill, from which he appealed.

A careful reading of the testimony in the case satisfies us that the learned trial court committed error in refusing plaintiff a decree.

At the time of the solemnization of the marriage between plaintiff and defendant, plaintiff was about nineteen years of age and his wife about the same age. They were married in St. Louis, October 31' 1918, by a justice of the peace. About a week before the marriage defendant told plaintiff that she was pregnant and that he was responsible and that he ought to marry her. They talked it over for awhile and finally plaintiff said .that if it was true that he was responsible for her condition, he would marry her. Directly after the performance of the marriage. cermoney, and while they were on their way to plaintiff’s home, plaintiff, for some reason, became suspicious as to whether his wife had told him the truth and took her to the office of a doctor with whom plaintiff was acquainted. Plaintiff did not tell his wife what his purpose was in going to the doctor’s and she made no objection and they went togethef into the doctor’s office. Plaintiff said to the doctor, his wife present: “Doctor, this is my wife, and 1 have known this girl for only two months and she claims she is in a family way by me and that I had to marry her, and so I married her.” He told the doctor that they had been married that day and from some actions of his *77 wife he became suspicious as to whether she “had not put something over on him.” He further told the doctor that if his examination proved that he was in fault in the case, he would stick by defendant, but if it proved otherwise he would not, and would have the doctor’s testimony against her. To this defendant said, “That is all right.” Whereupon the doctor examined her. In consequence of the doctor’s report to him of the condition and length of pregnancy, plaintiff made up his mind to leave defendant, and taking her on a car went with her as far as Tower Grove Aveue, got off the car, went to his own home and, as far as he knew, defendant went to the home of her employer. He saAV her two or three times after that at the house of a friend, in the presence of other people, but h.ad not lived with her as her husband from the time of the marriage down, and on November 11, 1918, he brought this action. On cross-examination, plaintiff testified that he thought that one reason he had not noticed the condition of his wife Avas, that he was very nearsighted and that he had yielded to her solicitation of marriage because he had no reason to think anyone but himself had been intimate with her. Plaintiff denied that he had ever met defendant until about íavo months before their marriage, when he met her at a house Avliere they were both employed. While admitting that he had had undue intercourse A\dth defendant before their marriage, he denied that it had been under any promise of marriage.

The-physician referred to, testified that when plaintiff- and defendant came to his office and were in his private room, plaintiff, in the presence of defendant, said that he had been going with her a couple of months immediately prior to their marriage; that she told him she was pregnant and wanted him to'marry her; that she had said that he was the father of the child; that he was “willing and man enough” to marry the girl, and that they had got married that day; that something had raised his suspicions at the justice office and after leaving there, and to satisfy himself he had brought *78 his wife to him (the doctor) for ail examination; that he (the doctor) accordingly examined her, she making no particular objection, and he asked defendant how far she was gone, and she said “Two months,” After an examination he said to her: “You are between six and seven months, at least. Don’t you think somebody else has been familiar with you,” to which she said, “No;” that it could not be that she was any more than two months gone in pregnancy and that plaintiff was responsible. He further testified that defendant was dressed in a girlish fashion, with a short dress made with a high waist, and a young man very likely would not consider that she had gone very far; that her clothes were loose, Asked if he could ascertain, considering the way she was dressed, and to one ordinarily looking at her, it would appear that she was in the family way, the doctor answered; “No you wouldn’t ordinarily consider that unless you get her in certain positions” and drew her dress down in a certain way; that she was a plump looking girl and those kind are “rather deceiving in appearance,” when dressed as she was. Witness repeated that he had found, on examination, that she was six or seven months advanced and when he told defendant that, she said: “It is impossible;” that she had only known defendant about two months.

The doctor, asked by counsel for defendant, on cross-examination, “Now, doctor, would you say as an expert, when a man who had been having intercourse with a girl right along had to come to a doctor after she was six months along to find out whether she was in a family way or not,” he answered, “Yes, sir; I know a case of that sort.” Asked, “In view of that girl’s appearance when you examined her, would you say it was possible that Victor Ritayik, having constant intercourse with her, would have needed the doctor’s statement as to whether she wTas in a family way or not,” he answered, “I think so.”

Further testimony introduced on part of plaintiff was to the effect that he had been introduced to defend *79 ant about two months prior to the marriage by the lady at whose place they were both employed at the time and he had never met or had anything to do with her before then. Defendant testified that when the lady introduced them, she (defendant) said she ah’ ready knew him. She was not corroborated as to this. She further testified that she had met him about nine months before that, when she was employed in another part of the city, but that plaintiff had never been to that house because on<5 of the servants there, a colored woman, told her that their employer refused to allow the help to have any visitors; that shé had gone with him from there to dances, moving picture shows, to the parks, but always met him, outside the house where she was then employed.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W. 883, 202 Mo. App. 74, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritayik-ex-rel-piskulic-v-ritayik-moctapp-1919.