43 A.2d 630 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued April 17, 1945.
On March 12, 1940, prosecutrix secured an order of support for herself and her five minor children against appellant, her husband, for $75 per month under the Act of June 24, 1939, P.L. 872, § 733, 18 Pa.C.S.A. § 4733. On December 17, 1943, appellant filed a petition to reduce the amount of the order under the Act of June 19, 1939, P.L. 440, § 1, 17 Pa.C.S.A. § 263, and on the petition the court entered an order which as finally amended on January *621
28, 1944, required appellant to pay $75 per month for the support of three of the minor children only. Upon appeal to this court, because of inadequacies of the record and reliance by the trial judge upon unsworn statements dehors the formal testimony, the order was reversed and the record remitted for a further hearing, findings of fact and an order based thereon. Com. v. Elliott,
The record now before us discloses that appellant went to West Virginia in July, 1940, and secured employment with the Kopper Coal Company from that time until October, 1943, at a salary of $200 per month. Following that, appellant worked for the Elizabeth Fuel Company for $300 per month, and since May 1, 1944, he has been engaged as general superintendent for the Tioga Coal and Coke Company at a salary of $400 per month, from which $46.40 is deducted for social security and federal income taxes. While in West Virginia appellant instituted a suit for divorce against prosecutrix which was later withdrawn, but in a second proceeding prosecutrix was granted a divorce on April 7, 1943, on a cross-bill filed by her in the action. The decree included an award of $75 per month for the support of prosecutrix and five of her children, and was made to run concurrently with the support order in Westmoreland County, but payments thereunder fell in arrears. On July 3, 1943, appellant remarried and at the time of the hearing he was living in West Virginia with his second wife. Under the terms of a property settlement negotiated in connection with the divorce action, appellant conveyed to prosecutrix a farm in Unity Township worth from $2,000 to $5,000, which they had owned by the entireties and upon which *622 prosecutrix and four minor children continued to make their home. At the time of the hearing prosecutrix' and appellant's two adult children had left the home and were self-sustaining, one minor daughter was living at home but was employed, and three other minor daughters, for whose support the order now provides, lived with prosecutrix and were dependent. Prosecutrix worked when she was able to leave the house, but the health of one of the daughters was such as frequently to require prosecutrix' attention and the services of a physician whose bill averaged $10 monthly. Prosecutrix testified that rising costs of living had encroached upon the funds at her disposal and had made the maintenance of the family upon the payments under the order more difficult than had been the case in 1940 when the original order was entered.
The first question is whether the sum awarded for the support of appellant's children is excessive in the light of the testimony. The purpose of a support order is to secure such an allowance to the children of appellant as is reasonable, having in mind his property and earning capacity and the station in life of the parties; but it is not our prerogative to punish appellant for any misconduct toward his family, if such there has been, nor is it within our province to divide his estate. Com. ex. rel.Milne v. Milne,
Appellant's remaining objection goes to that part of the order requiring him to make good old arrearages, the argument being that appellant should be given credit for that part of the deficiencies representing amounts chargeable to the support of prosecutrix accruing after the entry of the divorce decree, and also amounts payable under the old order for the use of a son and a daughter over the age of 16 and employed. With the entry of a valid decree in divorce the obligation of a husband to support his wife is terminated, Com. ex rel. Cronhardt v. Cronhardt,
Appellant also complains that no findings of fact were filed below in compliance with the mandate from this court when the case was first here. Com. v. Elliott, supra, p. 481. The more desirable practice in proceedings of this kind is to have findings in support of the order, Com. ex rel. McClenen v.McClenen,
Order affirmed. *625