JUSTICE CARLSON PLANS TO STEP DOWN
November 15, 2011 § 2 Comments
Mississippi Supreme Court Presiding Justice George Carlson announced yesterday that he will step down when his term ends at the end of 2012. The vacancy created by his retirement is in the northern district.
Carlson, of Batesville, served for 19 years as a Circuit Judge in the 17th district. He was appointed by Governor Ronnie Musgrove to fill a vacancy on the Mississippi Supreme Court, and he has served on the high court for the last 11 years.
The justice said that he wants to spend more time with his family, alhough he continues to enjoy his work on the court.
He timed his announcement to allow time for careful consideration and planning for the campaign in the 33-county northern Supreme Court district.
His announcement at the Mississippi Judiciary web site is here. The Clarion-Ledger article, which mimes most of the official announcement instead of doing its own reporting, is here.
DIVORCE F*A*I*L
November 14, 2011 § Leave a comment
One of the most valuable service you can render your clients is to convince them that it is indeed difficult to get a divorce in Mississippi without an agreement therefor.
Most clients present facts that would fall generally in the ballpark of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment (HCIT), if anything. And yet, HCIT is not an easy ground upon which to obtain a divorce. The Mississippi Supreme Court’s stringent definition of the ground has really not changed since its pronouncement more than eighty years ago:
“Conduct only as endangers life, limb, or health, or creates a reasonable apprehension of danger thereto, thereby rendering the continuance of the marital relation unsafe for the unoffending spouse, or such unnatural and infamous conduct as would make the marital relation revolting to the unoffending spouse and render it impossible for him or her, as the case may be, to discharge the duties thereof.” Russell v. Russell, 128 So. 270, 272 (Miss. 1930)
In the decades following Russell, Mississippi trial and appellate courts in practice allowed the HCIT divorce where the chancellor was satisfied that the parties “need to be divorced from each other,” even when the offending conduct was less than that defined. In essence, HCIT became an incompatibility ground.
In 1984, however, the MSSC returned to a strict adherence to the Russell standard in Gallaspy v. Gallaspy, 459 So.2d 283, 285 (Miss. 1984). Since then, the appellate decisions reflect the stricter standard, and your case will F*A*I*L if it does not measure up.
To complicate matters, there is the requirement of corroboration.
As for the facts supporting the ground, there is a breathtaking scope of opinions showing what has not passed muster as HCIT. Here is a sampling:
- Wife’s weight ballooned from 165 to 210 because she drank too much beer, but husband bought the beer for her and drank with her, and she was not exactly undernourished at the time when the parties tied the knot. When husband would come home in the evenings a few minutes late, wife would cry and complain that he had been off somewhere with some other woman. Husband said that wife’s treatment had caused him to become nervous and upset, and he had lost 11 pounds, but the court found that he was not at home enough for his health to have been materially affected by any habitual conduct on wife’s part. Husband testified: ‘If I was a few minutes late getting home, she would be waiting and crying under the assumption that I had been out to see another woman, which was untrue;’ and further that she would not have supper prepared for him, and that he would sometimes have to cook his own supper and his own breakfast; and that she was indifferent to her own personal appearance. The court pointed out, on the other hand, that wife had been able to hold a position of employment as cashier at a restaurant for a long period of time. F*A*I*L: Skelton v. Skelton, 111 So.2d 392, 393 (Miss. 1959).
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Wife complained about the marital residence that ‘the location wasn’t right’; it was ‘too far out of town’; she ‘would not make any choice in the selection of colors’; and ‘she said she was not going to live in that house.’ The parties had many differences, compounded by their son’s congenital hypospadias that required numerous, expensive surgeries that the husband resisted. Wife complained that husband was not employed in a respectable job and was not making enough money; his friends ‘were not much’, and were not welcome in her house; she did not like his work and the hours were too long for what he was making. They would quarrel. He would try to ‘shut up’ at first, and if that would not stop her he would walk out of the house. ‘She would run me off from the house.’ He and his son got along all right on minor corrections, but, if she did not agree, she would attempt to overrule him in the boy’s presence. Husband wanted his son’s condition to be corrected, but thought it could be done in the South nearer home and the doctor told him that it could be done here but she would not hear to this and said that she was going to continue with the doctors in New York. He said that the effect of her attitude and treatment were such that it was on his mind all of the time; he would neglect his work; he would forget things and have to re-do his work; and that this troubled him very much all of the time. ‘There were times when he did not think that he would be able to live any more.’ However, when she was away, there was no domestic trouble on his mind. He did not think that they could live together with reasonable happiness and satisfaction. He was willing to accept the full custody of the boy and contribute to his support within his means. F*A*I*L: Taylor v. Taylor, 108 So.2d 872, 873-874 (Miss. 1959).
