Tebbe v. Tebbe

21 S.W.2d 915, 223 Mo. App. 1106, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 127
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 21 S.W.2d 915 (Tebbe v. Tebbe) 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
Tebbe v. Tebbe, 21 S.W.2d 915, 223 Mo. App. 1106, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 127 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

This is an action for divorce, which was tried upon the petition of plaintiff, the wife, and the answer and cross-bill of defendant, the husband. Each party counted upon alleged indignities of various kinds and character, the nature and purport of which will fully appear from our subsequent statement of the evidence adduced. At the conclusion of the hearing, the lower court dismissed both the petition and the cross-bill, from which judgment the parties perfected their separate appeals, which have been duly consolidated as one cause in this court.

We find in the respective briefs the usual assignments of error for a case of this character, which, while they are required by the rules of appellate practice, are yet of no vital significance, since the hearing is de novo, with the duty resting upon us to make our own finding of facts and arrive at our own conclusions, subject only to such deference to the lower court's decision as the exigencies of the particular case may seem to warrant.

Plaintiff, the wife, is now about forty-eight, and defendant, the husband, about sixty-five years of age. The marriage occurred on December 16, 1925, in the city of St. Louis; there was a first separation on March 1, 1926, which seems to have continued for four months; and the final separation took place on September 20, 1926, following which the instant suit for divorce was instituted by plaintiff on November 4, 1926. During the period of the first separation, plaintiff had also filed a petition for divorce, which was dismissed by her on June 15, 1926, pending the resumption of marital relations.

Plaintiff had formerly been married to one Edwards, from whom she was divorced some six years prior to her marriage to defendant. Of this union a daughter, Geneva, was born, who had reached maturity before her mother's second marriage, and at all times maintained a residence for herself independent of the one which plaintiff acquired. Defendant had also been previously married, his wife having died twelve years before he made the acquaintance of plaintiff. Of this marriage there were six children surviving, consisting of two sons and four daughters. The two sons and two of the daughters were married and living to themselves, while the remaining two daughters, Norma, about twenty years of age, and Elsie, about twenty-seven, were yet single, and made their home with their father. Norma was employed in some capacity by a downtown industrial concern, but Elsie was feeble-minded, and was totally dependent upon her father for support. Plaintiff had originally come from Coffeen, Illinois, *Page 1111 where her father, J.I. Scherer, was the village blacksmith, while defendant, on the other hand, had immigrated to this country from Germany when he was but a lad of eighteen years, and had thereafter engaged in business as a truck gardener until the declining years of his life, when he sold his land, and had retired to the enjoyment of his home at 5548 Emerson avenue, in the city of St. Louis, where he was living when his acquaintance with plaintiff was formed.

After her divorce from Edwards, it appears that plaintiff had been employed from time to time as a seamstress, and as a saleswoman in a department store, but in July, 1925, she was engaged as a hosiery solicitor in a house to house canvass in the neighborhood of defendant's Emerson avenue address. Coming to defendant's home in the course of her calls, she found him sitting on his front porch, and a conversation at once ensued between the two which revealed to plaintiff that defendant was a lonely widower, possessed of an automobile but with no one to ride with him, and to defendant that plaintiff was a divorcee, residing with her daughter at an address on Cabanne avenue, where she assured him that a number of widows were always to be found. Not only did she prevail upon defendant to buy six pairs of hose as the immediate fruits of her salesmanship, but she further invited him to call at her boarding house, which invitation he readily accepted, and as the final consequence of which the marriage ceremony was performed.

The burden of plaintiff's complaint was centered around the presence of defendant's daughters, Norma and Elsie, in the home; her husband's neglect and abuse of her; the slovenly habits which he continuously manifested after their marriage; and the fondness he displayed for the wife of an old friend of his upon such occasions as the two were afforded an opportunity to be together.

Perhaps the chief difficulty between the parties, under plaintiff's version of what transpired, arose from the fact that defendant insisted on keeping his daughter Elsie as a member of the household. Plaintiff would have us believe that Elsie was a maniac of homicidal tendencies; that her own life was constantly in danger at Elsie's hands; and that defendant was able to control and subdue his daughter only by the force of his own strength, which was but little superior to that which his daughter possessed. Plaintiff testified to an incident which occurred about March 1, 1926, shortly before the time she first separated from defendant, when the latter engaged in a rough and tumble fight with his daughter, culminating in Elsie's taking hold of a sharp knife and threatening to kill plaintiff unless she immediately left the house. Defendant's story of the occurrence was that he merely attempted to push Elsie into an adjoining room, in consequence of which she slipped upon a linoleum rug and fell, and that she had no knife, and made none of the threats of which plaintiff accused her. *Page 1112

Aside from the testimony of a number of disinterested witnesses, such as neighbors and acquaintances of Elsie from childhood, that she was only feeble-minded, and in nowise a dangerous person, the facts and circumstances in evidence sadly discountenance the force of plaintiff's own testimony. Elsie had always lived in her father's home; she assisted in part with the housework; she and her sister Norma roomed together; she cared for the children of a married sister; she went about over the city wholly unattended; and she was even put upon the stand as a witness in the case. The record clearly bespeaks the fact that plaintiff wanted to be rid of Elsie; but she had seen her on several occasions before the marriage, and had been fully advised of her deficiencies, and did not enter into the compact under any misapprehension as to the facts. Defendant, on the other hand, had promised Elsie's mother on her deathbed that he would always care for the child, and his sense of duty and nobleness of character is amply shown by his insistent refusal to deny to his helpless daughter a haven in the only home she had ever known. We are fully convinced, therefore, that plaintiff's charge with reference to Elsie's habits and tendencies was grossly exaggerated, and utterly disproved by the vast preponderance of the credible evidence in the case.

The same may be said as to the relations which plaintiff bore with Norma. It may well be that a daughter of Norma's age was somewhat resentful of a stepmother in the home, especially when the stepmother displayed such violent dislike for her feeble-minded sister, but the weight of the evidence does not bear out plaintiff's own testimony as to the constant insults, abuses, and illtreatment which she claims to have received at Norma's hands. To the contrary, Norma concededly lent her efforts to further the marriage between plaintiff and her father, although at first she seems to have opposed it, and so far as defendant's preference for Norma's wishes over those of his wife was concerned, it was shown that he at least compelled Norma to pay board out of her earnings, and thus contribute her part to the expenses of the home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.2d 915, 223 Mo. App. 1106, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tebbe-v-tebbe-moctapp-1929.