167 Pa. Super. 168 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1950
Opinion by
This case is before us on appeal from the dismissal of a petition to quash a writ of attachment execution issued at the instance of relatrix. She is a resident of Ohio and her husband, Charles Bolen, appellant, is a resident of Pennsylvania. They separated in 1941 and
A praecipe for attachment execution on the judgment was filed September 9, 1949, and the Peoples First National Bank & Trust Company and The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania were summoned as garnishees. Both garnishees filed answers admitting sums of money in their hands owing to the defendant. He, however, obtained a rule to show cause why the attachment execution served on his employer, The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, should not be quashed on the ground that relatrix, not being a resident of Pennsylvania, could not legally attach all of her husband’s wages in the hands of his Pennsylvania employer. He takes the position that since, under the law of Ohio, where relatrix resides, she could attach only a percentage of her husband’s wages, she should not be permitted to come into Pennsylvania and attach all of his wages. This for the reason that the decisions of the courts of this State permitting such attachment have been due to the concern of the Commonwealth that a deserted and needy wife should be prevented from becoming a public charge, and the circumstance that failure of a husband to support his wife is a criminal offense in this Commonwealth.
True, the Supreme Court in Commonwealth ex rel. Deutsch v. Deutsch, 347 Pa. 66, 31 A. 2d 526, where the question was whether a wife who had obtained a support order upon her husband could attach his wages,
But in Stewart's Estate, 334 Pa. 356, 5 A. 2d 910, where it was specifically contended that the Act of 1921 did not apply to nonresident wives, the Supreme Court, speaking through the present Chief Justice, said (page 366) : “We cannot agree that the Act of 1921 was intended by the legislature to relate only to claims of resident wives . . And in Stewart v. Stewart, 127 Pa. Superior Ct. 567, 193 A. 860, this Court, at page 582, approved the following from the opinion of Cordon, P. J., of the Court of Common Pleas No. 2 of Philadelphia, in Lippincott v. Lippincott, 28 D. & C. 28, 32: “ ‘A wife’s right to support exists wherever she may reside, and decisions, some of which protect the fundamental rights of wives, while others, by denying them, assist husbands in refusing or neglecting to perform their correlative fundamental duties, cannot be reconciled either in reason or good morals upon any such irrelevant basis as that of residence.’ ”
Collom’s Appeal, 12 W. N. C. 309, and Sweeny v. Hunter, 145 Pa. 363, 22 A. 653, upon which appellant
We agree with the conclusion of the learned court below that, in the absence of any statutory provision restricting the right of attachment to a resident of this State, “we may not deny such remedy to a non-resident wife simply on the basis of her non-residence.”
Order affirmed.
Act of April 15, 1913, P. L. 72, 18 PS §1252, empowering a Court of Quarter Sessions making an order for support to enforce it by issuing a writ of attachment execution; re-enacted in The Penal Code of 1939, P. L. 872, §733, 18 PS §4733.
Act of May 10, 1921, P. L. 434, 48 PS §136, extending the authority to “any court of competent jurisdiction.”