Simmons v. Simmons

280 S.W.2d 877, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 155
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1955
Docket7367
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 280 S.W.2d 877 (Simmons v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Simmons, 280 S.W.2d 877, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 155 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

RUARK, Judge.

Mary Frances Simmons sued Harvey Simmons for divorce, alimony and attorney fees. Defendant responded with a cross-petition. The court found plaintiff to he the ■ innocent and injured party and adjudged her the divorce but refused to grant alimony or attorney fees as prayed. From this judgment, and the overruling of plaintiff’s motion, to amend under Section 510.-310. RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., plaintiff has appealed. Defendant did not appeal. The sole question here is whether or not the alimony and attorney fees should have been allowed.

. Plaintiff and defendant were married on August 10, 1952. At that time plaintiff was not yet fifty-seven years of age, a widow with grown children. Her former husband had departed this life approximately a year before. Defendant was then sixty-three years old, had been twice married and once divorced. He too had grown children and one daughter who was tjien sixteen .years old but who married prior to date of trial, which occurred May 27, 1954.

Prior to the marriage plaintiff had operated á cafe and small motel near Buffalo, Missouri, which she had on the market for sale ánd which she did sell after the marriage. She testified that before the már-riage she had had an opportunity to sell this property at a higher price than that received at the sale afterward, but in this she was not corroborated by any other evidence and the terms of such offer, with the exception of the end price, are not shown. Defendant was an auctioneer, cri'ed sales in the country community and maintained an auction sale barn at Buffalo. He was also a trader in the sense that he bought and sold real and personal property and was. the owner of various' tracts of real estate which will be mentioned hereafter.

*879 Plaintiff’s 'petition was based on general indignities, several of which. had their origin in unreasonable jealousy. Her testimony was that the defendant and consequently she, his' wife, were the victims of extreme, oppressive and sometimes infantile jealousy on his'part to the extent that she was denied normal social intercourse with her friends and acquaintances; that she was upbraided for going to the post office alone; that defendant’s attitude was such as to cause her to resign from her social club in order to keep the peace, and thereafter the parties- received no social visitors at the home except relatives. According t'o plaintiff, visits even by kinfolk occasionally provoked disapproval and ill language. Outbreaks and incidents of jealous temper and verbal abuse by defendant occurred on an average of once every two weeks. On these occasions defendant used vile language and sometimes told plaintiff that she could get out of h'is house and get a divorce. It would serve no purpose to relate and rehash all of these various incidents. Suffice it to say that plaintiff’s testimony in regard to so'me of them was corroborated by the circumstances and even by seepage from defendant’s testimony given in denial. There is no indication that plaintiff ever gave defendant cause for his intolerant jealousy.

On one occasion the plaintiff left defends qnt and went to the home of her son, where she stayed for a period of about five weeks. Defendant induced her to return, but the misconduct of defendant soon commenced again and finally culminated in a scene at night when defendant subjected the plaintiff to unreasonable complaints and accusations and to some physical abuse which caused her to suffer temporary hurts. Plaintiff left for good the next morning.

While plaintiff complains mightily of defendant’s inordinate jealousy, she was not an innocent girl entirely unaware of hei husband’s disposition at the time the marriage was contracted. She said that she realized during courtship that he was extremely jealous but had hoped that the marriage would cure that. Even on the day of the marriage the defendant balked, literally, at the church’ door and threatened not to go through with the marriage because the ushering or some part of the ár-rangements was in the hands of a man whom he did not like.

With the exception’ of his obsession, defendant appears to have been a fond and affectionate husband. He provided for the plaintiff well. He took her about with him both , on pleasure and on business. He sent and took her to beauty shops and made trips with her so that she might purchase cosmetics and- might shop for clothes. Upon at least one occasion he picked, out and bought a dress for her after she had ■ exhibited some petulance with him for having sought to evade the wearing business of waiting for her to make her selection, by walking out to rest and' smoke; ■ He was anxious that his wife "look nice and’ be well-groomed, and to this desire oh his part plaintiff responded with true 'feminine enthusiasm. ■ - •'

One of the complaints of the defendant was that plaintiff indicated an' undue 'interest in his property' arid his affairs arid attempted to get him to put his property and bank account in their joint names. This defendant said he resisted because he felt that what she and her former husband had accumulated should go to her children and what hé and his former wife had accumulated should go to his children with the exception of “a widow’s dowry.” On the' other harid,' plaintiff denied any beseechmént in this respect except as applied to the home. She' testified that she thought it proper that such be placed in their joint names. Defendant also testified that plaintiff interfered-with his business affairs. He maintained his sale barn a, short distance from the home. This was a large building wherein were pens for the housing of various animals to be offered for sale. He had a small platform upon which he stood while engaged in his auctioneering and a -cream can upon which he sat when resting. The plaintiff frequently came over to this place while defendant was engaged in this work and defendant riiade room for her on his platform. The picture presented by de *880 fendant’s evidence is of the plaintiff, well-dressed and well made-up, sitting on a cream can amid the litter, sounds and smells of the auction barn, smoking cigarettes, whilst defendant hawked hogs, hardware and what-have-you, everything “outside of dogs.” Defendant testified that he protested to plaintiff that she would be a lot better looking if she would leave off part of her makeup and lipstick and smoking in a crowd “where it was just purely men.” Yet it appears that he was glad to have her join him and objected, if in fact he did object, not to her appearance in presence but her appearance cosmetically speaking. Plaintiff testified that defendant never objected to her being well-dressed or smoking cigarettes at the sale barn.

Prior to the final separation the parties had been married seventeen months and one week and, deducting the five weeks’ separation, they had enjoyed each other’s society in marriage for a period of approximately sixteen months.

As to the financial situation of the parties, at. the time of trial plaintiff had approximately $9,500 cash in the bank, most of which was the net proceeds derived from the sale of her tourist court and cafe. She also owned an eighty-acre farm of the approximate value of $10,000 which had produced for her during the previous year, an admittedly drought-ridden period, share rental in the sum of $700.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W.2d 877, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-simmons-moctapp-1955.