Seniuta v. Seniuta

334 N.E.2d 261, 31 Ill. App. 3d 408, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2802
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 25, 1975
Docket60649
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 334 N.E.2d 261 (Seniuta v. Seniuta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seniuta v. Seniuta, 334 N.E.2d 261, 31 Ill. App. 3d 408, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2802 (Ill. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE SULLIVAN

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by defendant from a decree granting plaintiff a contested divorce, giving her custody of the three children of the parties and awárding her alimony in gross. Plaintiff sued on grounds of physical cruelty and adultery. Defendant cross-complained, alleging adultery. On appeal, defendant contends. (1) plaintiff failed to sustain her burden of proving condonation of her admitted adultery; (2) the.court erred (a) in privately examining two of the parties’ minor children, depriving defendant" of his right of cross-examination and (b) in allowing certain testimony of defendants mother, a witness for plaintiff, which was in-jcorrectly translated by; the interpreter; and (3) the award of alimony in •:gro'ss:'--was improper, excessive,:.and not based on,-plaintiffs needs and defendant’s ability to pay.

At. the hearing on the issue of'divorce in- a bifurcated"trial, 1 plaintiff testified that defendant struck her on two separate occasions in February, X1973. Specifically; she stated he beat her with his fist on February 10, and on the evening ' of February 16 extending -into the early, morning of February 17 he struck' her with his hand and fist. From each she suffered pain and developed black and blue marks. She left with the children on the"17ttiand has been living separate and apart since then.' Prior ¡thereto, ■tin Jánuáiy;-1972 defendant had accused her of committing adultery with two'other'men but said he would'forgive her if she admitted the 'acts. She made the admission and, at the same time, asked his forgivenéss. Thereafter, she and defendant continued to live together as man and wife in the same apartment, sleeping in the same bed, until she finally "'left'on'February 17, 1973. While they were living together, she performed her domestic duties and rendered services in'connection with the operation of defendant’s buildings. She had sexual intercourse with defendant when he' requested it. After she had admitted hér a'dultéry and : before the two instances on which defendant had struck her in February, J.19.73, she left defendant on three occasions — in .April, June and. Sep■lember, 1972 — but returned to the marital domicile each time.

During one of these absences, in April, 1972, she' filed' a complaint for separate maintenance, which included an allegation that she had a partnership interest- in the properties acquired by defendant which were held in a land trust. This complaint was dismissed in May,: 1972, when .defendant, as a condition of plaintiff’s agreement to return, conveyed to her'one-half of his interest in the parcels of realty. The next .day she executéd reassignments to him on his promise that he woúld stop'hitting '.-.her and.would spend more time at home with her' and the.children. In 1971 defendant had told her that he was seeing another woman, and in the summer of 1972 he showed her some pictures of that woman and again said he was seeing and living with her. When they separated on -the .second occasion in June, 1972, she directed defendant’s..attorney not .-. to bansfer the reassignments of the property interests to the land trustee.

; .They separated-again in September, 1972 and thereafter,-when they,-resumed their marital life, defendant, threatened to kill herXor rain the buildings if she-did not reconvey the propérty interests. She did so.:in October of that year. 1 1

Defendant’s.móth.ér testified in Polish, through.an interpreter,ithat .she .. .'had seen braises and blue,.marks on plaintiff’s body on FebruaryTQ;:1973, and saw .marks: on plaintiff’s .head, breasts ..and legs-.á- few-.dáys after .plaintiff left-' defendant- for "the last time. 1 . She had observed plaintiff working in and around two of the buildings,-noticing that she'cleaned apartments, helped- to furnish them, showed apartments to prospective tenants, collected rénts, and kept records.' During the time she lived with the parties, she had'seen her son strike plaintiff but she did not remember the exact dates. In his translation of her testimony, the interpreter apparently made mistakes concerning the dates, but they were corrected by defendant or his attorneys, who apparently understood the language.-

Irving Niehart testified that he had been the janitor in the 636 Wave-land Avenue building, and he observed that initially plaintiff kept the books on the property and later on, when it was changed over to furnished apartments, she had on many occasions carried furniture, cleaned the apartments, collected rents, and burned garbage in the boiler room and shoveled coal into the hoppers to feed the boiler. He had helped plaintiff carry furniture up to the apartments during this change-over period. He also stated that plaintiff showed the apartments to prospective tenants.

Two of the children of the parties (boys aged 12 and 15) were called as witnesses for plaintiff. The trial court interviewed the boys privately on motion of plaintiff. Defendant’s objection that he would be deprived of his right of cross-examination, was overruled. Following the interview, the court reported, among other things, that one boy said his mother signed over the properties to defendant because the latter threatened her. The other boy said his father threatened to ruin the properties and go into bankruptcy if his mother didn’t sign over her interest in them. One of the boys said that in February, 1973, he saw defendant strike plaintiff,-and the other boy observed defendant strike plaintiff on the day before she and the boys left defendant.

Defendant denied striking plaintiff on the occasions she alleged but admitted that during the period of time which included those dates, he had thrown a toy automobile which struck her and drew blood. He further testified that after his alleged condonation of plaintiff’s adultery he had accused her of various other acts of adultery with others, including Irving Niehart, and that plaintiff impliedly admitted these other charges by her reply that she could not help herself because, “I am just that way.” ■

In rebuttal on the divorce issue, plaintiff was recalled and she denied any acts of adultery other than those she had admitted to her husband and further denied that she had made the statements to her husband, indicating that she could not help herself. Then Irving Niehart,' one of the men with whom defendant alleged plaintiff hád committed adultery, was called and he- denied any sexual relations with her.

The trial court found that the testimony of plaintiff concerning a tits óf physical cruelty, corroborated by the testimony of defendant’s mother, entitled plaintiff to a divorce; that plaintiff s defense of condonation of her admitted adultery was established by the evidénce that defendant took her back, lived with her and conveyed the real estate to her; and that the evidence was inconclusive on both plaintiffs allegations of adultery by defendant and his charges of other acts of adultery by plaintiff. Custody of the children was awarded to the mother, with visitation rights to defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
334 N.E.2d 261, 31 Ill. App. 3d 408, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seniuta-v-seniuta-illappct-1975.