Worth v. Worth

68 P.2d 881, 51 Wyo. 488, 1937 Wyo. LEXIS 34
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1937
Docket1997
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 P.2d 881 (Worth v. Worth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worth v. Worth, 68 P.2d 881, 51 Wyo. 488, 1937 Wyo. LEXIS 34 (Wyo. 1937).

Opinions

This case comes before this court again on direct appeal proceedings to review a judgment of the district court of Laramie County. As case No. 1881, appealed from a judgment therein by the district court of Platte County, it was by an opinion filed here October 1, 1935, (Worth v. Worth, 48 Wyo. 441, 49 P.2d 649), returned to that court for a new trial. Subsequently, upon stipulation of the parties, the venue was changed to the district court of Laramie County, where the case was retried before the court, with a jury in attendance, commencing on the 26th day of February, 1936. *Page 492

In this second trial the jury again found for the plaintiff, the daughter-in-law, against the parents of her husband, Harold Worth, who are the defendants G.M. Worth and Kate Worth, returning a verdict in the sum of $7,500.00, upon which the court entered the judgment aforesaid.

The opinion heretofore rendered by this court in the case considered sundry errors of law in connection with instructions refused and rulings relating to evidence. On the new record now before us but three questions are argued and submitted for our disposition, viz.: (1) Was there substantial evidence to support the verdict of the jury; (2) Was the verdict of the jury the result of passion and prejudice; and, (3) Is the verdict and judgment excessive?

While the question of the sufficiency of the evidence was argued at length upon the previous hearing, we did not undertake to rule on that matter, although some comments were made. A brief outline simply of the facts presented then was given. Due to the nature of the questions at this time presented, it becomes necessary to review more in detail the evidence now set forth in the record and especially that in behalf of the plaintiff, Margery Worth, whose testimony and evidence a second time has received the favorable verdict of a jury.

Plaintiff and her husband were married on December 23, 1927. At that time she was teaching school and continued so to do until May 20, 1928. Her husband at the time of their marriage was working in Scottsbluff, Nebraska, and immediately thereafter was employed in the Sunrise iron mines until March 1, 1928, when at the request of the defendants, he went to work on their ranch in the vicinity of Wheatland. His parents promised him that he would receive as compensation the money necessary for living expenses and the balance in the form of an interest in livestock. Upon the close of *Page 493 her school term Margery joined her husband at the ranch home of the defendants. She had theretofore objected to this arrangement as unwise, pointing out that two families thus situated frequently do not get along well, but her objections were met by the parents' suggestion that the house was large and it could be divided so that the young folks would have their own apartment. The suggested plan was not carried out, however, until June, 1929.

Harold and his wife subsequent to their arrival at the ranch and for nearly a year thereafter, therefore, lived with the defendants as one family. There do not appear to have been any difficulties until the fall of the year 1928, when the defendants began to complain nearly every day of plaintiff not doing the work, she undertaking then to perform practically all the housework, cooking and taking care of the poultry. At this time but one hired man was employed on the ranch, although there were occasions when more were employed. When these criticisms were directed at the young wife she had become pregnant, and about half the time, as she says, it was very hard for her to do the work and she was ill frequently. She continued, however, to carry on the housework until about a week before the child was born. During this period continued and additional criticism seems to have been directed against Margery by both Mr. and Mrs. Worth, in the presence of their son Harold, reflecting on plaintiff's family, to the effect that she had not come from a very good family, that they had nothing in a financial way and did not amount to much.

The expectant mother planned a layette for the child and made a list of the things she would need. Mrs. Kate Worth watched Margery prepare the list and afterwards had a conversation with Harold in an adjoining room, overheard by the latter's wife, in which Harold's mother complained of the list as too expensive. *Page 494 The amount to be expended had theretofore been agreed upon between the young folks as the sum of $10.00. After talking with his mother, Harold immediately returned to his wife, and, pursuant to the mother's directions, told the wife that she was buying too extravagantly and getting a lot of things that she did not need, asking her, with some profanity, if she did not intend to do any washing. The young husband at this time appears to have reflected the criticisms of his wife suggested by his parents, as he told her that she was lazy, that she had no interest in her home or in him, and that all she thought of was parties and wanting to play bridge. She never played bridge after she was married, as she testified.

The child was born at the hospital in Wheatland, Wyoming, on March 15, 1929, and lived but eighteen days. A few days before the child died, while Margery was in bed, under the care of the physician in attendance and was, as she testified, "paralyzed," a condition known to Mrs. Kate Worth, she overheard a conversation between Harold and his mother just outside her door in the hospital, in which Mrs. Worth told Harold that Margery had been in the hospital long enough, that she was not trying to help herself or trying to get up, that she could get up if she wanted to, and that she was just running up a bill. Up to that time the son had made no complaint of the situation, but immediately thereafter, he came into his wife's room, and in angry tones told her that he thought she had been there long enough and that she should try to get up and get out as quickly as possible. At the time this conversation occurred the wife had been unable to sit up, and she remained in the hospital for five weeks, under the daily care of the attending physician. Upon Margery's return to the ranch she was still unable to walk. At this time Mr. G.M. Worth said to Margery in Harold's presence that there would not be any work done on the *Page 495 place if Mrs. Kate Worth became ill and was not able to do it. This was just a few days after Margery had returned from the hospital.

In June or July of 1929 Harold and his wife moved into a part of the ranch house which had been separated for their use and where they had expected to go upon their first arrival at the ranch. On one occasion during the summer of 1929 Harold was absent over Sunday, and that afternoon being extremely warm, Margery went in bathing with friends of the Worth family. They had taken their bathing suits with them, Mr. G.M. Worth had seen them go, and at the time made no objection. Mr. G.M. Worth, as well as a number of the residents of the neighborhood, went also at the time to bathe in the same lake where the young folks had gone. When Margery returned Mrs. Kate Worth declined to speak to her, and shortly afterwards Mr. G.M. Worth came in and accused her of "terrible disgraceful conduct" in going swimming without her husband being present. Mr. G.M. Worth also told her at that time that he would not be surprised at her doing so because she was not a decent person and never had been. Shortly afterwards Mrs. Kate Worth entered the apartment and she reiterated the accusations of her husband.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Summerfield v. Pringle
144 P.2d 214 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P.2d 881, 51 Wyo. 488, 1937 Wyo. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worth-v-worth-wyo-1937.