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Husband, an attorney, marries wife for the second time. There are accusations of infidelity, a failed business, overspending, heavy debt, and hostility that ripens like a rotting peach into genuine mutual hatred. F*A*I*L: Wilson v. Wilson, 547 So.2d 803, 804-805 (Miss. 1989).
- Husband and wife have differences in religious views, wife is not as fastidious a housekeeper as husband would like, and wife is not demostrative enough to suit husband, so that husband is seriously unhappy in the marriage. F*A*I*L: Marble v. Marble, 457 So.2d 1342, 1343 (Miss. 1984).
- Husband gave wife the “silent treatment.” He has called her stupid on occasion and sometimes would not listen to her. Wife complained that she suffered from stress. She took the position that husband’s conduct endangered her health and created apprehension of danger, to such an extent, that she felt the relationship was unsafe, even though she did admit, several times in the record, that husband never physically abused her. F*A*I*L: Ayers v. Ayers, 734 So.2d 213, 214 (Miss. App. 1999).
- Wife contended that husband’s conduct created a reasonable apprehension of danger, rendering the relationship unsafe for her, based on: (1) Husband threw her onto a bed to take her pants off; (2) husband punched a hole in the bedroom door and put a gun barrel into his mouth; (3) husband hit her several times during an altercation; and (4) husband hit the car windshield in front of the parties’ son. She also complained of husband’s abusive name-calling and his constant nagging and complaining about her make-up, clothes, and hair style. Wife also argued that husband’s accusing her of being homosexual constituted “conduct so unnatural and infamous as to make the marriage revolting to the nonoffending spouse and render it impossible for that spouse to discharge the duties of marriage.” She cited Hibner v. Hibner,217 Miss. 611, 613, 64 So.2d 756, 757 (1953), for the proposition that false and malicious charges of adultery or immoral conduct which would “naturally tend to cause shame, humiliation or disgrace” would justify a divorce on the grounds of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment. Wife conceded, however, that husband had never actually called her a lesbian, and there was no evidence that David ever accused her of being such to anyone else, other than “insinuating” it to the children by saying “[y]our mother loves another woman more than she loves you.” The supreme court rejected wife’s argument that she was entitled to a divorce under Muhammad v. Muhammad, 622 So.2d 1239, 1250 (Miss.1993), cert. denied, 510 U.S. 1047, 114 S.Ct. 698, 126 L.Ed.2d 665 (1994), which held that a party is entitled to a divorce “if a spouse’s actions which cause deep personal misery that has no foreseeable end is the gravamen of the action for divorce by reason of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment.” That case involved a situation where the husband had moved the family into the community of an oppressive religious cult whose rules and social order were extremely oppressive to women and dictated virtually every facet of life, so that the wife had been “relegated … to a status and set of living conditions that would be unbearable to a great many, if not a majority, of the women living in our modern society.” Id. at 1250. The appellate court found that her situation did not reach that level. The chancellor had said that “[t]here is a great conflict in evidence in this case. And I’m sure that everyone that sat here and heard this case knows. There is almost irreconcilable conflict in many areas of the case … most of the evidence in this case had to do with the parties fussing back and forth with each other with a few physical altercations. It seems to the Court that each party gave about as good as they got when they had these physical altercations. The Court is not impressed by the trips of either party to Magee General Hospital in order to try to bolster their case, which the Court believes was contrived on the part of both parties.” F*A*I*L: Bowen v. Bowen, 688 So.2d 1374-1376-1378 (Miss. 1997).
