Strycker v. Levell and Peterson

190 P.2d 922, 183 Or. 59, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 152
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 190 P.2d 922 (Strycker v. Levell and Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strycker v. Levell and Peterson, 190 P.2d 922, 183 Or. 59, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 152 (Or. 1948).

Opinion

BRAND, J.

This is a companion case to, and rose out of the litigation in the case of Levell v. Levell, decided March 2,1948. The allegations of the complaint which on demurrer must be considered true, establish for present purposes the following facts: Lura H. Strycker is the mother of Esther M. Levell, divorced wife of defendant David W. Levell. The defendant, Albert Peterson is the former husband of the plaintiff, Lura H. Strycker. Esther M. Levell secured a decree of divorce from the defendant David W. Levell, together with the custody of two infant children. The decree required the father, David W. Levell to contribute $50.00 per month for the support of the children and gave to the father the reasonable right of visitation.

The complaint alleges that the father, David W. Levell filed in the divorce suit a motion for the modification of the decree as follows:

“COMES now the defendant and respectfully applies to the above entitled Court for an order thereof modifying the decree heretofore made and entered in the above entitled case so that the said decree as modified will contain a provision that the children must be kept within the jurisdiction of the *61 Court and are not to "be removed therefrom, except upon order of the Court after ample notice to the opposing party and on opportunity to be heard thereon and that while the said children are not kept within the jurisdiction of the Court the provision for the payment of support money shall be suspended, and that while the plaintiff has the custody of the children, the said children shall be kept free from the influence of and association with immoral persons.
“This Motion is based upon the records and files in the above entitled suit and upon the affidavit of the defendant which is hereunto annexed and by this reference made a part and parcel hereof.”

In support of his motion for an order that “the said children shall be kept free from the influence of and association with immoral persons”, the complaint alleges that the defendant, David "W. Levell filed an affidavit which reads in part as follows:

“ * * * I am disturbed at the fact that the plaintiff apparently has her mother as a member of the household, the mother being a person of lax morals and with a very strong hatred for this plaintiff. I feel that it is not fair to me that the plaintiff’s mother should be in the household with my children, as she is not a fit or proper person to associate with growing children, and she has such an unreasonable dislike for me that it is certain she will endeavor to prejudice the children against me.”

In answer to the motion and affidavit of the defendant David "W. Levell, the complaint further alleges that the plaintiff, Lura Strycker filed an affidavit in the supplemental proceedings in the divorce suit stating that she resided in San Francisco, California where she was employed. That Esther Levell and her children lived in Vallejo, California, and that *62 “ * * * the affidavit of David W. Levell that this plaintiff was living with and as a member of the household of the said Esther M. Levell and her children was untrue.”

It will be observed that the complaint in the libel suit does not affirmatively state that Mrs. Strycker was not living as a member of the household of her daughter, Esther, but only states that she once made an affidavit to that effect. The complaint further alleges that in February, 1947, David Levell and A1 Peterson conspired fraudulently and maliciously to injure plaintiff’s good name by filing further affidavits in the divorce suit. We quote the material portions of the affidavits so filed. The affidavit of David Levell is in part as follows:

“On my visit to the home of Esther M. Levell on the afternoon before Christmas, I did not state, as alleged by her mother in her affidavit, that I had a legal right to see her, my ex-wife. I did state that I felt I had a legal right to see my children. It is not true that Esther’s mother offered to bring the children to me * * *. I had no opportunity to talk with anyone there because Mrs. Strycker, when I asked to see the children, slammed the door in my face and locked it from the inside. * * *”
“While I did not state in my affidavit, to which reference is hereby made, that my ex-wife’s mother lives with her, I did state that she apparently was living in that home. I made this statement because my ex-wife had written me to send a letter to her General Delivery stating what hotel I was stopping at and she would send the children to the hotel with her mother. I assumed from that statement that her mother was probably living with her. That the mother is a woman of low morals is well known to me and is also well known to her daughter, Esther M. Levell, and the statement made in her affidavit *63 to the effect that her mother is not a woman of low morals is absolutely and knowingly false. While we were living together as husband and wife we formerly attended dances on the Battleship Oregon and similar affairs, and Esther’s mother would frequently be there and on many occasions was drunk and on many occasions we found her in compromising positions with various men who attended the said dances. It was a matter of common knowledge with us, and of more than occasional comment between us, that her mother was lax morally. * * * I believed implicitly in my then wife, and I had married her with knowledge of some of her mother’s shortcomings because I had seen the mother intoxicated and I had seen her in bed with a strange man in Roseburg at the Eagles convention which was held, I believe, in June of 1940. I know that it was prior to my marriage and that Mrs. Strycker had ridden in my car with other people whom I took to the convention at Roseburg. Together with some others we were serenading various people attending the convention, entering rooms at the hotels and among other rooms was the one in which I noticed Esther’s mother in bed with a stranger.
“During the time that I was married to Esther Levell, we saw as little of her mother as we could, as we both felt the same way regarding her, that is to say, that we did not wish to associate with her and were heartily ashamed of her manner of conducting herself.
“Referring now to that affidavit of Lura H. Strycker in which she states that upon my knocking at her daughter’s door, the daughter ‘asked me to answer the door.’ This statement is false, as the door was answered by a boy whom I did not know, and he said he did not know Esther or Mrs. Levell. After the boy had come to the door and opened it, Mrs. Strycker came to the door and upon my asking to see my ex-wife and children and stating that I had a legal right to see my children, slammed the door in my face and locked it.”

*64 The affidavit of the defendant, Albert Peterson which was filed in support of the motion of the defendant Levell is in part as follows:

“I, AL PETERSON, being first duly sworn, depose and say: That I am well and personally acquainted with Lura H. Strycker, mother of Esther M. Levell, former wife of David W. Levell. That I was formerly married to the said Lura H. Strycker.

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Bluebook (online)
190 P.2d 922, 183 Or. 59, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strycker-v-levell-and-peterson-or-1948.