Shapiro v. Shapiro

14 P.2d 1058, 127 Cal. App. 20, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 297
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8588.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 1058 (Shapiro v. Shapiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shapiro v. Shapiro, 14 P.2d 1058, 127 Cal. App. 20, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 297 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

WOODWARD, J., pro tem.

Plaintiff instituted an action for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty, setting forth eleven specific acts of marital misconduct on the part of the defendant. The trial court found in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant’s cross-complaint and plea of recrimination.

Appellant states in his opening brief that as to several of the accusations pleaded by plaintiff and found to be true by the court, the evidence is in “substantial conflict”, but urges nevertheless that the judgment should be reversed for the reason that his own recriminatory plea was fully established. This, of course, is rather an indefinite challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. It is not suggested, we may observe parenthetically, that the accusations of plaintiff concerning which the evidence was in conflict, were trivial in character, and for this reason it is immaterial whether *22 other accusations, covered by the findings, were supported by the evidence. It was not necessary that plaintiff should prove each of the allegations of cruelty set forth in her complaint. If enough material facts relied on were proved to fulfill the definition of extreme cruelty as it appears in section 94 of the Civil Code, other findings may be disregarded as surplusage. (Avery v. Avery, 148 Cal. 239, 246 [82 Pac. 967] ; Hawkins v. Hawkins, 104 Cal. App. 608, 613 [286 Pac. 747].)

Before discussing appellant’s point with reference to his recriminatory defense, it seems pertinent to allude briefly to the evidence adduced in support of the wife’s cause of action. We do not, however, deem it necessary to set forth all of the acts of appellant pleaded by the plaintiff and found by the trial court to have been committed. A few of them will suffice.

Plaintiff testified that her husband possessed a violent temper; was in the habit of calling her vile and obscene names, and, on several occasions, slapped her face, beat and choked her. These instances of personal violence usually climaxed a quarrel between the couple concerning money matters, or the defendant’s business. On March 3, 1930, according to the wife’s testimony, she suggested to appellant that he pay certain notes at one of the banks in Salinas; appellant immediately resented the suggestion and during a quarrel that ensued struck plaintiff over the head with a heavy book. Sam Shapiro, elder son of the couple, testified that on one occasion (he could not fix the date) he had seen defendant throw a book at plaintiff; that it “glanced off the top of my mother’s head and hit her glasses and knocked her glasses back”. This witness corroborated his mother as to other instances of appellant’s violence. He recalled that, on another occasion, the defendant attacked plaintiff while she was in the kitchen, knocking her down and otherwise mistreating her. The boy further testified that he had frequently heard his father call the plaintiff vile names, including “whore”, and threaten to kill her. One instance of defendant’s misconduct is best told in the boy’s own language: “Q. How did you happen to leave military school 1 A. One day my father came down there and he came out with my mother and got me, and on the way my mother started to tell him how much I learned *23 and everything while I was there, and my father told her that he spent a lot of money on . me that he would no.t have to if it was not for her, because he could have trained me just as well at home, and then he got mad and started to going faster and faster in his car and he told us he was going off the road and into the fence and kill us all, and I talked to him and I cried and he told us that he would run into the fence, and then he cooled off a little bit. ...”

Charles Nadeau, a laborer, testified that during the latter part of the year 1929 he saw the defendant strike plaintiff and knock her down. “Q. (By the Court) You say he knocked her down? A. Yes. Q. Tell what was done then? Let’s get that over with. A. Well, in the house they lived in the kitchen is a small one and the dining room is a small one and she was coming from the kitchen into this dining room and he hit her and knocks her down and shoves his fingers toward her eyes, and if I remember right he knocked her glasses off.”

Mrs. Ted Hennekin, a neighbor, testified that during the month of November, 1929, she. heard a “lot of commotion” in the defendant’s home “like blows being struck” and heard plaintiff say, “Don’t, please don’t.” E. J. Emerick, a former employee of the defendant, testified that in October, 1927, he saw the defendant kick plaintiff and heard him call her “an old whore”. “Q. When Mr. Shapiro kicked Mrs. Shapiro, what position was she in. A. She was stooping over. Q. Describe exactly how it was done. A. He come up behind her and she was stooped over and he kicked her over. . . . Q. Did you see any more conflict between them? A. Yes. Q. What was said or done? A. He said that he was going to kill her if she didn’t get out, and he picked up a shovel and was going to hit her with it. . . . Q. When he had the shovel raised up, what happened? A. She ran into the house.”

Appellant now takes the position that his conduct, “if not always justified”, in almost every instance was the result of great provocation, and that plaintiff, not having come into court with clean hands, should have been denied a divorce. “Recrimination is a showing by the defendant of any cause of divorce against plaintiff, in bar of the plaintiff’s cause of divorce.” (Civ. Code, sec. 122.) It *24 has been said that while a plaintiff’s conduct may fall short of the statutory definition of cruelty, yet it may be sufficiently culpable to warrant the court in denying any relief to plaintiff, especially if such conduct was of a kind calculated to cause the acts charged against the defendant. (9 Cal. Jur. 690.)

The provocative conduct, described in great detail by appellant at the trial and on which he apparently relied as an offset for his own derelictions, seems to have been a firm, and sometimes angry, insistence on the part of the wife that she be given a voice in the management of his business affairs. According to appellant’s testimony, Mrs. Shapiro went to his junk-yard daily where, without his consent and over his protests, she bought and sold goods, and gave directions to employees. Frequently, he went on to testify, she disagreed with him concerning details of the business, and on such occasions called him a “lazy bum” and other uncomplimentary names. She kept a watchful eye on his bank account and on one occasion, according to appellant’s version, she visited the bank where his funds ■were deposited and made derogatory remarks in the presence of officials concerning his credit. Appellant testified that his domestic troubles reached a climax when he undertook to improve certain real property which he owned at Salinas. The improvements consisted of a hotel and several small cottages, the property being referred to at the trial as “Bungalow de Luxe Court”. During the construction of these buildings, he averred, plaintiff asserted herself in an officious and meddlesome manner; she insisted on giving orders to the contractor and workmen and, on one occasion, demanded that certain changes be made in the plans which necessitated expensive alterations in work partially completed.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 1058, 127 Cal. App. 20, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shapiro-v-shapiro-calctapp-1932.