Stewart v. Stewart

242 P. 947, 66 Utah 366, 1926 Utah LEXIS 2
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1926
DocketNo. 4310.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 242 P. 947 (Stewart v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Stewart, 242 P. 947, 66 Utah 366, 1926 Utah LEXIS 2 (Utah 1926).

Opinion

This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree of divorce, entered by the district court of Salt Lake county in favor *Page 368 of the plaintiff. The defendant appeals and assigns numerous errors.

The defendant, in addition to setting up a defense in her answer to plaintiff's prayer for a divorce, also filed a counterclaim in which she prayed for a divorce from the plaintiff. She now insists in her assignments of error that the district court erred, not only in granting plaintiff's prayer for divorce, but also in refusing to grant her prayer and in not making findings of fact upon her counterclaim. While there is considerable evidence in support of both the defendant's defense and her counterclaim, yet, upon the whole, the clear preponderance of the evidence supports the findings and 1 decree of divorce in favor of the plaintiff, and hence we cannot interfere with the decree in so far as it relates to the divorce.

While, as stated, there are various errors assigned, yet those relating to the counterclaim and other matters are not vital. There, however, is an assignment which assails the division or distribution of the property owned by plaintiff and defendant as made by the court which requires careful consideration. In view, therefore, that the other assignments are not vital, we shall at once proceed to a consideration of the question of property rights, and shall confine ourselves to a consideration of that part of the evidence which relates to the division of the property.

The evidence upon that subject is not in dispute. It appears that the parties to this action are colored people, both of whom had been married before they entered the marriage relation with each other in August, 1914. Both have passed beyond the meridian of life. The plaintiff, for a number of years, both immediately before and after he was married to the defendant, was employed as a Pullman porter on a railroad running between Salt Lake City, Utah, and Butte, Mont. During the time he was employed as such porter, according to his testimony, he received the munificent wage of from $30 to $35 per month exclusive of tips, which, he said, amounted to about the same amount each month. Out of that he was required to pay his board both while on duty *Page 369 and while at home. After he left the Pullman service, according to his statements, he received wages at the rate of from $68 to $70 per month. When he was married in 1914 he had saved during the whole period of his prior life about, or perhaps a few dollars in excess of $100 in money, and had no other property except a trunk and some clothes. At the time of the marriage, and for some years prior thereto, the defendant rented and conducted a rooming house in Salt Lake City, and she owned the furniture and other property she needed in conducting that business. It seems that she continued to operate the rooming house after the marriage until in September, 1916, when they purchased a 7-room dwelling house in Salt Lake City. The defendant transferred her furniture and other furnishings from the rooming house into the dwelling house. About that time the plaintiff entered the employ of the Rio Grande Western Railroad Company at Salt Lake City and was paid wages at the rate of from $68 to $70 per month, as before stated. At the time he obtained the divorce, and perhaps for some time prior thereto, he was employed in the United States post office at Salt Lake City and received wages a few dollars in excess per month of that hereinbefore stated. Upon the other hand, the testimony is to the effect that the defendant did laundry work both at her home and in private families and cleaned houses when requested and in addition to such work also assisted at various functions in the capacity of a waitress, and earned on an average $7 per week, and in addition did all of her own house work. It appears she also kept some chickens at the home where they lived. The evidence shows that plaintiff did very little, if anything, about the home. While plaintiff contends and the defendant conceded that plaintiff contributed some small sums of money for the purchase of some household articles as they were needed, yet it is clear from the evidence that the money he contributed for that purpose during the 10 years of their married life was very small indeed, almost insignificant. As before stated, in 1916 they purchased the dwelling house, for which they agreed to pay $1,250, of which sum $50 was paid in cash and *Page 370 the remainder was to be paid at the rate of $18 per month with accruing interest. It is conceded that plaintiff made the monthly payments out of his wages, and at the time of the trial the dwelling house was fully paid for, and was free of any incumbrance. The dwelling house was purchased in the joint names of plaintiff and defendant, and, after the purchase price had been fully paid, a deed was executed and delivered to them in their joint names, and the title to the same still is vested in them jointly as tenants in common. There is no evidence respecting the actual value of the dwelling house, aside from the fact that the purchase price was $1,250. There are, however, some facts in evidence from which an inference can be deduced that the actual value of the dwelling house is somewhat in excess of that amount. There likewise is no competent evidence respecting the actual value of the household goods owned by defendant. The plaintiff ventured a guess, however, that it was probably worth about $850, but from the description and character of the property and the length of time that it had been in actual use, it is manifest that the actual or money value thereof was far less than that amount. In this connection it should also be kept in mind that there are no children or other dependents. While it appears from the testimony of her physician that the health of defendant was not robust, and that she was afflicted with rheumatism and at times was unable to work, yet it also appears that plaintiff is perhaps about 10 years older than defendant, and is not capable of earning large wages. Physically and otherwise, therefore, neither one has much advantage over the other so far as future probabilities are concerned, except that perhaps the plaintiff, in view of his better health, is perhaps a little better able to earn a living.

With the foregoing undisputed facts before the court, it distributed the property as follows: To the defendant was awarded all the household goods, while to the plaintiff was awarded the dwelling house, including the real estate. The plaintiff was, however, required to pay to the defendant the sum of $250. The defendant was denied suit money and *Page 371 attorney's fees, and was required to pay her own costs. The plaintiff thus was awarded all of the real property, including the dwelling house, which was owned jointly by the parties, except $250 and the defendant was awarded nothing except what property she owned when she married plaintiff, which property was, however, used by them during the full period of their married life, and much of it had been used prior to that time. While it is true that in this case the divorce was granted to the husband for the reason that the defendant had committed a grievous offense against him, yet it is also true that the assault was one of those sudden ebullitions of temper that sometimes occur even among law-abiding people. It is also true, that while there was some provocation for defendant's act, yet as a matter of law she was not justified in doing what she did. The act, in view of all the circumstances, however, was not such as would warrant a court of equity to deprive the defendant of her property rights. Our statute (Comp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 947, 66 Utah 366, 1926 Utah LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-stewart-utah-1926.