J. v. K.

Decision Date21 September 1967
Docket NumberNo. 8587,8587
Citation419 S.W.2d 461
PartiesJ., Plaintiff-Appellant, v. K., Defendant-Respondent.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

Raymond S. Roberts, Roberts & Roberts, Farmington, for plaintiff-appellant.

David L. Colson, Smith & Colson, Farmington, for defendant-respondent.

HOGAN, Judge.

This is a divorce case. The wife, to whom we shall refer simply as J., filed the action on grounds of general indignities. K., the defendant husband, responded by filing a general denial without any request for affirmative relief. Finding that the plaintiff was not an innocent and injured party, the trial court refused to enter a decree of divorce, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The plaintiff, 26 years of age at trial time, and the defendant, whose age is not shown, were married October 4, 1958. They are the parents of two small daughters, one five years old and the other about three. At the time the parties were married, the defendant was 'just going into the Army.' He is now an officer serving in the Army, and much of their married life has been spent at various domestic and overseas Army posts.

The plaintiff testified to a number of episodes which occurred at various times, the net effect of her evidence being that the defendant had abused and neglected her, had unjustly criticized her housekeeping, had associated improperly with other women, and on occasion had cursed her and had called her a 'bitch' and a 'prosticute.' There is no need to repeat all this evidence in detail, for it is in effect conceded that at the time the events we are about to relate happened the defendant had given the plaintiff cause for divorce if she was an 'innocent' party.

Following a period of duty at Ft. Benning, Georgia, apparently in 1964, the defendant was given an 'undersirable assignment' in Korea. The plaintiff wanted to remain at Columbus, Georgia, where the parties had been living, but the defendant insisted that she return to Missouri where her parents lived. By January or February in 1965 the plaintiff '* * * was tired * * * had worked hard, and * * * thought a vacation would be fine,' and consequently she left Missouri for Colorado Springs, Colorado. Whether or not by prearrangement, she contacted one M., a man whom she had known before her marriage and whom she described as being 'trustworthy' and 'fine,' and remained at M.'s motel for 'six or seven days.' At the end of this period, the plaintiff returned to Missouri, having advised M. that she would return and that he should obtain more commodious quarters because she was going to bring her children. Plaintiff then remained in Missouri for about a month, returned to Colorado Springs, and moved into M.'s apartment with her children. On this second trip, the plaintiff remained in Colorado 'approximately a month.' The plaintiff vigorously maintained that her relationship with M. was conventional and proper, and insisted thta she stayed with M. only as his 'guest.' After the plaintiff had been in Colorado Springs for about a month on this second visit, M. was transferred temporarily to Amarillo, Texas, and the plaintiff followed him there with her children. After she had been in Amarillo for two or three days, the defendant returend unexpectedly from Korea. At this juncture, the plaintiff was arrested on her mother's complaint, and the defendant traveled to Amarillo to bring the plaintiff and his children back to Missouri.

Plaintiff then advised the defendant that she no longer wanted to live with him, and wanted a divorce. She did return to Missouri, having fully informed her husband of her affair with M., but at once consulted an attorney about a divorce. The attorney she consulted advised her to attempt a reconciliation with the defendant, and at plaintiff's request the attorney obtained the name of a psychiatrist in St. Louis with whom both the plaintiff and defendant consulted on several occasions in an attempt to solve their marital problems. Upon the advice of her attorney and her physician, and acting upon the defendant's profession that he would not repeat the indignities which he had previously committed, the parties became reconciled and resumed cohabitation at Ft. Leonard Wood where the defendant was stationed.

The attempted reconciliation was unsuccessful. The plaintiff had told her husband that she would not stay with M. again and would not contact or talk to him again, but as appears in the record she did remain in contact with M. by telephone, though she assured the trial court that M. called her without encouragement on her part, and that he called only because 'he was interested in my welfare, I guess.' In any event, and whatever their motivation, it was brought out that plaintiff and M. have conversed by long distance telephone some 20 times after she resumed cohabitation with the defendant, after she represented to the defendant that she would have no further contact with M., and it appears that plaintiff neither discouraged M. nor advised the defendant that he had called. The defendant also resumed his offensive conduct and the parties finally separated on November 18, 1965. Shortly thereafter, this action was begun. The question before us on this state of fact is whether the plaintiff's misconduct has been condoned, or whether, in the circumstances, it still constitutes a recriminatory bar to her action for divorce.

Substantially all the testimony in this case came from the plaintiff herself, though parts of a pre-trial deposition given by the defendant were introduced; but considered as a whole and taken as true, the plaintiff's evidence tends to establish that the defendant had, over a period of years, degraded and insulted the plaintiff in a number of ways. Any continuous course of conduct by one spouse toward the other which renders the injured spouse's condition intolerable through acts of such character as to be subversive of the family relation may constitute 'indignities' within the meaning of Section 452.010, RSMo (1959), V.A.M.S., depending on the circumstances, Hooper v. Hooper, 19 Mo. 355, 356--357(1) (2); Moore v. Moore, Mo.App., 337 S.W.2d 781, 786--787(2--8); Thomas v. Thomas, Mo.App., 288 S.W.2d 689, 696(4--6), certiorari denied 352 U.S. 873, 77 S.Ct. 98, 1 L.Ed.2d 77, and we assume plaintiff's grounds for divorce were sufficient.

It is not enough, however, for a plaintiff seeking a divorcein this state to show that he is 'injured,' i.e., that he has grounds for divorce. Through an extension of the maxim that he who seeks equity must come into court with 'clean hands,' our courts have held since an early day that a divorce may be granted only if the party seeking it shows that he is both an injured and an 'innocent' party. 'Innocence,' in this context, does not mean freedom from all fault, but it is required that the party seeking a divorce show affirmatively that he himself has committed no offense which is a ground for divorce. Franklin v. Franklin, 365 Mo. 442, 446, 283 S.W.2d 483, 485--486(6--8); Simon v. Simon, Mo., 248 S.W.2d 560, 562, 563(1) (2, 3); Gregg v. Gregg, Mo.App., 416 S.W.2d 672, 675(5) (6).

We consider it most evident from the facts that unless the plaintiff's association and relationship with M. has been condoned by the defendant, she has failed to establish the lack of recriminatory fault--the 'innocence'--which was an essential element of her case. Judging only by its outward...

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    ...court's findings will vary, depending on the importance of the parties' credibility to a proper determination of the issue. J. v. K, 419 S.W.2d 461, 466 (Mo.App.1967). It is the duty of the appellate court to review all of the evidence and reach its own conclusion as to the proper judgment ......
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