Vollbrecht v. Vollbrecht

131 N.W.2d 651, 178 Neb. 31, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 36
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1964
Docket35740
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 131 N.W.2d 651 (Vollbrecht v. Vollbrecht) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vollbrecht v. Vollbrecht, 131 N.W.2d 651, 178 Neb. 31, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 36 (Neb. 1964).

Opinion

Dierks, District Judge.

This is a divorce action commenced on April 19, 1963, by the husband, Mel von Vollbrecht, plaintiff-appellee, against the wife, Viola Vollbrecht, defendant-appellant. The ground for divorce alleged by plaintiff was extreme cruelty. Defendant originally cross-petitioned for divorce on ground of physical cruelty and on October 22, 1963, amended such cross-petition to also charge that plaintiff committed adultery with a certain named woman.

The trial court granted an absolute divorce to plaintiff husband and awarded to him custody of the three minor children of the parties and allowed reasonable visitation privileges between defendant wife and said children. The cross-petition of defendant was dismissed. Defendant was awarded alimony of $4,000, payable in annual installments of $500 each, commencing-January *33 1, 1964, without interest, except any delinquent installments were to draw interest as provided by law, and she was also awarded her personal effects. All other property, real and personal, was awarded and assigned to plaintiff, and costs were taxed against plaintiff, including a fee of $400' for services of defendant’s attorney and a fee of $20 to one Dennis L. Poeschl, who made an appraisal of the property and testified on behalf of defendant with reference thereto.

Defendant appeals and assigns various errors, all of which will be considered under the following contentions: In awarding the divorce to plaintiff and in not granting the divorce to defendant for the husband’s alleged adultery, in not giving custody of the youngest child, JoAnn, to defendant, and for the insufficiency of alimony awarded to defendant.

Plaintiff and defendant were married February 4, 1942. Four children were born to the marriage. They are Roseann, born September 19, 1943; Arnold, born March 18, 1946; Nancy, born August 2, 1950,' and JoAnn, born May 1, 1957. Roseann is now married and resides with her husband, Terry Daniel, and is no longer dependent on her parents. The three younger children still resided at home with their father at the time of trial. The defendant has been working full time at the Hilltop Cafe for about 3 months. The record reflects that plaintiff’ was 44 years old at the time of trial, but it does not reflect defendant’s age.

During the entire marriage the plaintiff has farmed and at times has fed a few cattle and hogs that he raised. In the early years of the marriage the defendant helped with the actual field work, when necessary, until the son, Arnold, was old enough to help his. father, which he did soon after attaining school age. In 1946 plaintiff bought the farm where they have since lived and reared their children. It comprises 240 acres, situated in Stanton County, Nebraska, with approximately 80 acres of farm ground and balance in pasture. He has for many *34 years also rented an additional 80 acres of farm ground.

Even the early years of the marriage were not entirely free of family arguments and name calling between the parties, but it was not until the last 10 years before final separation that, according to plaintiff’s testimony, it was horrible. Plaintiff testified that defendant accused him constantly of going out with other women, but that he never went near another woman as long as he lived with her. Such accusations would be made in front of the children. In 1959 plaintiff and the boy were farming 400 acres and defendant accused them of running after women instead of working. Defendant would sleep all day and yell all night. The boy and plaintiff had to sleep in the barn to get any rest.

The defendant’s stepfather and mother, Mr. & Mrs. George R. Hall, lived in Norfolk, Nebraska, and plaintiff testified that defendant would leave home and stay a couple of days. She usually went to- her folks and then plaintiff would go get her. A lot of times she would get mad on the farm and leave the house at night and plaintiff would go out and hunt for her practically all night. The youngest daughter, JoAnn, stayed with her grandmother, Mrs. Hall, after she was about 4 months old until the spring of 1958, but after that plaintiff and Roseann took care of her. The defendant’s screaming would make the child cling to him like he was her last hope. The mother resented her and every 2 or 3 weeks she would lock the child out, tell her to go out with her dad, and then plaintiff would take her with him on the tractor to the field. She was scared to death of her mother.

Defendant started to work at the Lazy L Restaurant in Norfolk in August 1961. For the first 4 months she stayed with her folks in Norfolk, but after that she stayed at home and drove plaintiff’s car back and forth to work. Out of her wages she bought Roseann’s wedding dress, a suit for Arnold, and a rug for the house that cost about $30. She left the family home permanently *35 in early September 1962. Before leaving she accused plaintiff of putting his arm around another woman 20 years ago, plaintiff called her a liar, and she got mad. She was still mad when Roseann came oyer the next day to can tomatoes. Plaintiff was on the porch fixing Nancy’s bicycle tire when Roseann and Terry came. Defendant came out of the house yelling, threw a ketchup bottle and plate at plaintiff, and broke the plate. He and Terry went up in the yard and defendant came up there with the broken half of the plate and was going to slice him with it, but he took it away from her. She grabbed the pitchfork and took after him and he ran. On September 8, 1962, defendant left with her folks and stayed away until after Easter 1963. The family did not know where she was. Plaintiff tried to locate her by checking different employment offices in Nebraska. Her folks said they did not know where she was and even went to Columbus with plaintiff to try to find her.

The three oldest children corroborated the plaintiff’s testimony with reference to specific instances occurring in their presence of arguments between the parents leading to attempted violence by the mother on the father. The oldest daughter, Roseann Daniel, verified the incident that occurred the day she went over to can tomatoes when the father was' fixing the innertube on the porch and the mother came flying out of the house, threw the ketchup bottle and Melmac plate with such force that the plate broke, and that he ran when she threw the pitchfork. Roseann further testified that her mother had the idea her father was stepping out on her and that he was having affairs with other women and meeting them in the cornfield or on the road or in town. It would start 'an argument and she would attack him with some object, anything near, lamps, skillets, baseball bats, and he would try to wrestle the object away from her and then it would be a fight. He never hit, her the first blow but he had defended himself. The mother’s loud talking *36 and yelling at the father really began about the time she found out she was pregnant with Joanie (JoAnn). Roseann further testified: “I’ve seen her try to stab him with butcher knives and one time try to ax him with an axe and there would be a fight when he tried to take it away from her.”

The daughter Nancy testified on rebuttal that she heard her mother accuse her father about every other night of going out with other women, and that when she threw things at him he would only fight back in self-defense.

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.W.2d 651, 178 Neb. 31, 1964 Neb. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vollbrecht-v-vollbrecht-neb-1964.