- Husband charged that wife was disinterested in having sex, and that they had gone six months without a sexual encounter. Wife conceded lack of interest, but said that they had sex more frequently than husband claimed. The parties had frequent, intense arguments over finances and wife’s spending habits. F*A*I*L: Tackett v. Tackett, 967 So. 2d 1264, 1267 (Miss. App. 2007).
- “Boorish, obnoxious and selfish behavior.” Too much to catalog in this space. F*A*I*L: Talbert v. Talbert, 759 So.2d 1105, 1109 (Miss. 1999).
- Controlling behavior by husband, clinical depression of wife, questions about whether wife was a lesbian, husband severly beat wife’s post-separation boyfriend. F*A*I*L: Morris v. Morris, 804 So.2d 1025, 1029 (Miss. 2002).
The number of misfires has dwindled over the years as the “consent” divorce has come to the fore. Every now and then, however, an HCIT case comes through, raising with it the issue whether the ingredients of the Russell recipe are present in the case. Before you launch off into the treacherous waters of the HCIT divorce, consider the shoals, rocks and cross-currents that await your client. You might want to plot an alternate course.
In my opinion,. HCIT requires some creative thinking to make it work. You have to look at the totality of the circumstances and craft your case as strongly as possible to demonstrate the impact of the offending spouse’s behavior on the innocent spouse. Check out Judge Maxwell’s latest on the subject. It’s about as good an exposition on the subject as you will find.
BIRTHPLACE OF THE BLUES
November 13, 2011 § Leave a comment
To his everlasting credit, Governor Hayley Barbour exercised his executive prerogative and installed signs at the entranceways into Mississippi with the legend, “Birthplace of America’s Music.” Indeed.
It’s no secret that Mississippi — and the Mississippi Delta in particular — is where America’s quintessential music was born, took hold, and grew into an irrepressible force. It was the blues, the music of heartfelt pain, that was born out of the oppression and destitution of a people. It was the blues that made its way down the river to New Orleans, cross-bred with barrelhouse and ragtime and grew into Jazz. Jimmie Rodgers melded the blues with the music of hill whites and gave birth to country music. The blues directly spawned rock-a-billy, rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and soul, and almost every form of popular music in the past 100-plus years has a blue tinge.
The Land Where the Blues Began is Alan Lomax’s engrossing portrait of the Mississippi Delta, its culture and history, its blues artists, its oppression and exploitation of black people, and how this region of contradictions, savage racism, plantations, and juke joints gave rise to such formidable music.
Lomax ranged across the south from the 40’s through the 70’s, recording not only the music of original blues artists, but also their stories and recollections in their own words. The author continued the work of his father, who had begun the project in the late 20’s and 30’s.
What emerges from the stories he captured is a picture of the struggles and suffering of poor blacks in the Delta, and how they found release in music. Here are the stories of the cruel levee camps, the muleskinners, plantation life, the escape to Memphis and the factories of the north, Parchman farm. It becomes plain to the reader that the civil war did not end slavery, but merely transformed it into other forms of enforced servitude and destitution for blacks in Mississippi.
The main focus of this book, though, is the music. Lomax expertly analyzes the music’s African genes and the religious and early American musical strains that influenced and deepened it.
Lomax was a Texan who died in 2002. He is renowned as one of the great field collectors of indigenous music, particularly American music, although he did field work in Europe, the Caribbean and Africa as well. He had Mississippi roots that helped his understanding of the tortured Delta folkways. At page 186 of the book is this passage: “My father’s people were ‘peckerwoods’ from Meridian, Mississippi, ‘from the upper crust of the poor white trash,’ he used to say.”
If you want to understand Mississippi, you have to understand the blues and the music’s astonishing breadth of influence. The blues is merely one manifestation of Mississippi’s disproportionate impact on American literature, music and entertainment, dramatically belying the state’s stereotypical backwardness and reactionism. Lomax’s book is an excellent starting point.
If you want to understand the blues, you have to experience the Delta. Steve Cheseborough’s Blues Travelling is a travel guide that will open doors and by-ways to the region. Here you will find the towns and villages, grave sites, joints, monuments and historic locations, restaurants, museums and venues of the blues culture. There are maps and suggestions, along with articles telling the story.
If you are a Mississippian, you can explore the Delta in several easy day trips. This book will enrich the experience for you, telling you the stories of the places and people you encounter. You will probably find yourself stopping to explore places you would have bypassed.
