Friemann v. Friemann
Friemann v. Friemann
Opinion of the Court
On August 28, 1906, plaintiff filed his petition in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, praying for a divorce from the defendant, on the ground that the defendant, without reasonable cause, abandoned the plaintiff for the space of one whole year next before the date of the filing of the petition. The defendant was personally served with summons but made default.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff and defendant were married on December 20, 1903, and continued
After the separation, a child Avas born to the defendant and is noAV in her custody.
The court, on hearing the evidence, dismissed the plaintiff’s bill, from which action of the court plaintiff appealed.
An examination of the testimony, we think, clearly shows that there is no valid reason why plaintiff and defendant may not live together in harmony as husband and Avife. The cause of the separation is not to be attributed to any antipathy of the wife against her husband, but was brought about by the intermeddling of outside parties to whom plaintiff and defendant should have turned a deaf ear. A way is still open for a reconciliation and the parties should avail themselves of it and make an earnest effort to reunite and live together as husband and Avife in peace and harmony. It is not the law that courts, on proof of abandonment only, must grant a decree of divorce, if it reasonably appears that
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.