Woodroof v. Barrington

1947 OK 247, 184 P.2d 771, 199 Okla. 125, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 596
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1947
DocketNo. 32786
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1947 OK 247 (Woodroof v. Barrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodroof v. Barrington, 1947 OK 247, 184 P.2d 771, 199 Okla. 125, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 596 (Okla. 1947).

Opinion

LUTTRELL, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff, .Clive Woodroof, against defendant, Shelby G. Barring-ton, administrator of the estate of Treva Woodroof, deceased, to vacate a judgment for alimony and division of property, formerly rendered in favor of Treva Woodroof and against Clive Wood-roof, and for an accounting for certain sums of money in the hands of defendant administrator, and certain rents and profits alleged to’have been collected by him. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to plaintiff’s amended petition; plaintiff elected to stand on the amended petition and thereupon the trial court dismissed the action. Plaintiff appeals.

The appeal is by transcript and the pleadings and journal entry of judgment in the divorce ease, brought by Treva Woodroof against the plaintiff, Clive Woodroof, are attached to the amended petition filed by plaintiff. Therefrom it appears that by her petition filed in February, 1942, Treva Woodroof sued the defendant for divorce, alimony and a division of jointly acquired property. To her petition Clive Woodroof filed an answer denying generally “the allegations for grounds of divorce as alleged in plaintiff’s petition.” The journal entry of judgment in said cause shows that trial was begun on April 24, 1942, and that the case was taken under advisement until May 9, 1942; that on May 9, 1942, the plaintiff advised the court that she preferred to have a decree of separate maintenance instead of a divorce, and a settlement of all property rights between plaintiff and defendant; that the defendant had evidenced his willingness to such modification and to pay to the plaintiff separate maintenance in the sum of $30 per month, and that thereupon the court, after consent by defendant through his counsel in open court, approved said modification and agreement; that thereupon the court [126]*126found that the defendant in said action was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment as alleged in plaintiffs petition, and that plaintiff was entitled to a decree for separate maintenance and a settlement of property rights, and divided the property between the parties, awarding the plaintiff, Treva Woodroof, two pieces of property in Tulsa together with the household goods and personal property therein, and awarding the remainder of the property to the defendant, Clive Woodroof. The court directed both parties to execute quitclaim deeds conveying to the other party the property awarded to such other party, but apparently this was not done.

Plaintiff, in his petition in the instant case, states that in the month of May, 1942, the date not being shown, he and Treva Woodroof became reconciled, and maintained the relation of husband and wife until November 2, 1943, at which time he was adjudged insane' and committed to the Eastern Oklahoma Hospital at Vinita; that in 1944 he was paroled from said institution and went to the State of Kansas where he has resided since that time, and that on April 1, 1945, he was ordered discharged by the superintendent of said institution. Pie alleges that the judgment in the divorce action, in so far as a division of property was concerned, is void 'and a nullity and invested the deceased, Treva Woodroof, with no right, title or interest in and to the real estate thereby adjudged to be her property. Treva Woodroof died October 23, 1945; letters of administration were issued to defendant on November 4, 1945, and he has since that date acted as administrator. This action was commenced on December 11, 1945.

Plaintiff contends that Treva Wood-roof, by her statement to the court in the divorce proceeding that she preferred to have a decree of separate maintenance and settlement of property rights instead of a divorce, elected to abandon her suit for divorce, and by such election brought the action within the provisions of 12 O.S. 1941 §1284, which provides ’ that the wife or husband may obtain alimony from the other without a divorce in an action brought for that purpose, citing in support of his contention Williams v. Williams, 103 Okla. 194, 229 P. 797; Lewis v. Lewis, 39 Okla. 407, 135 P. 397; Anderson v. Anderson, 140 Okla. 168, 282 P. 335; Harden v. Harden, 182 Okla. 364, 77 P. 2d 721, and other authorities. Examination of all these cases discloses that in each the action was originally brought for alimony or separate maintenance without divorce under the provisions of the section above cited. In them the court held, either inferentially or expressly, that in an action brought only for alimony or separate maintenance, the trial court was without authority to divide the property of the parties. The factual differences between those cases and the case at bar render the decisions inapplicable to the instant case.

The divorce proceeding involved in the instant case was not originally brought under said section but, as above stated, was an action for divorce, alimony and the division of jointly acquired property. We do not -agree that when she waived her right to obtain a decree of divorce, the plaintiff in that action, Treva Woodroof, thereby changed her action to one for alimony or separate maintenance only, for she specifically affirmed her desire for division of the property, and the defendant in that action agreed that the court could divide the property between the parties.

We are inclined to the view that by her action Treva Woodroof brought herself within the provisions of 12 O.S. 1941 §1275. That section provides as follows:

“When the parties appear to be in equal wrong, the court may in its discretion refuse to grant a divorce, and in any such case or in any other case where a divorce is refused, the court may for good cause shown make such [127]*127order as may be proper for the custody, maintenance, and education of the children, and for the control and equitable division and disposition of the property of the parties, or of either of them, as may be proper, equitable and just, having due regard to the time and manner of acquiring such property, whether the title thereto be in either or both of said parties.”

While the section uses the term “in any other case where a divorce is refused”, we think that the word “refused” is used in a broad sense, and that the Legislature thereby granted to the district court the right to divide the property when good cause for such division is shown in any case involving marital difficulties in which a divorce is for any reason not granted.

In Hicks v. Conn (Ky.) 109 S.W. 2d 811, the court considered a statute requiring notice of an election to be published in a newspaper unless the proprietor of the newspaper “refuses to publish said advertisement”. The Court of Appeals of Kentucky, in considering the meaning of the term “refuses” as used in the statute, said:

“The word ‘refuses’, like many other words in our language, is elastic and is of somewhat varied signification according to the context in which it is found and the nature of the subject-matter to which it refers. Refusal usually implies a previous demand or request or the existence of circumstances equivalent thereto. But, as stated in Mackey v. U. S. (C.C.A. 6) 290 F. 18, to ‘refuse’ does not necessarily imply to deny deliberately a previous demand. One of the general definitions of ‘refuse’ is to ‘withhold.’ Webster’s New International Dictionary. The word has been given judicial construction as being a synonym of failure.”

The statute above quoted was adopted from Kansas and the decisions of that state construing it, although not conclusive, are very persuasive.

In Wulf v. Fitzpatrick (Kan.) 261 P.

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Bluebook (online)
1947 OK 247, 184 P.2d 771, 199 Okla. 125, 1947 Okla. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodroof-v-barrington-okla-1947.