A case of extreme physical cruelty
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ROBERT GARDNER
Once upon a time, divorce was a rare and difficult thing. This was
before no-fault divorces. With no-fault, a person can wake up in the
morning, look at his wife of 30 years, decide he needs a newer model
and get the marriage dissolved post haste.
In the days before no-fault, it wasn’t that some people didn’t
want to trade in the old mate. It was just it was more of a
challenge.
In the days of which I speak, before one could secure even a
default divorce, it was necessary to corroborate the testimony of the
plaintiff. This meant that every morning, before starting our regular
cases, we judges had to listen to a string of plaintiffs tell their
stories of cruelty, whether physical or mental, and then listen to
their friends or neighbors attest that their testimony was true.
Most of the time, it was both silly and boring, but there was one
memorable case. I shall call the parties Smith. Mrs. Smith was
charging Mr. Smith with “extreme mental and physical cruelty.”
“Smith versus Smith,” I called.
“I will call Mrs. Smith as my first witness,” the attorney
intoned. “Mrs. Smith, come forward, please.”
As physical cruelty was charged, I was expecting someone on the
small side, someone a man could easily bully. I almost went into
shock when Mrs. Smith appeared.
Petite she was not. I don’t mean to be cruel, but if King Kong had
needed a mate, central casting couldn’t have done better than Mrs.
Smith. She was gigantic.
Mrs. Smith lurched across the courtroom toward the witness stand,
fortunately missing tables and chairs that would have been smashed
into kindling had she collided with any of them. I held my breath as
she fitted her large rump into the witness chair. Fortunately, it
held. She flexed the muscles on her huge arms and glared at the world
through angry red eyes.
I was completely intimidated. I would have granted her a divorce
right then and there -- or a $1-million judgment had she asked for
it.
After establishing the basic jurisdictional facts, her attorney
launched into his presentation. Did Mr. Smith drink to excess? Yes.
Did he gamble away the family money? Yes. Was he financially
irresponsible? Yes. The litany of domestic horrors went on.
Then came the clincher. “Did Mr. Smith ever use physical force on
you?” asked the attorney. An affirmative answer came through gritted
teeth as Mrs. Smith recalled the incident.
Then the lawyer called the corroborating witness, a neighbor. She
testified that Mr. Smith was a no-good lush, a thoroughly worthless
addition to the Smith household, maybe even to the human race. Then
came the classic line:
Attorney: “Are you aware that Mr. Smith once used physical
violence on Mrs. Smith?”
Witness: “Yes.”
Attorney: “Did you actually see the incident?”
Witness: “Well, not exactly. I got there right after Mr. Smith hit
Mrs. Smith and just before they took him to the hospital.”
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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