Tallmon v. Tallmon

166 Iowa 370
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 20, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 166 Iowa 370 (Tallmon v. Tallmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tallmon v. Tallmon, 166 Iowa 370 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

The parties were married February 21, 1912, and separated finally July 12, 1912. Both had been married before. Prior to the marriage, plaintiff had taken wife : separate maintenance : desertion: evidence. up a claim in South Dakota and was living on .it. She was about fifty years of age, and without means. Defendant was a farmer, residing on his farm in Franklin county, Iowa. He owns a half section of land and is worth about $40,000. He has ten children.' Five of them, four sons and one daughter, were living with him. The daughter was sixteen years of age, and the others ranged from six to twenty-one years. There was neither sense nor sentiment in this marriage.

Plaintiff put an advertisement in the paper that she wanted to marry for a home. This advertisement was seen by the defendant, who answered it; it resulted in a correspondence between them. Defendant notified plaintiff by letter when he would arrive at her home town in South Dakota, and he did arrive there on. February 20th; they were married the next day. After leaving his home for Dakota, he stopped at Mason City and had an antenuptial contract prepared, which was read to plaintiff and executed by them before the marriage. The defendant attaches to his answer a copy of this contract, but we do not understand that any issue is tendered or any defense founded upon it, although the question has been argued as to some features of its provisions. After the marriage the parties proceeded at once to Minneapolis, Minn., where they stayed all night. The next morning the defendant desired plaintiff to go to his home as a hired girl, which she refused to do at first, saying she would go as his wife or not at all. They then proceeded to Mason City, where she finally agreed to go to his home as a [372]*372hired girl. Plaintiff stayed over night in Mason City with a friend, and the defendant went on home alone; the plaintiff followed in a day or two.

The children were not informed of the marriage for about a month. After that there was more or less trouble between plaintiff on one hand and defendant and his children on the other, more particularly with the daughter of defendant. The sixteen year old daughter put plaintiff to work as a hired girl, told her to go upstairs and scrub, etc.

Without reciting the evidence at any length, it is enough to say that the situation was well-nigh intolerable. Some of the circumstances claimed by plaintiff are that the children became saucy, and that defendant did not attempt to prevent it; that the defendant did not treat her properly; that the daughter tried to run things, called plaintiff names, and when she wpuld go outdoors the daughter would lock the screen; that the children put sticks across the hall and darkened the hall as she went to bed; that one of the boys threw a clod of dirt .at her as she sat under a tree; that another time one of the boys threw a rock at her as she was sitting in the swing; that at one time, when plaintiff was playing the organ, the daughter called for the boys, and they pulled the organ stool from under her and locked the organ; that she then went down to the swing, and they tried to push her from the swing; that one of the boys said she looked like a bird dog running after defendant, and that after that they would whistle at her and call her “Bird”; that at one time the daughter shut plaintiff in the closet; one of the boys told the daughter to throw plaintiff down and sit on her, and she did so; that they pulled her around, pulled her hair down, and twisted her arm. Many other similar acts and indignities are testified to, as to some of which there is more or less conflict in the evidence. Some are established; others are explained or denied. Plaintiff seems not to have been able to cope with the entire family. It is conceded by appellee that much ill feeling developed because both plaintiff and [373]*373the daughter wanted to manage the household. The defendant denies that he mistreated the plaintiff.

The real question presented here is whether defendant was guilty of desertion. Bearing on that question, some of the facts should he recited, which in our judgment show that defendant was at fault and that there was a desertion of plaintiff by him. Under the evidence, we think there can be no serious question but that defendant, from the day after the marriage, desired to rid himself of the plaintiff, and that the tendency of the conduct of himself and his children was to force her to leave.

Plaintiff testifies that the next day after the marriage, when the matter of her going to his house as his servant was discussed, defendant wanted her to go back to her daughter’s home in Dakota; that plaintiff refused, and that he then wanted her to go back to her claim; that he then told her that his boys would kill him for marrying her, and said he would be the laughing stock of the country. After they arrived at defendant’s home, she says that she sent for her trunk, and defendant refused to get it; that her daughter finally sent it, and defendant left it standing on the porch and would not bring it in. This matter as to the trunk is denied by the defendant. She further says that she complained to the defendant about the treatment of her by the children, and that defendant would always say:

My advice to you is to go. It will never be any better. You had better go pack up your clothes and go.

At one time, when the youngest child was tormenting her, she closed the door to keep him out of the room, and the child’s foot was caught, defendant ran into the room and denounced her bitterly, said that she should go away forever, and that she should go away with her daughter and never do another thing there; that she should never ride with him again; that she refused to go with her daughter; that defendant then got up and left the table, and the daughter [374]*374followed him, and after awhile came back and ordered both plaintiff and her daughter, who was. visiting her, to pack up their things and get out of there, and said that if they did not she was going to throw them out; that her father would give plaintiff $40 to go on, and later $100 to prove up her claim, and that they were to get right out; that plaintiff’s daughter went that evening, but plaintiff did not go. She testifies that at one time, when the children threw her down, she told defendant about it and showed him the bruises on her person; that defendant said he was not there, and said afterwards that they had done just right, and said this in the presence of the children. When plaintiff’s daughter left, she went to Charles City and sent plaintiff a card to come and meet her when she went through Mason City. She told defendant of this, who said he would take her down next morning to take the 6 o’clock train; that she was sitting in a chair when defendant came in and wanted plaintiff to pack her things and go with her daughter; that plaintiff told him she was sick, and defendant helped her to her room. In the morning he asked her to finish packing her things, and that she refused. Plaintiff went to Mason City, and her daughter advised her to go back to defendant, and she did so the next morning. Defendant’s daughter told plaintiff at one time' that she could not sleep there any more.

Plaintiff further testifies: That at one time she was going to take some plants to the town of Aredale, and that she wanted to see the doctor and get some medicine. Defendant said he would take her, but that if he did take her she would take her clothes.

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Bluebook (online)
166 Iowa 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tallmon-v-tallmon-iowa-1914.