Wiggins v. Wiggins

148 P.2d 793, 174 Or. 181, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 13
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 793 (Wiggins v. Wiggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiggins v. Wiggins, 148 P.2d 793, 174 Or. 181, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 13 (Or. 1944).

Opinion

*182 HAY, J.

This suit was instituted by the respondent and cross-appellant against her husband, the appellant, for dissolution of the marriage relation existing between them. The amended complaint alleged cruel and inhuman treatment. The defendant answered by general denial, and, affirmatively alleging cruel and inhuman treatment on the part of plaintiff, he prayed for a decree of judicial separation from bed and board. (Chapter 408, L. 1941.)

The parties intermarried at Weiser, Idaho, on December 4,1937. They were hardly old enough to assume the responsibilities of marriage, Mrs. Wiggins being at that time only sixteen and Mr. Wiggins eighteen. For about a year, they lived with the husband’s parents at Midvale, Idaho. This was an unsatisfactory arrangement, as is often the ease. Mrs. Wiggins was unable to get along with her relatives-in-law, and, in an effort to avoid discord, the couple removed to the state of Oregon in March, 1939. A son, Tony LeRoy Wiggins, was born to them in September, 1940. Each of the parties seeks to be awarded custody of the child.

At the conclusion of the hearing and after consideration of the evidence, the trial judge intimated, in a letter to the respective attorneys, that he was of the opinion that neither party was entitled to affirmative relief. He accordingly entered a decree dismissing both the plaintiff’s complaint and the defendant’s cross-complaint. From this decree, both parties have appealed.

As the trial judge did not file a memorandum opinion or make findings of fact, this court is obliged to speculate to some extent as to the reasons for his decision. Evidence was introduced upon the part of *183 each of the parties which, if believed, would have been sufficient, we think, to have justified a decree in favor of either. We must assume, therefore, that the trial judge was of the opinion that the parties were in pari delicto, and hence that neither was entitled to relief in a court of equity.

The plaintiff testified that her husband struck her on two occasions, one of which was in Idaho, shortly after their marriage, and the other at Bend, in July, 1941. Neither of these incidents appeared to have made much impression upon her memory, and she seemed to be uncertain respecting the details. She admitted that she was not seriously hurt. The first alleged assault is not even mentioned in either the original or the amended complaint. She said that her husband, on two occasions, falsely accused her with having had improper relations with other men. The first time was in Idaho, when the accusation was supposed to have been made in the presence of her mother. The second was in Bend, shortly before the institution of this suit, and as to this incident we are of the opinion that the proof was insufficient. Three times, after family quarrels, she left her husband, not intending to return, but, after a longer or shorter interval, she did return. Mrs. Wiggins claims that her husband was very jealous of her, and that they quarreled over every man she looked at. She was very fond of attending dances and other social gatherings, while he, on the contrary, preferred to remain at home or to visit with a few family friends. Mr. Wiggins is a logger. His work is strenuous, and he comes home tired. He does not dance, having tried, without success, to acquire the art. Under the circumstances, he is not inclined to spend in attendance at public dances, where he might have the privilege of watching his wife dancing with other men, the time that, as he thinks, he needs *184 for rest. One might, perhaps, sympathize with both of these yonng people at this point, and it must be said, to the credit of Mrs. Wiggins, that for a time she tried to keep her desire for dancing in subordination to her wifely duties, and to observe the amenities of her situation. In the last few months of their life together, however, she formed the habit of going to dances unaccompanied by her husband. She testified that he objected to this, but that it “didn’t do him any good”.

In May, 1943, at a public dance, Mrs. Wiggins became casually acquainted with a soldier who was stationed at Camp Abbott, near Bend. This soldier apparently took a violent liking to her at first sight, and, before the evening was over, he asked her to divorce her husband and marry him. Whether or not Mrs. Wiggins considered seriously the soldier’s sudden and unconventional proposal, at all events she told her husband about it that same night, and undoubtedly, and very naturally, he resented it. Mrs. Wiggins thereupon demanded that he consent to a divorce, and, from that time until she brought the present suit, a period of about three months, she refused to cohabit with him. She continued to live in his home and ate the food provided at his expense, but refused to cook his meals or to wash the dishes. Every day, on his return from work, he was obliged either to cook his own dinner or eat at a public restaurant.

In an endeavor to keep the marriage from going on the rocks, Wiggins raised some money by selling his car, and contracted for the purchase of a somewhat better home than the one in which the family had been living. He also did his best, but without success, to persuade Mrs. Wiggins to have nothing further to do with the soldier. She, however, insisted that she did not *185 love her husband, and that she intended to divorce him and marry the soldier. On the day that she filed suit, she left his home and took up her residence in the apartment of one of her aunts. This young woman (she was only twenty-three) was herself divorced, and was one of Mrs. Wiggins’s most enthusiastic witnesses at the hearing of this cause.

In July, 1943, after having expressed her determination to divorce her husband, Mrs. Wiggins decided to go to Idaho to visit her grandmother. Her husband, notwithstanding their strained relationship, furnished her with the money to make this trip, and she purchased a ticket for the journey by stage from Bend to Weiser, Idaho. Evidently by prearrangement, however, she left the stage at Brothers, Oregon, which is only a few miles out of Bend, and was met there by her youthful aunt and a man friend of the latter’s, who conveyed her by car to Redmond, Oregon, where she stayed overnight. Next morning she proceeded to Portland, where she remained for three days. She had taken her child with her. She claimed that it was not her intention to return to her husband, and that her reason for going to Portland was to find employment. While in Portland she stayed at two different hotels, but professed to be unable to remember the name of either of them. Thereafter, she proceeded by train to Weiser. Meanwhile, her husband had telephoned to Weiser, and had learned that his wife had not arrived there. Accompanied by plaintiff’s aunt, he went to Weiser, where, on Mrs. Wiggins’s arrival, they had a spirited argument. He returned to Bend, and Mrs. Wiggins promised to, and actually did, follow him there after spending a few days with her grandmother. Mr. Wiggins apparently believed that she was not telling the truth about her *186 Portland trip, and Ms counsel, in Ms brief, insinuates that her visit to Portland was not so innocent as she claimed. While there is no evidence to support this insinuation, it must be admitted that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 793, 174 Or. 181, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-wiggins-or-1944.