Thomas v. Newell

127 S.W.2d 610, 277 Ky. 712, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 724
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 17, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 610 (Thomas v. Newell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Newell, 127 S.W.2d 610, 277 Ky. 712, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 724 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Chief Justice Thomas

Making temporary writ permanent.

By this original action filed in this court petitioner, Jessie May Thomas, seeks to prohibit respondent, Hon. Charles D. Newell, Judge of the Mason circuit court, from- further proceeding to try and determine the case pending before him in that court, styled “Stanley Thomas v. Jessie May Thomas,” upon the ground that *713 respondent’s court has no jurisdiction of that action because when it was filed (it being a divorce action filed by plaintiff: therein against petitioner herein) the petitioner was a resident of Jefferson county, Kentucky, and under Section 76 of the Civil Code of Practice a divorce action “must be brought in the county where the wife usually resides, if she have an actual residence in this State; if not, in the county of the husband’s residence.” It will thus be seen that the section localizes such an action and requires it to be brought in the county of the wife’s residence, if she has one in this state; otherwise it may be brought in the county of the husband’s residence if he resides in the state.

Petitioner filed a special demurrer in the Mason county action, and also a plea in abatement thereof, in the latter of which she stated that at the time the husband’s divorce action was filed in the Mason circuit court she was a resident of Jefferson county, Kentucky, and before he filed it against her she had prepared her petition against him for a divorce to be filed in the Jefferson circuit court, which filing was done the next day after the filing of her husband’s petition in the Mason circuit court on the late afternoon of that day, but which fact she did not know at the time her petition was filed in the Jefferson circuit court, nor was she •made aware of the filing of her husband’s petition for something like a month thereafter. A hearing was had before respondent upon the preliminary issue of venue jurisdiction, at which testimony was heard, which was transcribed and has been made a part of this record. At its close respondent announced his conclusion that the Mason circuit court possessed jurisdiction of the case of Stanley Thomas v. petitioner pending in that court; but before an order was made and signed to that effect this original action in this court was filed by petitioner to prohibit respondent from further proceeding in the ease or making any orders therein, except one abating it for want of jurisdiction in the Mason circuit court.

The pleadings and the proof develop substantially these facts: That the parties were married in 1931 and lived the greater part of their married life up to 1936 in the city of Louisville, Kentucky — part of the time in a residence owned by the husband, and part of the time in one owned by the mother of his wife, the petitioner. At that time the husband was an agent for the Kentucky *714 Central Life Insurance Company, a domestic corporation, with, headquarters and home office in the city of Louisville. In the year referred to he was made superintendent of agents in a prescribed district composed of some counties in the state of Ohio across the river from Maysville, Kentucky, and a number of counties in central Kentucky with headquarters at Maysville, to which place the parties moved and rented an apartment where they kept house. The chief duties of the husband in the latter position consisted of superintending of agents under his jurisdiction, and were largely inspection duties, causing him to visit the various agents under his authority and which kept him away from home a large part of the time. Before the last separation hereinafter referred to there had been three prior ones, following some of which, if not all, the wife filed divorce actions against her husband which, we gather from the record, were based upon the ground of cruelty and infidelity ; but on each occasion he promised to reform and repent and the disturbances were dropped by mutual consent.

Some days before August 29, 1938, while the husband was away from home in the discharge of the duties of his position with the insurance company, the wife (petitioner) found a batch of letters somewhere in the residence addressed to her husband and written by oné Mrs. Lillie Mae Bean, who resided in Dayton, Ohio, and who appears to have been either the agent or in some way connected with the local agency of the Kentucky Central Life Insurance Company at that place and which was within the jurisdiction of the husband. It is intimated that those letters, though not copied in the record, were very endearing and affectionate, and as interpreted by petitioner (wife) they portrayed a relationship between the writer and addressee not altogether conforming with upright conduct or the degree of moral fidelity due from a husband to his wife. The discovery appears to — and no doubt did — very much disturb her and she sent a telegram to Mrs. Bean, signing her husband’s name thereto, requesting her to come to his residence in Maysville at once; but she did not inform her husband of what she had done. On that night, at about 11 o’clock, Mrs. Bean appeared at the residence but to the great astonishment of the husband, and soon thereafter the storm began to rage, which lasted the major part of the night, with only the three *715 of them present so far as the record discloses, up to 3 o’clock, when the husband took Mrs. Bean and carried her to the depot where she took a train back home. It would serve no useful purpose to undertake to detail what occurred at that time, except the wife stated— and she was not contradicted — that she did not go to bed, nor did she sleep any at all.

Between T and 8 o’clock the next morning petitioner consulted one Bussell Porter, the only attorney she knew in Maysville, and laid before him the facts with a view of getting his advice as to the course she should pursue in bringing about a permanent separation and finally a divorce from her husband, which she had determined upon because of language he had used towards her, plus her interpretation of the letters she found, each of which causes she concluded furnished ample grounds, not only for separation, but for a divorce. ITpon application of the wife to the attorney she made known to him not only that she was going to immediately separate from her husband, but that she was going to return to Louisville and take up her abode with her mother where she had lived prior to her moving to Maysville, and which she had always claimed as ber home, although the proof shows she had registered once and perhaps voted once in the city of Maysville after moving there.

The husband, on the morning of August the 30th, left the home on one of his tours of inspection, but, according to his testimony, he stated to his wife that he would return that night, and obtained a promise from her that she would not leave before his return, although she had told him beforehand that she was going to leave him. Soon after the husband left the wife "began to pack her belongings and by 4 o’clock in the afternoon she had them at the depot for shipment, and herself took the train for Louisville, where she arrived later on that evening and went to the home of her mother. The next day (August 31st) she went to the office of Hagan & Hagan, attorneys in the city of Louisville, .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 610, 277 Ky. 712, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-newell-kyctapphigh-1939.