Sallee v. Sallee

280 S.W. 932, 213 Ky. 125, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 465
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 932 (Sallee v. Sallee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sallee v. Sallee, 280 S.W. 932, 213 Ky. 125, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 465 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Reversing as to the allowance of alimony.

The parties to this divorce litigation were secretly married on November 4, 1922. The husband, who is the appellant and was the defendant below, was 49 years of age at the time, and had never been married. The wife, who is the appellee and was plaintiff below, was 38 years of age, and had three children by a former marriage, whose ages were 14,15 and 17 respectively. She and her children were living at the time with her brother in Bard-well, Kentucky, who was jailor of Carlisle county, and resided in a portion of the county building, a part of which was used as the jail for the county. She continued to so reside with her children after the marriage, which was kept a secret until January 28,1923, when the parties made the fact of their wedding known and lived for a short while with defendant’s widowed mother at Bland-ville, in Ballard county, which was the old Sallee homestead and-was a comfortable home. After the expiration of a few weeks they moved into a house in another part of *127 that county located on a farm owned by defendant, which was described by the witnesses as being a boxed house, weatherboarded and having three or four rooms, at least one of which was unfinished to the extent that it was not ceiled overhead. They occupied that house on defendant’s farm from that time until about the middle of May, 1923, when they returned to the residence of defendant’s mother, where they had first lived, and they remained there occcupying the house with the elder Mrs. Sallee until some time in the latter part of August the same year when plaintiff left and returned to the house on defendant’s farm, her children following her a few days later.

On September 5 thereafter she filed this equity action in the Ballard circuit court seeking a divorce and a judgment for alimony against defendant in the sum of $50,000.00, alleging in her petition that he was worth 'at least $100,000.00, and she relied upon the statutory ground of cruel and inhuman treatment, settled aversion, &c. The answer denied those grounds and also the alleged amount of defendant’s property, averring that he was worth not exceeding between $4,000.00 and $5,000.00. Later an amended answer was filed in which defendant set up a marriage contract between the parties and averred that plaintiff before and after the marriage was guilty of lewd and lascivious conduct; that it was concealed by her from him and but for which he would never have entered into the marriage relation with her, and because thereof he was entitled to have the marriage declared null and void, and that her same conduct after marriage entitled him to a severance of the bonds of matrimony. That pleading was denied and proof was taken covering about 600 typewritten pages of the record.

During the pendency of the cause defendant’s mother filed her intervening petition and asked to be made a party defendant, and in which she claimed ownership in something more than $9,000.00 of notes that plaintiff had attached upon the filing of her action, and which amount she averred was her distributable share as widow of her deceased husband’s estate.- That pleading was made a cross-petition against plaintiff, and she replied thereto denying its averments.

Upon final submission the court granted the prayer of the petition and entered a judgment divorcing the parties and adjudged plaintiff entitled to recover perma *128 nent alimony in the sum of $3,000.00, for which judgment was rendered in her favor. The court also entered an order requiring defendant to pay plaintiff $20.00 per month for the maintenance of a five months old. infant girl child that was born of the marriage after the filing of the petition, and gave her custody of that child. The court further adjudged that the intervening defendant, the elder Mrs. Sallee, was entitled to the relief sought by her pleading, and adjudged her to be the owner of the notes claimed therein. Both parties objected to the judgment, the defendant praying an appeal to this court and plaintiff praying a “cross-appeal,” but only defendant has appealed, on the ground that the court erred, first, in rendering any judgment in favor of plaintiff and excessive allowance to her attorneys, but if mistaken in that, then second, the court erred in the amount of alimony .allowed, but because of the conclusions we have reached the second ground will not be noticed. No cross-appeal by plaintiff was prayed or obtained in this court, and in view of that fact, and the further one that she only asked in the lower court for a cross-appeal, we seriously doubt if her objections to the judgment are properly before us; but if otherwisé the conclusions we have reached, as set out below, render it unnecessary to further notice her complaints.

It readily will be seen that the only questions involved are ones of fact and which this court in an equity case has the right to review, but the findings of the chancellor will not be disturbed if the testimony on the whole creates only a doubt in our minds as to their accuracy. If, however, it goes beyond that, then it is not only our right but our duty to decide the case in accordance with what we find the facts to be from the clear preponderance of the evidence.

It will render this opinion far beyond due limits, and at the same time serving no useful purpose, to enter into a detailed analysis of the testimony as given by the 30 or 40 witnesses who testified in the case. The testimony of plaintiff was directed toward proving three facts establishing her ground of cruel and inhuman treatment, which were, (1) physical violence and surly conduct; (2) failure to provide suitable provisions or a suitable home, and (3) the groundless charge of lewd and lascivious conduct-made in defendant’s amended answer. Manifestly, unless one of those grounds was sufficiently proven the *129 plaintiff failed to sustain the averments of her petition, and the divorce should not have been granted. Under a continuous and consistent line of decisions by this court, following the statute on the subject, we have no jurisdiction to interfere with the judgment of divorce; but the same opinions, which are too numerous to incorporate herein, say that we do have jurisdiction to inquire into the facts to ascertain whether the judgment as to alimony was or was not proper, and under that practice we will now briefly notice the testimony for the purpose of determining the only question involved on this appeal.

The principal occasion by which fact (1) is sought to be established was a little episode that occurred one day when the parties were going from Wickliffe, Kentucky, to their home at Blandville. Plaintiff testified that they got into a quarrel and defendant called her a “damn fool” and struck her on the knee while they were riding together in the automobile, and that he afterwards hit her somewhere about the head and knocked off her hat. Defendant denied those facts as pictured by plaintiff, but said that he stooped down while driving the automobile to arrange some part of the steering machinery and in doing so his hand or some part of his arm came in contact with plaintiff’s knee and that he explained to her that he meant nothing thereby, but she did not accept it and slapped him in the face and started to administer a second one when he threw up his hand to ward it off and knocked off her hat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 932, 213 Ky. 125, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sallee-v-sallee-kyctapphigh-1926.