As a bonus, the book includes forays into Memphis, Jackson, north Mississippi, and even Meridian.
Lisa and I have found this book particularly helpful in our blues explorations. I recommend it to you.
Q & A WITH JUDGE ROBERTS
November 10, 2011 § 1 Comment
Chancellor Edwin Roberts is one of two chancery judges in north Mississippi’s far-flung 18th District (Benton, Calhoun, Lafayette, Marshall, Tippah). Here is his Q & A.
Q: Tell us some of your personal preferences that lawyers from outside your district need to know before they come before you.
A: Be prepared in all meanings of the word, i.e. research your client’s story, interview your witnesses, know the facts and applicable law, and more!!!!!!
If you try to think about the rational and reasonable resolution to your case, your thinking will be in line with mine…
Act in a respectful, dignified, and professional manner in the Courtroom…
Q: What are the three attributes that you would consider to set the good lawyers apart from the bad ones?
A: a. They care..about their case, client, and the profession…..
b. They work hard as a result
c. They have a sense of responsibility
Q: What is the main thing lawyers should know to avoid doing in your court room during a trial?
A: Getting emotionally involved…Attorneys should try to maintain an objective approach with their Client’s best interest in mind. Remember, Client’s ARE already emotionally involved…you need to help them with levelheaded thinking…this means arguing their case based based on the FACTS and Law rather than EMOTIONS!!!!
Q: What part of your job do you enjoy the most?
A: Helping people…
Q: What part of your job do you enjoy the least?
A: Unprepared and unprofessional Lawyers…
Q: What is your pet peeve as a judge?
A: Unprepared and emotionally invested lawyers as well as unnecessary litigation
Q: Cell phone ringing during a trial: death penalty, stern look, dismay, or no reaction?
A: YES!!!!
Q: Who do you model yourself after as a judge?
A: Chancellor William Anderson
Q: Who do you consider to be the best chancellor you ever appeared before, and what set that chancellor apart?
A: Chancellor William Anderson(Author of PASS v. PASS)….All lawyers as well as litigants perceived they had a fair hearing in front of a fair and impartial Judge….
Q: Share your innermost thoughts and feelings about MRCP 81.
A: Needs amending…keep inherent nature of “Equity” practice, but remove burdensome and unreasonable requirements of summons..ie adapt Rule 4 Process..bring back fiats and inherent power of Chancery Court to hear matters of emergency, child custody, etc.
Q: What do you do to try and get control of your probate docket?
A: Education of Clerks and their responsibilities…
Q: Should chancery and circuit court systems be merged?
A: ABSOLUTELY NOT!!!!
Q: There are 19 appellate judges. What would be the ideal number of former chancellors serving on the two appellate courts?
A: More than we have now…
Q: Tell us your favorite quote.
A: “Every Saint has a past and every sinner has a future.” Oscar Wilde ” To err is Human, to forgive Divine”
Q: Tell us your favorite court room movie.
A: My Cousin Vinny
THE MORNING AFTER
November 9, 2011 § Leave a comment
As is always the case the morning after an election, I awake to discover that I won some and lost some. I”m sure your experience is pretty much the same.
Overall, though, I’m pleased that we once again came together in this ancient civic ritual of our republic and peaceably renewed our government through the ballot, resolving our differences via democracy.
Cynics will argue that I am wrong, that special interests, plutocrats and autocrats actually govern, and that electoral democracy is a chimera designed to placate the masses. As with all overstatements, there is a kernel of unfortunate truth in that, but even the most hardshell cynic can not deny that we did get to vote, and our votes counted.
Some years ago when I campaigned for the judgeship I now hold, I was astonished at the number of people who told me that they would be happy to vote for me if they were registered to vote, but they weren’t registered because they did not want to bother with jury duty.
Think about it. They are shirking the two core privileges/responsibilities of a citizen in a democracy: the right to vote, and the right to a jury of one’s peers. This is mind-boggling to me. Some of these are the very same people who wave the flag, act like patriots, and criticize politics and politicians with whom they disagree. These are some of the same people who welcome back our troops from conflicts afar and forward partisan emails about supporting our troops.
