Wehrenbrecht v. Wehrenbrecht

207 S.W. 290, 200 Mo. App. 452, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 174
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 290 (Wehrenbrecht v. Wehrenbrecht) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wehrenbrecht v. Wehrenbrecht, 207 S.W. 290, 200 Mo. App. 452, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 174 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

— Plaintiff brought his action against the defendant, his wife, for divorce. The parties were married in the city of St. Louis, December, 1886. The action was commenced in July, 1917.

After averring that during all the times mentioned in the petition plaintiff “faithfully demeaned himself and discharged all his duties as the husband of defendant, and at all times treated her with kindness and affection, hut the said defendant, wholly disregarding her duties as the wife of the plaintiff, has offered plaintiff* such indignities as to render his condition intolerable, in this, to-wit,” the petition charges numerous indignities. Summarizing them, they charge false accusations by defendant to other people of improper relations by plaintiff with married women; improper and Immoral conduct in regard to his children, in exposing his person to and spying on his daughters; express[454]*454ing the wish on many occasions that plaintiff had died instead of a son of theirs, who died when about 5 years of age; expressing a desire to hill plaintiff; that she would kill him sometime; that she had stated at many times that the family would he better off if plaintiff were dead; that she would not mourn if he were dead and that when he died she would warn their pastor not to say a good word fojr him at the funeral; accused him to members of their church of being a hypocrite; that defendant complained to and had him haled before the Assistant Circuit Attorney as a vagrant; had him tried upon a1 vagrancy charge, which she had lodged against him; that defendant continually nagged and scolded him in the presence of other people and of their children; ridiculed and belittled plaintiff before others, and continually complained about him to her own and plaintiff’s friends and had told plaintiff many times in the presence of their children that she hated him and was sorry she had ever met him and would rather wash for a living than live with him; had told many people that she hated him; that she had lost all love for him and believed he was losing his reason; had told plaintiff in the presence of their children that nobody had any use for him; that everybody knew him and if it were not for him, she would have more friends; that she had no use for him except for the money she could get out of him; told plaintiff to give his money to his family'and leave; that defendant-had said, to plaintiff that he (plaintiff) did not know whether the deceased son was his son or not; asserted that he had always hated their children and had never done anything for them; accused plaintiff of earning more money than he told her of and of using part of it to keep another woman; and of meanness to her and his family.

The petition continues with a number of other charges along this line. Averring the necessary jurisdiction of facts, plaintiff prays a decree of divorce.

It is set out in the petition that four children were born of the marriage, the eldest, a son, dying when about 5 years old.

[455]*455The answer, beyond the admission of the marriage and the birth of the children, denies' all the allegations of the petition and avers that 'plaintiff was not the injured and innocent party and was not entitled to a divorce.

There was a trial before the court, lasting parts of several days, and at its conclusion the court denied the petition of plaintiff and dismissed the case. Interposing a motion for new trial and excepting to its being overruled, plaintiff has appealed.

We have read all of the somewhat voluminous record of the testimony in this case and do not think that it would subserve any public interest to attempt to set it out in detail, or even to summarize all of it. It is sufficient to say of it that there was testimony on the part of plaintiff in support of many of the more serious allegations of indignities pleaded, these sustained not alone by the testimony of plaintiff himself but by that of other witnesses. In point of fact, a number of the charges were admitted by the defendant, or corroborated by the testimony of her own witnesses. Reading the whole testimony in the case and giving it the consideration we, as an appellate court, in a case of this kind, are bound to do, our conclusion is, that plaintiff made out a case entitling him to a decree. It appears that almost from the beginning of the marital life of these parties, there has been constant quarrelling and bickering, often brought on by one of the daughters, particularly, who seems on all occasions to have sided with her mother and has invariably taken her mother’s view of the case as to the relations between them, apparently without any love or respect for her father. Defendant had plaintiff arrested as a vagrant. He was acquitted of that charge. The last time he left home his wife told him, in effect, never to return. In short, the testimony tends to show that the plaintiff, throughout practically the whole of their married life, has been subjected to what is commonly referred to as “nagging” on the part of his wife, usually over the most trivial, sometimes over serious matters of domestic polity. [456]*456She and her daughters, socially ambitious, complained of the neighborhood in which they lived, and were continually urging removal to other neighborhoods; when he left they did move into another locality.

The question then arises, was plaintiff debarred from relief because he was not an “innocent and injured party??’ While plaintiff himself was not blameless in all these matters, the weight of the testimony, as it strikes us, is, that within the meaning of the law, he was the injured and innocent party.

It is rather curious that section 2370, Revised Statutes 1909, does not use the word “innocent,” only providing that for any of the causes mentioned “the injured party” may obtain a divorce. In section 2372, providing for a cross-bill, as it is called, if is enacted that “if the court shall be satisfied that the defendant is the injured party, it shall enter judgment divorcing the defendant from the said plaintiff, as prayed in the answer.” Nevertheless, it has always been assumed in 'our pleadings that an averment should, in effect, be made that plaintiff, or defendant, is both the innocent as well as the injured party, or words of similar import. As the chapter on divorce and alimony appears in the revision of 1845 (see p. 426, sec. 1), the language is: “The innocent and injured party may obtain a divorce from the bonds of matrimony.” In the old ease of Nagel v. Nagel, 12 Mo. 53, these words are referred to as necessary under the law as it stood in 1845. The words “innocent and” were left out of the revision of 1855 (as see 1 Revised Statutes 1855, p. 662, see. 1), as they had previously been left out in the Act of March 12, 1849 (see Laws 1849, p. 49, sec. 1), which amended the chapter concerning divorce as it stood in the revision of 1845, and so they have remained to the present day. Referring to this omission, Judge Bliss, speaking for our Supreme Court, said, in Hoffman v. Hoffman, 43 Mo. 547, l. c. 549, that it was not clear why the word £ £ innocent’ ’ had been left out,£ £ unless regarded as superfluous, or — more likely — to conform to section 3 (chap. 114, p. 561, Revised Statutes 1865, which [457]*457is now section 2370, Revised Statutes 1909), where a divorce is provided for the defendant if the conrt shall find that he or she is ‘the injured party.’ ” It is further held in Hoffman v.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 290, 200 Mo. App. 452, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wehrenbrecht-v-wehrenbrecht-moctapp-1918.