Walz v. Walz

156 N.E. 828, 325 Ill. 553
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1927
DocketNo. 16610. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 828 (Walz v. Walz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walz v. Walz, 156 N.E. 828, 325 Ill. 553 (Ill. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

Lina Walz filed a bill against her husband, Jacob Walz, in the circuit court of Cook county, for separate maintenance, which was afterward amended so as to pray for a divorce on the ground of habitual drunkenness and for alimony. An answer was filed to the amended bill denying most of its material allegations. The cause was heard by the court, and on June 28, 1924, a decree was entered granting a divorce on the ground of habitual drunkenness and decreeing a conveyance of real estate, upon terms prescribed, in lieu of alimony. The defendant prayed an appeal to the Appellate Court, and that court, on his motion, ordered the cause transferred to this court on the ground that a freehold was involved.

The parties were married on December 12, 1895, and lived together for twenty-five years. They had two children, only one of whom was living, who was twenty years old at the time of the hearing. It is contended that there is not sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the finding of the decree that defendant was guilty of habitual drunkenness. The complainant testified that prior to the filing of the bill her husband would become intoxicated two or three times a week, or oftener. That began immediately after their marriage and continued practically all the time. He was a bottle-beer driver for Seipp’s for twenty-three or twenty-four years. He would go to his work at five o’clock in the morning and sometimes come home at midnight, sometimes at two or three o’clock in the afternoon, sometimes not until the next morning and sometimes not for a few days. This was during the whole time of the marriage. There was no regularity about his getting home. When he was intoxicated he would curse and swear and call her names and he used vile language. He would say he wanted to break up things around the house, but he never did break anything up. She could smell the liquor so that she had to open windows and doors, and he called her dirty names. She was corroborated by their twenty-year-old son, who was living with his mother, and testified that he had seen his father drunk or under the influence of liquor for weeks at a time, — pretty nearly every night,— and then there would be weeks when he would not be. He would frequently come home drunk and was generally belligerent and quarrelsome. His language was not decent and was profane. He called his wife vile names and treated her with little respect, and these actions had been going on as long as the boy could remember. The complainant’s sister, Mrs. Emma Becker, who lived near her on the same street, visited her at her home very often during their married life, — two or three times a week, — and would stay an hour or an evening, or sometimes the whole afternoon. She saw the defendant intoxicated quite often. When under the influence of liquor he was quarrelsome. He used profane language. She could not recall exactly what he said, but knew he was always quarreling with his wife about one thing or another.

The defendant denied that he ever drank to excess or ever got drunk, did not get drunk two or three or four times a week, and did not remember that he ever got drunk during his married life. His wife accused him of being out with other women, which angered him, but he always tried to treat her with respect. He never used exactly vile language, but would call her a louse or tell her she was beyond redemption. He never used anything worse ■ than that and did not think he ever swore at or cursed her.

Joseph Kugel, an artist, who was a near neighbor, testified that he had known the defendant about eight years and had seen him quite frequently during the last five or six years; that he had never seen him drunk; that he would see him in the early part of the evening, particularly in the summer months when he would be out of doors, and Kugel would go in and talk with him.

Oswald Meggison, who was business agent and secretary of the Bottle Drivers’ Union, testified that he had known the defendant since 1893 and had seen him two or three times a week for the last five or six years during the day and during the evening and never saw him drunk or under the influence of liquor. He testified: “I never smelled liquor on his breath; I never noticed that far because I might have had some myself.” On cross-examination he was asked whether there were any rules prevailing in the union as to the hours of employment of beer drivers by breweries, and he answered, “No, sir.” To the question, “They could go to work when they wanted to and remain as long as they wanted to?” he answered, “Work until you were drunk; we had no hours at all.”

From this evidence the court, which heard the witnesses, found that the charge of habitual drunkenness was proved, and we cannot say that the finding was not sustained by the evidence.

On June 20, 1921, the complainant and the defendant purchased a lot on Lawrence avenue, in the city of Chicago, improved with a two-flat frame building and a two-car frame garage, for $4000, subject to a mortgage for $2000, the complainant paying $1000 of her own money and the defendant $3000 of his money on the purchase price. This property, and a Ford truck worth about $140 owned by the defendant, is all the property which the parties own. The family had been occupying one of the flats, the defendant using a bed-room off the kitchen as a sleeping room and getting his meals elsewhere, and the complainant, with their son, using the rest of the house, the other flat and garage being rented for $52 a month. The court decreed that the defendant convey all his right, title and interest in this lot to the complainant in lieu of alimony, upon the payment by the complainant to the defendant of $1000 as soon after the entry of the decree as convenient, and $800 to be paid in monthly installments of $40, beginning July 15, 1924. It was also ordered that the defendant pay within......days the sum of $200 for her solicitor’s fees, and vacate the part of the premises now used and occupied by him within ten days from the entry of the decree. It is contended by the appellant that this part of the decree is unreasonable and unjust; that he should not be decreed to convey to the complainant, in lieu of alimony, the premises in which he has invested $3000 and she only $1000, but that alimony should have been decreed in a certain sum, payable at stated periods, and should remain within the power of the court to increase or diminish, as may be just, and that the interests of the parties in the real estate should be decreed to be one-fourth in the complainant and three-fourths in the defendant.

It is the ordinary rule that a decree for alimony should not vest the fee of the husband’s real estate in the wife except where special circumstances exist justifying such a decree. (Ross v. Ross, 78 Ill. 402; Robbins v. Robbins, 101 id. 416; Shaw v. Shaw, 114 id. 586.) Where no contribution has been made from the wife’s means to the acquisition of the property, the court will not be justified, upon granting a divorce to the wife, in decreeing the title of the husband’s lands to her except in case of some special equity arising out of the particular facts in the case. (Wilson v. Wilson, 102 Ill. 297; Champion v. Myers, 207 id. 308.) Where such special equity does exist the power of the court to render such a decree is well established. (Bergen v. Bergen, 22 Ill. 187; Armstrong v. Armstrong, 35 id. 109; Meighen v. Meighen, 307 id.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 828, 325 Ill. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walz-v-walz-ill-1927.