I don’t know about you, but I don’t think of those people as fellow citizens. They are, I hope, fellow taxpayers, and they are fellow occupants of space on this continent, but citizens? No. They are not supporters of our military. They are parasites sponging off of the blood and sacrifice of all who truly valued our freedom and sacrificed their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to preserve it.
Lawyers have traditionally had a special role to play as guardians of our democratic ways. They have been looked to as leaders, policy makers, defenders of those whose rights are threatened, and active in the political arena. That role has been blunted, in my opinion, over the past 25 or so years by one party that has vilified lawyers and cynically attacked their legitimate role in society, as well as by lawyers themselves, who have increasingly become shopkeepers interested more in a safe profile and the bottom line. That’s a pity — if my opinion is accurate. If you disagree, feel free to comment.
So to those of you who exercised the grandest privilege of your liberty yesterday and voted, I tip my hat to you and embrace you as my fellow citizen. We may not have voted the same way, but we made our voices — however small — heard.
And to those of you lawyers who are hunkered down with your bottom line, I urge you to do yourselves and your embattled profession a favor by sticking your head up out of the trenches, look about you at the surrounding landscape, roll up your sleeves, and lead. Critics be damned.
CALCULATING CHILD SUPPORT FOR OUTSIDE CHILDREN
November 8, 2011 § Leave a comment
MCA § 43-19-101 is the statute that prescribes the formula for calculating child support. I’ll leave it to you to re-read it (or to actually read it for the first time, if you’ve never bothered). I do suggest you read it, because from the questions I get about the statute, it’s clear that not all of you have done so.
There are two provisions in the statute that deal with how to consider child support for the payor’s other children:
- § 43-19-101 (3)(c) provides that any amounts due for prior court-ordered child-support for other children must first be deducted.
- § 43-19-101 (3)(d) provides that if the payor is parent of other children who live with him, and there is no other court order for the other children who live with him, the chancellor may deduct an amount “appropriate to account for the needs” of the other children who live with him.
The statute does not address the situation that arises when the payor has other children who do not live with him, and for whom there is no court-ordered child support. That was the situation that presented itself in Knighten v. Hooper, handed down by the COA on September 6, 2011.
Hooper and Knighten lived together for a brief time, and their relationship produced a son, CJ. After CJ was born, Knighten had relationships with two different women that resulted in three children.
Hooper sued Knighten for for child support for CJ. After a hearing on the matter, the chancellor ruled that neither party had overcome the presumption that the statutory child support guidelines were applicable. She calculated that guideline child support for CJ should be 14% of Knighten’s adjusted gross income, or $526.21. The chancellor went on to say that, ” [t]he court does consider that Mr. Knighten has three other minor children that he has to provide for … The court further considers all other factors and finds that it is reasonable for Mr. Knighten to pay … $400 per month.”
Knighten appealed, complaining that the chancellor had failed to make findings of fact sufficient to support the reduction of child support. Reading between the lines, it appears that he felt that the reduction for the outside children should have been greater than the 24% of adjusted gross income that the chancellor allowed.
The COA found no error in the chancellor’s approach. The court noted that the two statutory deductions for other children did not apply, and then stated, beginning at ¶ 11:
“Although the deductions did not apply, the chancellor decided that it was equitable to consider Knighten’s other children. Chancellors may deviate from the child-support guidelines if they determine, in writing, that application of the guidelines would be unjust or inappropriate in the particular case. Miss. Code Ann. § 43-19-101(2). When deciding whether a deviation is appropriate, chancellors may take into account, among other things: “[a]ny . . . adjustment which is needed to achieve an equitable result which may include, but not be limited to, a reasonable and necessary existing expense or debt.” Miss. Code Ann. § 43-19-103(i) (Rev. 2009).
¶12. Here, the chancellor wrote that “[t]he Court does consider that Mr. Knighten has three other minor children that he has to provide for . . . . The Court further considers all other factors and finds that it is reasonable for Mr. Knighten to pay . . . . $400 per month.” Thus, the chancellor determined, in writing, that a deviation from the guidelines was appropriate based on a reasonable and necessary existing expense – namely, Knighten’s obligation to support his other children.
