Shirey v. Shirey

112 S.W. 369, 87 Ark. 175, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 13, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 369 (Shirey v. Shirey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shirey v. Shirey, 112 S.W. 369, 87 Ark. 175, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 41 (Ark. 1908).

Opinion

McCulloci-i, J.

Appellant, A. W. Shirey, brings up for review a decree of the chancery court against him in favor of, his wife, Fairbelle Shirey, for divorce and alimony and suit money.

Appellant and appellee intermarried on February 29, 1904, the former being then about 70 years old and the latter about 15 years.

Appellant lived at Minturn, a small village in Lawrence County. Fie was and is a man of considerable wealth, .estimated at from $200,000 to $250,000, and was engaged in the mercantile business and farming. Appellee lived with her mother and two brothers as tenants on one of appellant’s numerous farms in the vicinity of Minturn, and the two had been acquainted with each other for several years. Prior to the marriage appellee instituted an action in the circuit court of Lawrence County against appellant to recover damages for seduction, and this action was pending but was dismissed at the time of the marriage. Appellee’s mother instituted the action for her as next friend. On the day of the marriage they entered into an ante-nuptial contract, whereby appellant settled upon her, in consideration of the marriage and in lieu of all other marital rights in his property, a farm of small value. Appellee being then an infant, the contract was executed for her by a guardian appointed on that day by the probate court. It was also signed by her mother. They lived together only about three months. Appellee left the home of her .husband in Min-turn in May, 1904, and returned to her mother, and on June 15, 1904, she commenced a suit against him for divorce and alimony on the alleged ground of cruel treatment and indignities. They never lived together after that time, though appellant visited her occasionally at her mother’s home during the months of July, August and September, 1904, and on January 11, 1905, they entered into another written contract whereby she agreed to dismiss the pending suit for divorce and not to again employ the attorneys who then represented her in that suit “in any suit either in law or equity that she may hereafter bring or defend against the said A. W. Shirey,” and he agreed to pay her the sum of $25 per month for her maintenance.

The chancery court had previously made an order in the divorce case directing appellant to pay fees of appellee’s attorneys in the sum of $500 and the sum of $25 per month for 'her maintenance during pendency of the suit; and it appears that at the time of this agreement between them referred to above in January, 1905, they compromised the allowance made to her by the court for attorney’s fees so as to cheat the attorneys out of it and divide it between themselves. Pursuant to the aforesaid agreement the divorce suit was the next day dismissed. A short time afterward appellant declined to pay the stipulated monthly allowance, and on February 16. 1906, appellee instituted against her husband a suit in chancery to cancel and set aside the antenuptial contract and to recover permanent alimony. She alleged in her complaint that she was an infant, and therefore incapable legally of entering into a binding contract; that her consent to the execution of the contract was obtained by fraud; that her husband had,i in May, 1904, “without cause whipped her openly in the public streets of Minturn, where they lived, cursing her and threatening to kill her, driving her from his home, causing her great suffering of mind and body, from the effects of which she still suffers, rendering her partially unable to earn her living by hard labor, and causing her the necessity of expenditure of a great deal of money, which he has failed and refused to furnish her, but to the contrary has caused to be published in'the ‘Blade,’ a weekly newspaper published in Lawrence County, a notice saying that he would not pay her debrs; and that after the execution of the agreement on January n, 1905, he had refused to pay her the amount stipulated therein, and had refused to live with her or support her.” She asked for a decree for a permanent monthly allowance of-one hundred and seventy-five dollars. Subsequently, on September ............., 1907, she amended the prayer of her complaint by asking for a decree for divorce on the grounds already set forth and for one-third of her husband’s estate.

Appellant answered the complaint, denying all the material allegations thereof, and on February 16, 1906, he instituted a separate suit against appellee for divorce, alleging in ‘his complaint, as grounds for divorce, that she had wholly failed to perform her duties as a wife, and had offered such indignities as rendered his condition intolerable by treating him with unmerited reproach, rudeness, studied neglect, open insult, etc. On May 31, 1907, after a considerable part of the testimony had been taken in the cases, appellant amended his complaint so as to charge adultery committed by appellee with various individuals named in the complaint on various dates and with other individuals at different times whose names were to him unknown. Appellee answered the original and amended complaint, denying . all the allegations thereof relating to misconduct on her part.

These suits were consolidated by order of court and consent of parties, and at the final hearing the court dismissed for want of equity appellant’s complaint for divorce, and granted the prayer of appellee’s complaint for divorce and alimony, decreeing to her as alimony one-third of appellant’s personal property, irrespective of debts which he may owe, and one-third of his lands for and during her life. The court further ordered appellant to pay into court the sum of one thousand dollars as fees for her attorneys.

We are of the opinion, after a careful consideration of the voluminous evidence in this case, that neither of the parties have shown themselves to be entitled to a divorce.

Appellee’s prayer for divorce is based upon harsh and cruel treatment to which she is alleged to have been subjected by her husband during the brief period of time they lived together, principally in whipping her with a rod or switch publicly in the streets of Minturn-. She testified that while they lived together he repeatedly used harsh, insulting and threatening language to her, but he denies it, and her testimony lacks corroboration except as to the one incident of the public whipping referred to above.

There is a conflict in the testimony concerning the circumstances surrounding this incident and as to the extent of the chastisement inflicted. According to appellee’s version of the incident, appellant was not justified, but according to his version he inflicted chastisement upon his wife under circumstances not void of provocation for the act. They had been living together about three months, and on a certain afternoon she, in company with a young woman of questionable morals and unsavory reputation in t'he community, went strolling or walking to the outskirts of the town where they encountered two travelling men; and while they were talking to the men appellant, whose attention had been called to the situation, came up where they were. One of the men who was talking to- Mrs. Shirey fled precipitately, and appellant gathered a rod or switch and thrashed his wife with it. The testimony is, as already stated, conflicting as to the severity of the whipping. Appellee denies that the meeting'with the men was prearranged, and the only one of the men who testified in the case made the same statement as to the meeting. He said that he and the other man stopped and talked to the two women ten or fifteen minutes.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 369, 87 Ark. 175, 1908 Ark. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirey-v-shirey-ark-1908.