Tiffin v. Tiffin

176 N.W. 435, 209 Mich. 232, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 598
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1920
DocketDocket No. 33
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 176 N.W. 435 (Tiffin v. Tiffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tiffin v. Tiffin, 176 N.W. 435, 209 Mich. 232, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 598 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

STONE, J.

The bill of complaint herein was filed by the wife, on February 6, 1915, to obtain a divorce from the husband on the grounds of extreme cruelty and failure to support. The bill charges the defendant with personal violence and many other marital offenses. These charges are all denied by the defendant in his answer, and claiming the benefit of a cross-bill he charged plaintiff with extreme cruelty, refusal to perform her duties as a housewife and with many acts of marital misconduct. After the filing of the original bill, the parties resumed marital relations for a time under an attempted reconciliation, but it is claimed in and by a supplemental bill,'which was filed November 12„ 1915, that the conduct of the defendant was such that plaintiff found it impossible to further live with him, and the case proceeded to a hearing.

The defendant is a practicing physician in the city of Detroit. The parties were first married on September 16, 1891, while defendant was a student of medicine in the Detroit College of Medicine, and it appears that by mutual consent the parties did not live- together, and plaintiff returned to the home of her parents in the Province of Ontario.

[234]*234Subsequently, the defendant graduated in his course of medicine, commenced the practice of his profession in Detroit, and a second marriage ceremony was performed on November 17, 1896, after which time the parties cohabited as husband and wife continuously until a short time before the filing of the original bill of complaint.

The record is a large one, and in both the pleadings and the testimony of the parties there is much of acrimony, consisting of accusation and counter accusation. In fact it is seldom that a record shows so much of crimination and recrimination by the parties as is here shown. A fair sample of this bitterness is shown in that part of defendant’s answer and cross-bill wherein he says of the plaintiff:

“She has no sense of propriety nor truth, and is a most unmitigated liar.”

We have read the entire record with great care, and have duly considered it, but we are of the opinion that no possible good could follow the spreading of the differences of the parties upon the pages of the reports of this court. The record shows much incompatibility, but we think it shows much more.

After the hearing the trial court, evidently with some reluctance, announced its conclusion as follows:

“In considering the whole case I believe that justice will be subserved by separating these parties, granting to the plaintiff the relief prayed, and awarding her as permanent alimony the sum of $2,000 and costs to be taxed, together with a solicitor’s fee of $100.”

Subsequently a rehearing was granted, and further testimony was taken as to the value of the defendant’s property, the plaintiff having prayed for permanent alimony. About a dozen witnesses, mostly real estate dealers, were examined in June, 1918, upon the subject of the value of defendant’s property — No. 1870 [235]*235Woodward avenue. Later, and on June 28, 1918, the trial judge filed a memorandum opinion in which he reached the conclusion that relief should be denied to both parties. He said:

“To grant a decree to one may work an injustice to the other. To arbitrarily divide the property between them may likewise be inequitable. Such an adjustment was attempted, in the suggestions made in the opinion already filed. These suggestions have met the distinct and emphatic disapproval of both parties. Under these circumstances, and following the usual rule, both parties being equally to blame for the conditions complained of, the bill of complaint and the cross-bill in this case will be dismissed, and it is so ordered.”

A decree was entered accordingly. The plaintiff has appealed.

We recognize the rule that this court ought not to lightly reverse a decree, where the chancellor has seen and heard the witnesses, and has had the advantage of determining their credibility; nevertheless we are not thereby relieved of the duty of exercising our own judgment in passing upon the evidence in the case.

A careful consideration of the evidence has led us to differ from the opinion of the trial court that the parties are equally to blame. The extravagant charges contained in defendant's cross-bill have not been supported by any testimony save his own, in many important instances. By this we do not mean to hold that under the testimony the plaintiff has been entirely blameless. That she has been imprudent appears by her own cross-examination. That the defendant has been guilty of repeated acts of personal violence, amounting to extreme cruelty, is undisputed. Immediately before the filing of the original bill the following incident occurred, which was described by plaintiff as follows:

“On the 31st of January, 1915, after I had come [236]*236home from church and was providing my own food, I had prepared my dinner, and set it on the table in the kitchen — he came out and asked if I expected him to eat a meal. Occasionally he would get his breakfast there himself. I don’t remember what answer I made him, but I do remember that he rushed at me right and left, struck me over the head, and I raised up to defend myself as good as I could, and he shoved me against the window and broke the windowpane out, and when he satisfied himself on me, stood against the wall and asked me if I had had enough, and I said, ‘Well, you are a low dirty pup.’ He rushed at me again and pounded me again. There was an empty bottle standing on the table, and I grabbed that and threw over his head, and he threw me down on the floor, and sat on my back and put his hands on my back, until the prints of his fingers were on my skin for several days. He has not charged this as an assault on him, and that is the way it occurred.”

The defendant in his testimony gave this version of the transaction:

“I judge that she wanted some grounds for divorce; she thought I would strike her. She mentions the fact that I struck her, and this is how it was. She was getting her breakfast, or I was, I don’t know which, but anyway, I gave her a good shove with my fist, and shoved her right over to the other side of the kitchen table. She picked up a milk bottle and cut my head open with it. In grabbing her I don’t know whether I grabbed her to prevent her striking me again, but I caught her aflound here (indicating), threw her on the floor and held her there until she promised she would behave. I didn’t strike her. I didn’t touch her outside of holding her, only the first shove. She promised to behave and I let her up, and learned afterwards she ran out of the door and across to the church, and told a policeman about it. I heard it. However, she went upstairs, she hadn’t been to church that morning, she said she had. She went upstairs and stayed there the rest of the day. The next morning or some time after that, she .filed this bill for divorce. She had understood and I had un[237]*237derstood, it was impossible for us to live together, the way we were living.”

Earl W. Watson, a young man about 21 years of age, testified to the following conduct of the defendant in 1909:

“I roomed and boarded at Dr. Tiffin’s residence. I took lunch where I worked, but generally had breakfast, and dinner there in the evening. There was no servant kept in the Tiffin house when I was there. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.W. 435, 209 Mich. 232, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiffin-v-tiffin-mich-1920.