Teel v. Teel

289 S.W. 973, 221 Mo. App. 104, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 77
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 289 S.W. 973 (Teel v. Teel) 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
Teel v. Teel, 289 S.W. 973, 221 Mo. App. 104, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 77 (Mo. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

*106 BAILEY, J.

Plaintiff filed his petition for divorce from the bonds of matrimony contracted with defendant, returnable to the June term, 1926, of the Barry county circuit court; defendant, in due time, filed her answer and cross-bill. Plaintiff charged in his petition that defendant was hostile to his interests in business matters, refusing to sign papers; that she was quarrelsome, called him vile names in the presence of his children; accused him of being intimate with other women; refused to cohabit with plaintiff and spoke disrespectfully of his mother and relatives.

Defendant, in her cross-bill, after denying the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, charged plaintiff with certain indignities, which may be briefly stated as follows: 1st: Possessed an ungovernable temper and constantly without justification was quarreling and nagging at her. 2nd: Falsely stating to her he was financially broke, and if she did not sign whatever papers he presented he would knock hell out of her. 3rd: Cursed and called her vile names. 4th: Plaintiff was addicted to the habitual use of intoxicants and frequently came home drunk and at one time brought their seventeen-year-old-son home with him drunk. 5th: Plaintiff brought into his house a man and wife and plaintiff and his company all became drunk, and plaintiff in the presence of defendant and family, kissed and caressed this drunken woman, and her husband in the presence of plaintiff attempted to kiss this defendant and caress her, and when she protested, she was called a damned fool, etc. 6th: Plaintiff admitted to her he was out with other women. 7th: Ordered defendant to leave and if she did not he would get his gun, and at one time snapped the gun at her. 8th: Plaintiff falsely accused her with being out with other men.

The trial court found defendant to be the injured and innocent party and entered judgment awarding her a divorce and the care and custody of two minor children, girls, while the oldest child, a boy, ■was awarded to plaintiff. The judgment further required plaintiff to pay $30 per month for the support of the minor children and also *107 awarded to defendant alimony in gross, in the sum of $5000 and the household goods. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed.

"While divorce suits are held to be actions at law rather than suits in equity, nevertheless, it has been the uniform practice in this State to treat them as suits in chancery triable de novo on appeal. [O’Neil v. O’Neil, 264 S. W. 61, l. c. 64.]

It, therefore, becomes our duty, in passing on the question of whether or not defendant was entitled to a decree severing the marital relationship, to set forth the facts as shown by the record rather fully. Plaintiff and defendant were married in November, 1906, in Barry county, Missouri. From this union three children' were born, consisting of a son and two daughters, whose ages at the time of the trial were about seventeen, twelve and six years, respectively. They continued to live together until April, 1925, or for a period of approximately nineteen years. Plaintiff was a good provider and defendant evidently a good mother and housewife and it was only during the last few years of their married life that serious trouble arose.

It seems they lived on their farm in Barry county until the year 1919 when they moved to a farm in Lawrence county, owned by plaintiff. Frequently while plaintiff would be'away from home, his stock would break out. On this point defendant testified as follows: “Our main trouble was over the stock. For nine years I guess our stock has aggravated our neighbors and there was always someone phoning for us to come and get our stock, and I would raise eain about it and he was always in town and I had to take all the rackci there was about it. I had to always go and try to get the stock in, sometimes I could and sometimes I couldn’t. It was a continual warfare and every time I would say anything about the neighbors saying anything about- the stock he would say that wasn’t bothering him. He had a different stock at that time. At one time he had about thirty head of cattle and ten head of hogs and he didn’t have the pasture for the stock and that was one reason they broke out. He wouldn’t stay at home to look after them, that was all there was to it, and it would be me or Austin,one that would have to go get the stock. They have been in the wheat time and time again. Sometimes there would be two neighbors call in one day about the cattle and hogs, and he would say I was a damn liar that they never called or never said a word about it, if they did they would have told him about it. It was almost every day during the summer this occurred, and I would talk and plead with him to fix the fence and he wouldn’t, and we would have war every day and the neighbors were awful nice to put up with what they had to.” Defendant was corroborated as to the stock breaking out and resulting quarrels by the testimony of her father E. D. Browning. This witness seemed *108 unusually fair to both sides, and we place considerable weight on his testimony. He stated,-that “I have been there a little over a year. I am not married. While I was out there at their home I never did see Ora mistreat my daughter, no more than just kinda short -words. I have seen them both talk short. The best I can get at it, the trouble would come up over some stock a good deal, that seemed to be the •bother about that. The stock would get out and it was a complaint to her and a worry about this stock, and of course they would get into a quarrel. She would commence and say that the stock had gotten out. She would tell him the stock was out and they would kinda' get riled up about it. She would not begin it all the time. My daughter did not start the subjects all the time. I stayed clown at Pierce City at Ora’s place. I would be down there with him and I would go out with him at nights once in awhile, and when w7e would go out she would commence and tell him what had taken place sometimes. She would tell Ora the stock had gotten out and he. would sometimes get a little short about it, and that is the way it would come up. It just occurred along and I paid little attention.- I know that occurs in most families. I told them they could get along without it. ’ ’

Two other -witnesses testified to the fact that plaintiff’s stock broke out. It may, therefore, be taken as an established fact that plaintiff’s stock did break out and caused defendant considerable trouble and annoyance; that as a result plaintiff and defendant quarrelled and nagged each other about the matter to a degree, w7e think, unwarranted by the provocation. Defendant attaches great importance to these occurrences stating, in her testimony that, “our main trouble was over the stock.” Her father, how7ever, who lived with them, states that “it just occurred along and I paid little attention. I know that occurs in most families. I told them they could get along without it.” While we defer largely to the.findings of tl\e trial court on controverted facts, we have no hesitancy in stating that in so far as the stock situation is concerned, it failed to arise to the proportions of an indignity as contemplated by our divorce law7. We realize a thing of this sort may become aggravating to a wife who has to chase the stock and perchance endure a certain amount of complaint from the neighbors.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

O'Hern v. O'Hern
228 S.W. 533 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1921)
Holschbach v. Holschbach
114 S.W. 1035 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1908)
Barth v. Barth
151 S.W. 769 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 973, 221 Mo. App. 104, 1927 Mo. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teel-v-teel-moctapp-1927.