Smith v. Smith

Michigan Supreme Court
Smith v. Smith, 247 N.W. 910 (Mich. 1933)
262 Mich. 436; 1933 Mich. LEXIS 893
Butzel, McDonald, Clark, Potter, Sharpe, North, Fead, Wiest

Smith v. Smith

Opinion of the Court

Butzel, J.

Ruth M. Smith filed a bill for absolute divorce from George H. Smith, on the ground of cruelty. He denied the charges, and in a cross-bill charged her with refusal to cohabit and failure to perform other marital duties. After taking considerable testimony, the judge rendered a decree in her favor.

*437 The testimony established the baselessness of defendant’s charges, except as to those actions of plaintiff that were justified by defendant’s conduct. It showed that defendant remained away from plaintiff’s bedside for the 36 hours following the birth of their youngest .child, and then when he saw her he upbraided her for having the child; that he insisted upon keeping the radio going long after reasonable hours, when the plaintiff and the children were trying to rest, and that he had insisted that it be kept going even when he absented himself from home; that he constantly referred to her in an insulting manner; and that he was guilty of other acts of cruelty towards her and the children, the details of which it is unnecessary to discuss.

In the decree, the trial judge awarded plaintiff the custody of the children, aged 12, 11, and 7, respectively. He gave her the household goods and effects and also the homestead, burdened with a mortgage of $3,000 running to defendant’s father. (See Smith v. Smith, ante, 60.) He also decreed that the tenancy by the entireties in an oil station property near East Lansing, Michigan, rented for $100 per month, should hereafter be a tenancy in common; that defendant further pay plaintiff $1,500, which, until paid, should be a first lien on defendant’s interest as tenant in common of the oil station property. He further ordered defendant to pay $30 a month towards the support of the children. This left defendant with a small equity in another house in Lansing and the full ownership of another oil station property in the same city, not as valuable at the present time as the one in East Lansing.

We believe the decree is fair and proper and fully sustained by the evidence. In coming to this conclusion, we are not unmindful of the fact that plaintiff *438 has inherited, from, her father an 80-acre farm near Williamston, Michigan, as well as a small amount of personal property.

The decree is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff. •

McDonald, C. J., and Clark, Potter, Sharpe, North, Fead, and Wiest, JJ., concurred.

Reference

Full Case Name
Smith v. Smith.
Status
Published