Young v. Young

162 N.W. 993, 196 Mich. 316, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 784
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1917
DocketDocket No. 129
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 N.W. 993 (Young v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Young, 162 N.W. 993, 196 Mich. 316, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 784 (Mich. 1917).

Opinions

FeIllows, J.

The defendant at the time this cause was tried in the court below was 63 years old and the, plaintiff 57. They were married July 27, 1898, and their separation took place the fore part of September, 1915. Both had been married before, the defendant’s wife having died in 1894, leaving one child, a daughter seven or eight years old. Plaintiff had a somewhat checkered matrimonial career prior to her marriage to defendant. When 16 years of age she had married a man named Clark, with whom she lived but a month, and then divorced him. In 1877 she married a man named Mudica¿ with whom she” lived until his death in 1888. In 1893 she married a man named Murdock, with whom she lived but a short time, and was divorced from him, due to his dissolute habits. In 1895 she married him again on his promise to lead a better life; in this she was disappointed and left him in a few days. She was divorced from him in 1897, the defendant advancing her money to pay for the divorce. For over a year prior to her marriage to defendant she had been a domestic in his household. She was at the time, of her marriage to him 40 years old. No children were born to them. The defendant’s family at that time consisted of himself, his daughter, and his aged father. He was conducting a large farm and had considerable hired help.

[318]*318It will be unnecessary to set forth in' detail the pleadings or the testimony taken at the' hearing bearing on their domestic affairs and troubles. After a careful reading of this record we agree with the circuit judge, who saw the witnesses and was well able to judge of their credibility, that the plaintiff had made out a case. We quote from his opinion:

“She had been living in the home of defendant as his housekeeper for about a year prior to her marriage to him, and the parties seem to have had ample opportunity to become thoroughly acquainted with each other prior to their marriage.
“Plaintiff’s mother lives at a place called Yankee Springs, some distance from Battle Creek, and is in poor circumstances. Plaintiff also has several sisters who are not well-to-do.- Her mother lived at the home of defendant for at least a part of the time while plaintiff acted as housekeeper, and one of the sisters and her husband at one time worked defendant’s farm.
“The plaintiff has been devoted to her. mother, -and defendant complains that she has constantly given her money and'merchandise at his expense. As to that, I consider it of no consequence. All the proofs show that whatever she did give her was of small value and was quite the natural thing.
“Plaintiff’s contention is that the defendant was constantly making sneering and abusive remarks about her mother and family, that he was penurious to the last degree with her; was constantly swearing at and about her, telling obscene stories in her presence, and that he made foul and indecent suggestions about her to other men. That a large part of these charges are true I have not the least doubt.
“The defendant gives but one instance of any unwomanly conduct on her part, and that was an unbelievably vile piece of abuse which he claims was directed at him when she was in a fit of anger. It was told with apparent gusto, and I am inclined to discredit it entirely. Defendant did testify to a couple of threats against him by plaintiff which amounted to assault, but I take little stock in them. All of the testimony outside of that, including defendant’s own, goes to show that plaintiff was a hard-working, industrious [319]*319woman of kindly disposition and a competent housekeeper. No pretense is made that she ever abused or mistreated defendant personally in any way, aside from the incidents above referred to.”

We think it should also be stated that the record discloses that she was all -that could be expected of a mother in the treatment of defendant’s daughter, who was 11 or 12 years old at the time of the marriage, and who was never strong physically and needed a great deal of care. The proof demonstrates this, and defendant admits it. That she was kind and considerate to defendant’s aged father is also established. It should also be stated that when the parties were married defendant owed something over $3,000, and that with the assistance of plaintiff’s economy and good management this was wiped out and a comfortable balance appeared in his bank account. It also appeared in the proof, and we are satisfied, that defendant frequently called her vile names, names imputing a want of chastity; we are satisfied that she was a good woman and fully discharged her duty to the defendant during the upwards of 17 years they lived together.

The defendant not only denies the charges made by plaintiff, but insists in his defense, and this feature of the case is the one most strenuously urged in the brief and oral argument, that this bill was filed as the result of a conspiracy between plaintiff and a man named John H. Quilhot to procure a large amount of money from him by this proceeding, either by way of settlement or decree, and that but for Quilhot this proceeding would not have been instituted. This necessitates a stating of the facts appearing in the testimony bearing on this branch of the case at a greater length than we have felt the case required on the other features.

While the record contains more of insinuations [320]*320against Quilhot than it does actual tangible evidence, we are satisfied from the evidence that was produced and his connection with this case that he was an adventurer and a crook, and that, so far as his connection with the case was concerned, his motives were purely mercenary.

Prefacing the first meeting between plaintiff and Quilhot, we think it should be stated that it fairly appears that defendant had so arranged the disposition of his property after death as that plaintiff would only receive such part thereof as she would receive by law, and that plaintiff had been made conversant of that fact, that she had purchased a little piece of real estate near her mother’s on a contract; that there was $50 due on the contract which she was unable to pay, and that defendant had refused to let her have this small sum, although he was a man worth somewhere between $20,000 and $25,000. This is not stated in justification of her acceptance of financial assistance from a stranger, but as showing the state of her mind when she first met this smooth and unscrupulous adventurer.

Plaintiff first met Quilhot on an interurban car on September 1st, when she was on her way to Richland Junction to take a train to Hastings. She testifies, and it is all the testimony there is in the case on the subject, that she was crying over the way her husband was treating her. She at that time expected that she was about to lose this little piece of land through inability to make the small payment. She was approached by a stranger who inquired if she was sick. She informed him she was not. He persisted in conversation with her, and finally learned that she was in trouble. He then informed her that he was an attorney, and offered his assistance. Before the conversation ended he learned what her trouble was with reference to the land, and also received information [321]*321from which he could shrewdly guess that she was having trouble with her husband. As a result of this conversation he offered her a loan and did loan her $90, taking a note from her for $105. After this she saw Quilhot on several occasions and he interested himself in her affairs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.W. 993, 196 Mich. 316, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-young-mich-1917.