25 Pa. Super. 467 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1904
Opinion by
This proceeding was begun and a subpoena sur libel for divorce a vinculo matrimonii issued on October 15, 1842, returnable the first Monday of December following, and was so proceeded in that, on February 25,1843, a divorce was decreed. That decree stood unquestioned for over fifty-nine years. The respondent, on November 17, 1902, presented a petition and obtained a rule on J. A. Smith, executor of William Given, deceased, to show cause why the decree in divorce entered February 25, 1843, should not be vacated and annulled. The petition set forth that the parties were married in 1838 hnd lived together in Philadelphia until October, 1840, that„ the petitioner then being ill was ordered by the doctor to go to the home of her parents or to a hospital; that she went to the home of her parents in Philadelphia, where her husband went to see her at different times requesting her to go back to housekeeping with him, but that she was unable to do so because of her physical condition, being unable to walk up or down stairs, and that she communicated these facts to her husband; that early in the spring of 1841 her husband’s visits ceased ; the latter part of 1841 or early part of 1842 she received a letter from him dated at Cleveland, Ohio, and that the last time she saw her husband was shortly before Christmas, 1842, when he
This cannot be considered as an appeal from the original decree, the right of the appellant to raise any question as to the sufficiency of the evidence upon Avhich the court passed in 1848, or as to any irregularities in the proceedings, not of a jurisdictional nature, has long been barred by lapse of time: Kepner’s Appeal, 94 Pa. 74. The court below had power to vacate the decree, if satisfied that the court was Avithout jurisdiction to enter it, or that it was procured by fraud or imposition : Allen v. Maclellan, 12 Pa. 328 ; Boyd’s Appeal, 38 Pa. 241; Fidelity Insurance Company’s Appeal, 93 Pa. 242.
The court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and there was nothing in the record to show that it was without authority to enter a decree in this particular case. The papers in the case have been lost from the files, and in their absence the
The burden was upon the appellant, in order to sustain her contention, to establish by evidence outside of the record the facts which required the vacation of this decree. In passing upon the evidence, by which it was attempted to establish those facts, the court below was vested with a discretion. Our jurisdiction to review the conclusion reached must be found in the Act of May 20, 1891, P. L. 101, allowing an appeal from a refusal to open, vacate or strike off judgments. The proceeding is in the nature of an application to a chancellor, and upon appeal, the appellate court will only reverse when there has been a clear abuse of discretion: Kelber v. Plow Company, 146 Pa. 485 ; Jenkintown National Bank’s Appeal, 124 Pa. 337.
There was no evidence whatever that the libelant had ever made any representation to the respondent which could have misled her as to this proceeding. The imposition if there was any must have been practiced upon the court. The appellant undertook to prove that the libelant at the time of the institution of this proceeding was a resident of the state of Ohio; she undertook to establish that fact by evidence satisfactory to the court below. The learned judge was not convinced upon that point, and a careful review of the evidence has not satisfied us that his conclusion involved an abuse of discretion. William Given had been a resident of Philadelphia from his boyhood, and the appellant concedes that he had lived there until the spring of 1841. His father and mother lived there. After his wife left him and returned to her home he boarded in that city for a time. He was a journeyman bricklayer, working by the day. The appellant testified that in the latter part of the year 1841 she received a letter from William Given dated at Cleveland, Ohio; she did not say that the letter contained any
The decree in this proceeding was entered on February 25, 1843; William Given, on January 15,1844, in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, married Mary E. Simmons, who died on April 1, 1884. Given subsequently, on August 23, 1885, married a third wife who survived Mm. Given died, leaving to survive him a number of children and grandchildren, the fruit of his marriage with Mary E. Simmons; the legitimacy of those children is of course dependent upon the validity of this decree. William Given made no attempt to conceal his subsequent marriages, nor to keep secret the place of his abode. He frequently visited Philadelphia taking his wife with him. He made known to his son, the son of the respondent, the existence of his second family, many years before his death; this certainly indicated that he believed that the respondent was fully aware of the existence of the decree. The judges who entered this decree, all the counsel who appeared in the cause, the examiner who took the testimony, and all persons connected with the proceeding, save alone this respondent, are long since dead. The evidence offered to impeach the decree was not sufficient to warrant the court below in striking it down.
The order of the court below is affirmed.