Rowling v. Rowling

209 N.W. 147, 234 Mich. 657, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 630
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1926
DocketDocket No. 52.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 209 N.W. 147 (Rowling v. Rowling) 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
Rowling v. Rowling, 209 N.W. 147, 234 Mich. 657, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 630 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Shakpe, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a decree of the trial court dismissing her bill for divorce. The parties were married in 1905, and separated in August, 1924. She is 52 years of age and he a few years younger. They have one child, a daughter, now 20 years of age. The allegations in the bill are general. They may be thus summarized: cursing and swearing at her; threatening her with personal violence; abusive conduct to their daughter, and threats to take her life; was stingy and miserly; faultfinding, nagging and abuse; fear that he will do her bodily harm. No date is assigned as to any occurrence, nor is any incident mentioned to inform the defendant or the court of any particular act of misconduct relied on.

The bill in this case but follows the usual practice in preparing such pleadings. We may assume an intent to charge extreme cruelty and nonsupport, although these terms are not mentioned.' It may also be observed that it contains no charge of physical violence, although several acts of this nature are relied on to entitle plaintiff to a decree. We can but urge attorneys to treat a proceeding for divorce as a real law suit, in which the allegations of misconduct complained of shall be specifically averred, with date and place and such incidental statements as will inform the defendant of that which he is called upon to answer. While the evidence-need not be pleaded, it is unfair to a defendant to be required to meet such charges, and to the courts to expect them to review the many years of married life of the parties and ascertain whether one or> more of the grounds on which a divorce may be granted has been established. We are not intimating that a long-continued course of ill-treatment may not be averred and proven, but *660 domestic difficulties, perhaps almost forgotten when the separation occurred, aid but little in reaching a final conclusion as to whether the proofs entitle the complaining party to a decree. We are not intimating that the record in this case differs materially from that usually presented in such cases. The labor of the trial court and of this court on appeal will be much lessened by specific allegations in the bill of the misconduct complained of, and by confining the proofs so far as possible to the issues thus presented.

We have read this record with care and, aided by the briefs of counsel, have sought to collect the proofs bearing on particular charges, in order to determine whether the plaintiff has established them by a preponderance of the evidence submitted. The unkindness of which plaintiff first complains is thus stated by her:

“I have alleged that the defendant has been guilty of extreme and repeated cruelty towards me. We had not been home very long from our wedding trip when he became guilty of that, I brushed his coat collar and brushed it the wrong way of the nap, and he said, ‘You don’t know how to brush a coat collar.’
“Q. You may state whether or not at any time after marriage he began to curse and swear at you and call you nasty names?
“A. Before my little girl was born I asked him if he would buy an extra bed for the nurse. He refused to give anything for clothes or anything, we didn’t need it. That was our first contest.”

That the defendant occasionally swore at plaintiff and called her names like “dumb-bell,” “blockhead,” and “fool,” is clearly established. She admitted, however, on cross-examination, that she had called him a liar “maybe a dozen times,” and that she had sworn at him. He testifies that she called him “Kaiser Bill, bullhead, miser,” and that the word liar was “her pet epithet.” Plaintiff admitted that she called his sister *661 a “red-headed devil.” It is apparent that these parties frequently quarreled and abused each other, b.ut we are not persuaded that the conduct of the defendant in this respect, in view of that of plaintiff, entitles plaintiff to a decree.

That defendant has threatened plaintiff with personal violence is proven, but he testified that she was guilty of the same offense.

“Just as soon as something turned up that wasn’t going her way — ‘You are a liar; you are a liar; I will brain you, you liar’ and she would accompany that by a blow.”

While, as stated, .the bill does not contain any allegation of personal violence, the testimony relating thereto was admitted without objection, and, as the bill might have been amended, we think it should be considered. The most serious act of this nature of which she complains arose out of an altercation between them concerning the reading of his father’s will, the date of which is not stated. She testified:

“I went on the porch and I screamed and he pulled me and pulled my arm out of joint and I am suffering from it today; he threw me the whole length of his mother’s hall and his brother picked me up and said, ‘Do you come in dead or alive.’
“Q. You may state whether or not your spine is disabled to this day?
“A. Yes, I went to three doctors.”

The defendant positively denies that he assaulted plaintiff on this occasion. He testified:

“I took one hand to her mouth and the other at her back — she was yelling murder in the middle of the town.”

Her testimony in this respect is uncorroborated, although there were several others in the house at that time. Had sh'e called one or more of the doctors by whom she testified she was treated, the injury she *662 received might have been established. He not only denies all charges of personal violence, but he testifies to acts of that nature committed by her upon him.

“She would run up to me and say: ‘You are a liar’ and punch my head and face — everything of that kind.”

She admits that she at one time turned the hose on him in anger.

It is well known that a charge of extreme cruelty founded on personal violence is appealing to a court. A husband will always find much difficulty in justifying an assault upon his wife. The omission of any charge of this nature in the bill of complaint and the testimony of the plaintiff, when considered as a whole, leads strongly to the conclusion that her charges in this respect are grossly exaggerated, and, when met with his denial, form no sufficient ground for a divorce.

It is unfortunate that the plaintiff left the defendant’s home. They had struggled along through lean years when his earnings were barely sufficient for their actual needs. The last few years of their married life he had been in receipt of an income which bid fair to secure to them a good living. He had bought some property near Ann Arbor, and was building a comfortable home on it. There had been friction over the presence of plaintiff’s father in the household. But he had then left, and, as we read the record, the chances for their future happiness seemed bright. Less than a year before their separation she wrote him:

“Dear Will: Rec'd your letter yesterday. I don’t see why it wouldn’t be even better to have garage attached to the house. I have, been thinking about the chimney for the kitchen.

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Related

Schmiege v. Schmiege
57 N.W.2d 459 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
209 N.W. 147, 234 Mich. 657, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowling-v-rowling-mich-1926.