Turner v. Turner

262 S.W. 257, 203 Ky. 327, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 890
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 23, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 262 S.W. 257 (Turner v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Turner, 262 S.W. 257, 203 Ky. 327, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 890 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Appellant and defendant below, Boy Turner, and tbe appellee and plaintiff below, Lou Turner, were married on April 25, 1921, in Butler county, Kentucky. It was tbe second venture for each of tbe parties on tbe matrimonial bark, altbougb tbey were yet comparatively young in years. They each bad children by their first marriage and plaintiff since tbe death of her first bus-band bad lived with her father-in-law, a Mr. Anderson, with whom also resided a bachelor son, Yeacbel Anderson, a brother-in-law of plaintiff, and who was about forty years of age. Plaintiff obtained from tbe estate of her first husband about $700.00 in personal property, which she bad at tbe time of her marriage to defendant. After tbe marriage she moved but a short distance away to the home of her newly acquired husband carrying with her, of course, her infant children. So far as the proof shows, she presided over the household of her [328]*328husband as truly becomes a loyal "wife, until the morning of June 24, 1921, just fifty-nine days after the marriage, when she was informed by her husband for the first time that he was dissatisfied with the marriage relation and that he had concluded that they had best “shake hands and say good-bye.”' The gruff and unceremonious announcement not only astonished plaintiff, but greatly shocked and grieved her. Her husband, however, made known his determination and told her that he had arranged with his brother, the defendant, Callie Turner, to represent him and asked her to select her representative and for the two to meet and draw up a contract of separation which was to include a settlement of the property rights between the parties. In her dethroned and perturbed condition, plaintiff consented to the proposition of her husband and selected her brother as her representative, and he and defendant’s brother met later in the day at the residence of the parties when the defendant was absent, but the plaintiff was present in the house though crying and weeping practically all the time. A contract was drawn up, but it is not made a part of this record though pertinent excerpts therefrom are contained in the record, and they show that it was agreed that defendant would not oppose the granting of a divorce to plaintiff and that he would pay the cost thereof should an action therefor be filed by her, and in settlement of the property rights he agreed to pay her $250.00, $100,00 cash and a note for $150.00 signed by his brothsr, Callie, as surety. The latter, speaking for his brother-, the defendant, immediately upon the execution of that agreement informed plaintiff that a tenant on the place would be ready later in the day to' haul her household goods away from the house and take them to whatever place she desired, which was accordingly done, plaintiff not seeing her husband any more after he delivered to her his parting message in the earlier part of the day.

Before cashing the check, plaintiff realized the cold and inconsiderate treatment that she had received from her husband and she offered to return to him the check and the note, and afterwards filed this action in the Butler circuit court against him and his brother, Callie, praying as against the former that the settlement contract be set aside because of fraud and concealment in its obtention and her disturbed mental condition at the time, and she prayed fora judgment against .him for her main-' [329]*329tenance. She also sought against both defendants the cancellation of a deed which she and her husband executed to his brother the day or second day before the execution of the settlement contract, on the ground that it was made in fraud of her marital rights and" to prevent her from recovering alimony or maintenance when the separation, already determined upon by her husband, should occur. She also alleged in her petition wrongful treatment at the hands of her husband and that he refused to support her and drove her from his home without fault on her part. The answer denied the allegations of the petition and relied on the separation agreement. Issues were formed by subsequent plead ings, and after proof taken, much of which was incompetent, the court cancelled the separation agreement, adjudged the deed-to the husband’s brother as in fraud of plaintiff’s rights'and sustained the attachment which she obtained upon the filing of the suit and which was levied upon the land, and gave plaintiff a judgment ■against her husband for $500.00, an attorney’s fee of $100.00 and the cost of the action, together with a small allowance pending the suit in the circuit court. From that judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The defendant, Boy Turner, seeks to justify his unnatural and, as we think, unjustifiable conduct, upon the ground that the father-in-law and brother-in-law of plaintiff wrongfully interfered with his rights as her husband, in advising her after the marriage with reference to her duty in preserving for the benefit of her children the personal property she obtained from her first husband, which advice from them seems to have been very offensive to the defendant and as he insists justified his separation from his wife and shipping her to other ■quarters. The record does not disclose any quarrels or ■disturbing contentions on the part of plaintiff growing out of that matter. On the contrary, it appears from the record that she possessed a gentle and noncombative ■disposition and fully comprehended her wifely duties with an accompanying desire to perform them. She, of •course, wanted to observe the right, and proper course with reference to her pittance of property, and if it was her duty to preserve it and expend it for the benefit of her children, from whose father she obtained it, she desired to do so, but she neither assumed nor manifested to the defendant any fixed or determined purpose to do ■so; nor does it even appear that he insisted otherwise, [330]*330but his grievance seems to have rested upon only the fact that such advice was given to his wife by the relatives of her first husband instead of by himself; and which action on their part he concluded was a gross interference with his rights. Under the law, as it now stands, the personal property obtained by plaintiff from her first husband was her separate estate and defendant had no rights in it over and beyond what might be given him by his wife, and it requires no further comment to show that this ground of justification is wholly without merit.

A second justification for his conduct, as urged by the defendant, was a veiled intimation by him that plaintiff was unduly familiar with her brother-in-law, Veachel Anderson, who with her father-in-law gave her the advice to which he objected. In support of this contention the proof shows that the children of plaintiff were very much attached to their uncle, which attachment was reciprocated by him. About twice per week during the fifty-nine days plaintiff and defendant were married and living together the brother-in-law, while driving his automobile, would pass by and stop in front of the house and more frequently than otherwise he would not get out, but the children and sometimes plaintiff would come to the front gate and converse with him. Once or twice he got out of the automobile and went into the house, but in no case was his visit accompanied with the slightest suspicious facts or circumstances. It is also in proof that he went with plaintiff to the merchant to obtain her wedding trousseau when she married defendant. The foregoing is all the evidence to sustain this alleged justification and it is perfectly apparent that it must share the same fate as the first one.

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Hulett v. Hulett
80 Ky. 364 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1882)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 257, 203 Ky. 327, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-turner-kyctapp-1924.