45 A.2d 909 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued October 22, 1945. In this compensation case the bureau determined that the claimant was ineligible to compensation, and upon claimant's appeal, the referee sustained the bureau. Upon her appeal to the board, it reversed the referee and allowed compensation. The bureau appealed to us.
The only findings of fact by the board which require consideration relate to claimant's separation from her employment. The claimant, Grace Burkhart, was employed as secretary-stenographer by the Jacobs Aircraft Engine Company at Pottstown. On April 28, 1944, she voluntarily resigned her position in order to be married, and on May 13, 1944, she married Carl W. Dames, Jr., an aviation cadet in the United States Army, *566 at Tulsa, Oklahoma. She remained with her husband at Tulsa, and shortly thereafter moved to Greenville, Texas, and thence to Carizzo Springs, Texas, all of these places being near to the camps where her husband was stationed from time to time.
She registered for work, and contended, and the board found, that she was able, ready and willing to accept work. However, we do not reach the controversy concerning her availability for employment. Our answer to the contention that she had good cause for voluntarily leaving her employment decides the case.
The Board based its decision upon an extract from the opinion in Teicher Unemployment Compensation Case,
An impulse, a whim or a fancy cannot furnish the base upon which to predicate good cause. They lack the character and strength of a compulsion produced by extraneous and necessitous circumstances which, as explained in Sturdevant UnemploymentCompensation Case,
The pivotal point, however, is that no legal obligation rested upon the claimant to marry or to join her fiance. The Act of June 22, 1935, P.L. 450, § 2, 48 PS *567 § 171, abolishing causes of action for breach of contract to marry, frees the parties to an engagement to marry from legal obligations. Claimant was morally bound by the solemn promise which she exchanged with her intended spouse, but the agreement between them was not enforceable or cognizable in courts of law. The Sturdevant and Felegy appeals, decided this day, are based upon the compulsion arising from the legal obligation resting upon a wife. This was recognized in the Teicher case by the phrase, "a devoted wife". Even if an impulse were allowable as good cause, it would be applicable, under the facts and the express language of the Teicher case, only in the case of a wife.
Decision reversed.