¶13. Knighten correctly argues that the chancellor did not explain in detail how she settled on the precise amount of $400. However, he cites no authority that supports his proposition that such a detailed explanation was required. The chancellor was faced with great uncertainty in this case. Given the informal arrangement Knighten had with the mothers of his other children, it was unclear exactly how much Knighten paid to support the children. When there is no court-ordered child support for the other children, there will inevitably be uncertainty in this regard. In light of that uncertainty, chancellors must be afforded flexibility and discretion so that they may do equity under the circumstances.
¶14. The chancellor, in her discretion, determined that a downward deviation in the amount of $126.12 per month was appropriate and equitable in light of Knighten’s obligations to his other children. We find that the chancellor’s decision was within her discretion. This issue is without merit.”
In a footnote, the court declined to consider whether later-born children are entitled to any consideration in calculation of child support for earlier born children. Some jurisdictions take the position that payors should not be allowed to place the first-born children at a financial disadvantage by continuing to procreate.
The opinion seems to imply that it was doubtful whether Knighten was actually paying any support for the three after-born children. In that situation, any reduction would be a direct benefit to him and not to the children. The chancellor was obviously conflicted about what the COA described as this “uncertain” situation. The COA afforded her the flexibility and discretion she needed to address it.
JUDGE MAXWELL’S PRIMER ON HCIT
November 7, 2011 § 8 Comments
Habitual Cruel and Inhuman Treatment (HCIT) as a ground for divorce can be an elusive concept. It’s almost seems to be an “eye of the beholder” phenomenon.
In the case of Smith v. Smith, rendered November 1, 2011, by the COA, Judge Maxwell penned about as concise an exposition on the legal basis of the ground as you will find. Here is an excerpt from the opinion:
In Mississippi, one of the twelve fault-based grounds for divorce is habitual cruel and inhuman treatment. Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-1 (Supp. 2011). To obtain a divorce on this ground, the plaintiff must show conduct that either:
(1) endangers life, limb, or health, or creates a reasonable apprehension of such danger, rendering the relationship unsafe for the party seeking relief, or (2) is so unnatural and infamous as to make the marriage revolting to the non-offending spouse and render it impossible for that spouse to discharge the duties of marriage, thus destroying the basis for its continuance.
Richard v. Richard, 711 So. 2d 884, 889 (¶22) (Miss. 1998). The plaintiff must prove one of these two prongs by a preponderance of the credible evidence. Shavers v. Shavers, 982 So. 2d 397, 403 (¶35) (Miss. 2008).
¶11. In reviewing a divorce based on cruelty, “[t]here is a dual focus on the conduct of the offending spouse and the impact of that conduct on the offended spouse.” Bodne v. King, 835 So. 2d 52, 59 (¶24) (Miss. 2003). Evaluating the impact on the offended spouse is a subjective inquiry. The focus is on the effect the conduct has on the particular spouse, not its effect on an ordinary, reasonable person. Faries v. Faries, 607 So. 2d 1204, 1209 (Miss. 1992). The plaintiff must show a casual connection between the defendant’s conduct and the impact on the plaintiff. Id. And the defendant’s cruelty must not be too temporally remote from the separation. See Richard, 711 So. 2d at 890 (¶23) (finding a divorce may be granted based on “habitual or continuous behavior over a period of time, close in proximity to the separation, or continuing after a separation occurs[.]”); see also Deborah H. Bell, Bell on Mississippi Family Law § 4.02[8][b]-[c] (2005) (explaining that a strict causal connection between the conduct and the separation is no longer a required element of proof).
¶12. Generally, the party alleging habitual cruelty must corroborate his or her own testimony. Shavers, 982 So. 2d at 403 (¶35). An exception is made in cases where corroboration is not reasonably possible because of the nature of the accusation. Bell § 4.02[8][d]; see also Jones v. Jones, 43 So. 3d 465, 478 (¶30) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009). “‘[C]orroborating evidence need not be sufficient in itself to establish [habitual cruelty],’ but rather ‘need only provide enough supporting facts for a court to conclude that the plaintiff’s testimony is true.’” Jones, 43 So. 3d at 478 (¶30) (quoting Bell § 4.02[8][d]).
