Tribble v. Tribble

144 S.E. 665, 166 Ga. 850, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 420
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 12, 1928
DocketNo. 6370
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 S.E. 665 (Tribble v. Tribble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tribble v. Tribble, 144 S.E. 665, 166 Ga. 850, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 420 (Ga. 1928).

Opinion

Bussell, C. J.

This was an action for divorce, with a prayer for temporary and permanent alimony. The trial under review was the second trial of the suit for divorce, and temporary alimony of $50 per month had been granted by the trial judge. In her petition the wife made the claim that she owned a half interest in a described house and lot in the city of Atlanta, and asked that her [851]*851interest therein be established, and that .permanent alimony be awarded her, based on the earning capacity of her husband and his ownership of the other one half interest in the house and lot. She claimed ownership of a half interest in the house and lot and certain described personalty, including the house furnishings and a Marmon automobile; and she asked that her husband’s half interest in the property, both real and personal, be awarded to her as permanent alimony. The jury found in her favor, granting her a divorce, finding that she was the owner in her own right of a half interest in the house and lot, and awarding her the other half interest in the house and lot and the personalty mentioned as permanent alimony, as well as the further sum of $50 per month. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted. He also excepted directly to the decree, on the ground that it is not authorized by the verdict or the evidence.

There were circumstances in the evidence which fuljy authorized the jury to find that the defendant was guilty of adultery as charged by the wife, though this was strongly and unequivocally denied. The parties met during the world war in Serbia, and the defendant asserted that he had never proposed matrimony to his wife nor thought of marrying her until his engagement, which in fact did not exist, was announced by one Colonel Haynes, a superior military officer, at a social gathering of officers and war workers in Europe, and that lie finally returned to this country with his wife, who was then a nurse and Eed Cross worker, and married her at her home in Massachusetts on January 3, 1920, merely for the purpose of preventing her from being humiliated by the public pronouncement of Colonel Haynes. The testimony of the parties was strongly in conflict on every material issue except one, and a verdict in favor of either party would have been authorized. In this state of the record, and in view of the fact that the jurors are the sole judges of the credibility of the witnesses, it can not be said that the trial judge erred in overruling the ground of the motion based upon the contention that the verdict was contrary to the evidence. As to the ownership of the property, there is no evidence disputing the fact testified to by the wife that from her earnings as a professor in the college in which her husband also taught her husband received the sum of $7700 and from other money which she turned over to him the additional sum of $700, making $8400 of [852]*852her money which went into his hands, and that it was agreed that there was to be an equal amount contributed by the husband and any property bought should be joint property in which each of the parties had an equal interest. While it appears from the testimony of the defendant that the wife had paid only two fifths of the purchase-price of the house and lot and the husband three fifths, on account of his having paid $2625 upon the purchase of the house from money derived from the sale of a farm owned by him near Lavonia, the evidence of the wife as to the amounts expended for house furnishings, a piano, and an automobile, was not disputed; and it is so plainly apparent that this personalty must have been purchased from the $7700 contributed by the wife to the common fund that the jury was authorized to find that it had been substantially, if not entirely, paid for with the money of the wife. It does not directly appear in the testimony that there was any specific agreement that the wife was to support herself so as to absolve the husband of the duty ordinarily devolving by law upon the husband of providing his wife with maintenance and support. Many of the points as to which the parties are most strongly in conflict are immaterial to the real issues in the case; but as to material issues nothing more need be said as a matter of law than that the jury evidently preferred the testimony of the wife to that of the husband. This preference this court can not review. The jury had the witnesses before them; and from their manner and demeanor upon the stand as well as other circumstances not within the power of a court of review to consider, the law has properly placed the prerogative of awarding the superior weight in cases of conflicting evidence to the jury.

The fourth'ground of the motion for a new trial contains the insistence that a new trial should be granted, “because the verdict is contrary to the evidence and without any evidence to support it in so far as it seeks to award to plaintiff, by virtue of her having paid the purchase-price thereon, more than the interest which would be represented by the payment of $1030 towards the total purchase-price of $5250; and so far as said verdict found that she owned an interest in said property in excess of this amount, same was without evidence to support it.” This ground is a mere amplification of the general ground that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. But in so far as this specially directs our attention to the evidence [853]*853as a whole, it appears from the record, as we have already stated, that the jury was authorized to find that Mrs. Tribble, during her years of salaried employment, placed in the hands of her husband more than $8000 from which there was returned to her by her husband only $592 at the time of the separation. Consequently, fox the reasons heretofore stated, there is no merit in this ground of the motion.

In the fifth ground of the motion the complaint is made that the court erred in intimating an opinion as to the evidence in the case, in violation of section 4863 of the Code of 1910. The provisions of this section are mandatory; and if there is a violation of its terms, a reversal is demanded. However, we fail to see in the language used by the court any intimation as to what had or had not been proved with respect to the matter which the court was calling to the attention of the jury. The court charged: “You will determine whether or not the defendant [plaintiff] is entitled to a half interest in the real and personal property. She contends she is entitled to a half interest in this property. The defendant admits that she has $950 in the property. I have left that blank, and under the pleadings and evidence in this case you could not make it more than a half interest, and you could not make it less than $950, you to fill in that blank whatever interest you think she is entitled to in the property.” It is assigned as error “that said charge amounted to an inference that under the evidence the plaintiff might be entitled to recover a one-half interest in said property, whereas, under plaintiff’s own evidence, plaintiff would not have been entitled to recover any interest in the real estate in excess of the interest purchased by the payment of $1030 towards the total purchase-price of $5250.” It appears from the verdict that the court submitted the form- of the verdict which left blanks as to several particulars in which the parties were in dispute, and then instructed the jury how these blanks should be filled according to how the jury found with reference to the diverse contentions of the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.E. 665, 166 Ga. 850, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tribble-v-tribble-ga-1928.