Opinion by
This is an appeal from an order dismissing exceptions to a master’s report and entering a final decree in divorce a.v.m.
*11 The parties were married on March 23, 1951. On December 17, 1970, the hnsband filed an action for divorce, alleging indignities to the person, in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County. The parties were each 44 years old and had two children (a girl, 15, and a hoy, 9). A master was appointed and held hearings on April 17, 1972, and June 1, 1972. The husband’s testimony may be summarized as follows: his wife was a poor housekeeper; she called him vile names in front of the children; she refused to attend social functions with him; she was never current with the laundry and ironing; she often refused to cook meals; four or five times she drank alcohol until she passed out on the sofa; and she would embarrass and berate him publicly. 1 The wife denied that she was a poor housekeeper. 2 She claimed to have accompanied her husband to every social function that she knew about, unless she could not get a baby sitter. She denied that she was tardy with the laundry, or that she did not cook meals. She said she never drank alcohol to the point of passing out.
While the master found much of the husband’s testimony credible, she did not accept his allegations as to his wife’s poor housekeeping, her inefficiency with the laundry, or her refusal to attend social functions as grounds for divorce. The master did, however, find that the general course of the wife’s conduct over the past ten years showed that hate and estrangement had replaced love and affection, making the husband’s life intolerable and burdensome and thus constituting indignities to the person.
See Giuffre v. Giuffre,
The conrt below interpreted the wife’s exceptions to the master’s report as making two arguments. The first was that the master had not given sufficient attention to evidence, not denied by the husband, of infidelity. The second concerned certain evidence regarding the wife’s mental condition. The court found the evidence of infidelity irrelevant, and the evidence of the wife’s mental condition insufficient to show “that the conduct complained of was caused by [the wife’s] mental condition.”
As is our duty, we have made an independent review of the record. See
Arcure v. Arcure,
Appellant first contends that the granting of the divorce was error as it was based on her husband’s uncorroborated testimony. This argument is without merit. “A divorce may be granted upon the uncorroborated testimony of the plaintiff unless, of course, that testimony ‘is not only contradicted but also shaken by the defendant.’ ”
Arcure v. Arcure, supra,
at 417,
Appellant’s contention regarding her husband’s infidelity is also without merit. The husband did admit an extra-marital relationship with one Jill Yaughn in
*13
1962. This affair, however, was followed by eight years of cohabitation with appellant withont repetition of the transgression.
3
To be an innocent and injured sponse, a plaintiff need not be blameless.
Gray v. Gray,
The troublesome issue is that of appellant’s mental health. The husband testified, on cross-examination, that shortly after the birth of their second child, in 1962, his wife had been admitted to the psychiatric ward of a hospital in Lancaster for three weeks, and also that on four or five occasions since 1962 she was a patient at Fairmount Farms, a private psychiatric institution in Philadelphia.
It is settled law in Pennsylvania that conduct, no matter how severe, arising from mental ill-health is unintentional and therefore lacks the spirit of hate, estrangement and malevolence that is the heart of the charge of indignities.
Stewart v.
Stewart,
We cannot share this view of the record. Our conclusion might be different if the master had discussed the evidence of the wife’s mental illness and had found, for reasons explained in her report, that the wife’s illness was not the source of her objectionable conduct. The difficulty is that the master never discussed the evidence of the wife’s mental illness at all. If one were to confine oneself to the master’s report, one would never suspect there had been such evidence. This failure on the part of the master is especially striking when one examines the findings she did make. As discussed above, she rejected much of the husband’s testimony, for example as to his wife’s housekeeping and her willingness to entertain friends, but nevertheless found the wife guilty of indignities. Accordingly, in finding that the wife’s conduct “exhibited disdain, studied neglect, abusive language, intentional incivility . . .,” the master must have been relying on the evidence of what the wife had said to her husband. In view of the husband’s admissions regarding his wife’s treatment, however, it should have been apparent to the master that such conduct might not have been intentional but the result of mental illness and therefore insufficient to prove the charge of indignities.
Fawcett v. Fawcett, supra,
at 187,
It is essential that all facts relevant to a divorce be fully explored.
Cortese v. Cortese,
In these circumstances the record is so incomplete that we find ourselves unable to discharge our responsibility in good conscience. We might deny this divorce on the ground that, considering the evidence of his wife’s mental illness, the husband had not met his burden of proof.
Barnes v. Barnes,
Reversed with a procedendo.
Jacobs, J., dissents.
Notes
The last item was corroborated by a witness wbo said Mrs. Barr had “cornered” him at a Lions Olnb outing to criticize her husband.
Her testimony was corroborated by each of her three witnesses.
Appellee is currently living with one Sandy Sebastian but as this relationship did not start until after the parties had separated, in September, 1970, it is not a ground for refusing a divorce.
Gillen v. Gillen,