¶13. To prove habitual cruelty, the plaintiff must show more than mere unkindness, rudeness, or incompatibility. Robison v. Robison, 722 So. 2d 601, 603 (¶5) (Miss. 1998). Although in cases of violence a single incident may be sufficient for a divorce, generally the plaintiff must show a pattern of conduct. See Curtis v. Curtis, 796 So. 2d 1044, 1047 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2001). When there is no violent conduct involved, we review the facts on a case-by-case basis, taking into account the frequency and severity of the conduct, as well as the impact on the plaintiff. See Bell § 4.02[9][b]. “There are many kinds of acts such as wilful failure to support, verbal abuse, neglect, and the like which, if taken alone will not constitute cruelty, but when taken together will manifest a course of conduct as a whole which may amount to cruelty.” Jackson v. Jackson, 922 So. 2d 53, 57 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2006).”
* * *
“Our supreme court has observed “[t]he words ‘unnatural and infamous’ have not been precisely defined by precedent because the plain meanings of those words are sufficient.” To determine the plain meaning of words, we look to their dictionary definition. Gilmer v. State, 955 So. 2d 829, 834 (¶13) (Miss. 2007). The American Heritage Dictionary 1956 (3ded. 1992) defines “unnatural” as “[d]eviating from a behavioral or social norm[.]” “Infamous” means “[c]ausing or deserving infamy; heinous[.]” Id. at 924.
¶16. In McIntosh v. McIntosh, 977 So. 2d 1257, 1267 (¶¶37-38) (Miss. Ct. App. 2008), this court found a wife’s conduct relating to the parties’ finances amounted to habitual cruelty under the “unnatural and infamous” prong. The wife in McIntosh forged her husband’s name to savings bonds, cashed them without notifying him, and pretended to help him look for them afterward. We found: “Such acts certainly qualify as conduct that could have rendered the marriage revolting . . . and could have made it impossible . . . to discharge the duties of marriage.” Id. at 1267 (¶38). In Jones, 43 So. 3d at 471-72 (¶10), 473-74 (¶¶15-16), 477-78 (¶¶26, 29), we found a husband’s substantial gambling losses—when combined with his verbal abuse and sexual demands—rose to the level of habitual cruel and inhuman treatment. Though proof of the gambling losses was limited, the wife testified the losses were $100,000. Id. at 471 (¶10).”
* * *
“¶22. Habitual cruelty may be found from a series of acts, ‘such as wilful failure to support, verbal abuse, neglect, and the like which, if taken alone will not constitute cruelty, but when taken together will manifest a course of conduct as a whole which may amount to cruelty.'” Jackson, 922 So. 2d at 57 (¶8).
DICTA
November 4, 2011 § Leave a comment
- What Mississippi crimes will cost you your voting privilege if you’re convicted? Tom Freeland has an enlightening post about the confusing state of Mississippi’s disenfranchisement law.
- It’s up for a vote on Nov. 8. The NYT weighs in on Mississippi’s proposed “personhood amendment.“
- And, another NYT article, this on the decline of manners in the south.
- Locked out of your house, computer, wifi or garage? Lifehack offers top 10 ways to unlock the unlockable.
- Brian Palmer at Slate on why you should be drinking cheap wine. Like less than $5.00 a bottle.
- An elegy to handwriting by Ann Wroe at More Intelligent Life.
- Quite possibly the silliest opinion ever from the Mississippi Supreme Court. Thus Blogged Anderson revisits Justice Roberston’s embarassingly bombastic opinion in Dycus v. Sillers, 557 So. 2d 486 (Miss. 1990).
- SF Chronicle: A record 49% of all Americans live in a family where at least one member receives some type of government benefits. 63% of all federal spending is checks to individuals for which the government receives no services.
BACK IN THE DAY WHEN LAW SCHOOL WAS REALLY TOUGH
November 3, 2011 § 2 Comments
Law school ground you down, eh? Con Law especially rugged? Took you a while to get back on your feet?
Well, you only thought you had it tough. Take a look at this sad tale of an overzealous law student from the Chicago Tribune’s June 8, 1900, edition.
“CONSTITUTIONAL LAW!” he shouted. Indeed. If that had been me, I would have yelled “REAL PROPERTY” and swooned dead away.
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Thanks to The Law Life.


