Vardon v. Vardon

Plaintiff seeks divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty; defendant, separate maintenance on the ground of extreme cruelty. From a decree dismissing both the bill of complaint and the answer in the nature of a cross-bill, both parties appeal.

Plaintiff, a practicing physician and surgeon in Highland Park, was raised on a farm. After graduating from high school he studied medicine at the University of Michigan and in Detroit. The parties were married in Windsor, Ontario, in 1910. Prior to her marriage defendant had worked in an office, earned and saved some money. After plaintiff's graduation, the parties moved to East Jordan where plaintiff began general practice with a fair *Page 346 degree of success. He served overseas with the American Expeditionary Force as a physician and surgeon, thereby acquiring considerable practical experience. After the war he moved to Highland Park with his family and became attached to the surgical force of the local hospital. His charges against defendant are that she humiliated and annoyed him in an unreasonable manner; circulated false, scandalous and defamatory stories about him; falsely accused him of adultery and humiliated and disgraced him, thereby injuring his professional standing and endangering his means of livelihood.

Defendant charges him with extreme and repeated cruelty. The trial court apparently unsuccessfully tried to effect a reconciliation between the parties, and indicates an affirmative decree of some kind would have been granted had a property settlement been effected.

The settlement of the property rights of the parties is ancillary though important. The crucial questions are whether the plaintiff is entitled to a decree of divorce and if not, whether defendant is entitled to a decree of separate maintenance. Defendant indicates she is willing to forget plaintiff's extreme cruelty and effect a reconciliation conditioned however upon his change of attitude toward her. The record shows plaintiff as a careful, economical and methodical young physician and surgeon of good habits, ambitious to obtain a practice, recognition by his associates and standing in his profession; he has worked, earned a substantial income, traveled with his wife and family, lived in a good house, in a good residential section of the community; built, furnished and maintained a summer home in Kingsville, Ontario; maintained an office, driven an automobile, furnished his wife one, sent *Page 347 his children to school, dressed in a substantial way, furnished his wife considerable sums of money and ample credit until his household expenses were running, during the last years the parties lived together, approximately $10,000 a year for defendant, the household expenses and those of two boys. Defendant complains he was niggardly with her, he did not permit her to acquire half a dozen party dresses; though she had 64 charge accounts; he complained that she had too many bills and at one time criticized the fact she had 200 telephone calls in a month above the number allowed by the telephone company in its base rate. She played golf and entertained the bridge club. She says, "I would go down to the golf club if I had to crawl to get my children there." She wanted a better summer home at Kingsville and a better home in which to live. Plaintiff acquired a substantial dwelling house in which he says he had expended about $20,000; had substantial furniture and oriental or Chinese rugs in all the rooms except the kitchen. The house was undoubtedly furnished better than either party had ever had before. In testifying, defendant accused her husband of causing newspaper articles to be published in the Detroit papers in relation to the divorce proceedings, but she was the only person interviewed in connection therewith. She charges plaintiff sought to prejudice the older son against her but there is no substantial proof of this except her hearsay statements. Plaintiff claims defendant frequently made scenes to his humiliation by "bawling him out" in an angry manner in the presence of his associates and guests, and particularly he calls attention to the difficulties which defendant had with the family of Dr. Piper, though defendant boasts she has more neighbors than Dr. Piper's people. He *Page 348 claims she "bawled him out" in the presence of Mr. Bowles, who was a neighbor. Both these circumstances are corroborated and practically admitted by defendant. He alleges she criticized the fact her sister lived in the home, and on various trips with tourists to Duluth, Montreal, Chicago, Yellow Stone Park and other places she conducted herself in such a manner as to attract the attention of other people, and humiliate him. Particularly he complains that at the time the younger son was in the hospital, operated on for appendicitis she told the hospital nurses the hospital doctors ran around with the nurses, objected to the night nurse employed to take care of the son, found fault with the hospital food, and claimed plaintiff was in love with one of the nurses. After the separation of the parties, defendant learned from her butter and egg man plaintiff's office assistant, who was a married woman with a child, had filed a bill for divorce. In reliance on this back-door gossip she immediately began to charge plaintiff with some connection with his office girl's divorce proceedings; told others her husband was in love with the office girl; charged he was the father of the office girl's child; that he had broken up her family, and made unreasonable and improbable statements about her husband to her associates, particularly about his passionate disposition and sexual proclivities until even the trial court was shocked with her readiness to converse on this subject with others. There is nothing out of the ordinary in the conduct of the plaintiff. He sought to get ahead in his profession. At one time he was earning around $19,000 a year. Since his separation from defendant his practice has fallen off several thousand dollars a year, possibly due to the depression and not to the defendant's conduct. He desired to earn money. She desired to spend it. He *Page 349 was satisfied to get along moderately. She desired to cut a social swath. Her statements about some of her neighbors, her quarrels, her public exhibition of temper to which others without interest testify might possibly have been condoned, but we are satisfied from defendant's statements which she admits making, her manner of testifying and from the testimony of others apparently unbiased, the defendant was guilty without cause or just provocation of circulating these false stories about the doctor and his alleged intimacy with the office girl, thus tending to disgrace him and to endanger his means of livelihood, and that as found by the trial court, her repeated accusations of adultery are wholly unsupported by the testimony, so much so that the trial court refused to hear the testimony of the witnesses produced by the plaintiff, namely the office girl and her husband, and that by reason thereof the decree of the trial court should be reversed and a decree of divorce for plaintiff entered.

By supplemental brief of appellant it appears he has paid defendant $6,066.34 temporary alimony in addition to small sums paid his sons and counsel fee of $200 to defendant's counsel, making in all $6,447.34. Ordinarily, one against whom a decree of divorce is rendered forfeits the right to alimony by reason of their own misconduct, but in view of the long time the parties hereto lived together and other circumstances, an award of alimony and a division of the property of the parties should be made. A decree awarding an absolute divorce to plaintiff may be entered. Defendant is awarded the Packard automobile which she drives, the household furniture and furnishings in the Monterey avenue home, the summer home at Kingsville, Ontario, and $30 a month for the care and support of the youngest son of the parties until he shall reach the age of 21, if he continues *Page 350 to live and reside with defendant. Plaintiff shall make, execute and tender all proper conveyance to assure defendant's title to the property awarded her. Plaintiff shall also pay to defendant as and for permanent alimony and in consideration of her release of any and all claims against plaintiff or his property, and for her interest in property held by the parties as joint tenants or tenants by the entirety, and in full for alimony, dower, homestead rights, interests in or title to real estate, support and maintenance, the sum of $10,000, the same to be paid at the rate of at least $125 a month, with the right to pay sums in excess of that amount and all, in any event, to be paid within the period of five years from the date of decree, without interest.

Plaintiff is to be awarded all other real estate and personal property now owned or held by him or by the parties as joint tenants or tenants by the entirety, free from any and all claims upon the part of defendant. Defendant is to make, execute and deliver all proper conveyances necessary and requisite to release her rights and interests in such property, and in default thereof the decree may stand as and for a conveyance of such title and interest. Plaintiff to take such real estate subject to the outstanding taxes and encumbrances thereon. Defendant to pay all unpaid bills contracted by her. If plaintiff is compelled to pay any of such bills, the amount thereof may be deducted from the amount above awarded. The decree herein to be without costs to either party except that defendant is awarded an additional counsel fee of $100 to be paid by plaintiff.

FEAD, J., did not sit. McDONALD and CLARK, JJ., took no part in this decision. *Page 351