39 Pa. Super. 490 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Lead Opinion
Opinion by
This appeal is from an order made June 17, 1907, refusing
The parties were married March 15, 1894, and lived together about eleven years, during which time four children were born, two of whom died when four or five years of age, and at the inception of this proceeding there was living a son, twelve years of age, and a daughter aged seven. The family lived in a prominent residential section of the city of Pittsburg.
The libel filed October 19, 1905, charged that the respondent, in violation of her marriage vows, for a considerable time past had given herself up to adulterous practices, and on date given and at divers times before and after, had committed adultery with a person named and divers other persons. The respondent filed her answer six days later, positively denying every charge made or suggested in the libel. The libelant secured the services of three eminent attorneys of the Allegheny county bar, and in addition his brother and a brother-in-law, who were attorneys, actively aided in the procurement of testimony. The case was vigorously prosecuted and defended. It was specifically charged by the husband that Mrs. Hartje had committed adultery with a stable man, and a negro house servant, and by a supplemental bill she was charged with making and keeping appointments at the Hotel Lincoln, regularly, during the years 1903 and 1904, and at a public house on Watson street in the city of Pittsburg, no co-respondent being named in the latter charges, and further with communicating to the libelant a loathsome venereal disease. At the instance of the respondent the court granted a rule on the libelant for a bill of particulars as to the names and places where it was alleged she had been implicated. Libelant refused to give ,the names of the alleged co-respondents involved in the Hotel Lincoln and Watson street charges and abandoned these grave charges against his wife. The trial of the case began June 25 and continued until August 6, and presents a record of 2,000 pages of printed matter furnished by ninety-four witnesses, and a large number of exhibits, a number of which were, the
The deposition of a negro stable servant, Clifford Hooe, was procured by the libelant, in which acts of adultery were alleged with Mrs. Hartje. Immediately thereafter, the negro servant fled the state, but he was followed by detectives in the employ of the respondent, and subsequently apprehended and brought back to Pittsburg, convicted of perjury on his own confession with additional proof, and sentenced to six years in the penitentiary. Another witness, William B. DeCost, an accomplice of Hooe, was indicted and convicted of perjury in testifying that the respondent had met Hooe at DeCost’s store for improper purposes. On an appeal to this court that judgment was affirmed, from which decision the Supreme Court refused an appeal.
A principal witness in the case was one Thomas Madine, a stable and house servant, with whom it was originally alleged the respondent had committed adultery. On the trial this witness was subjected to a severe cross-examination by the libel-ant and he testified unequivocally that no improper relations had ever existed between him and the respondent. Subseqfiently, when the case was before this court for rehearing, an incriminating affidavit was secured from Madine by the libel-
On the hearing in the rule in the present case the respondent averred that she had no estate whatever of her own and no in-' come whatever from any source. That the -libelant has con-, tributed nothing'whatever since July 23, 1905, the date of the - separation, towards the support of her and her two children, and that she has been wholly dependent upon her father for means to support herself and the two children aforesaid, and avers, “Your petitioner is informed, and believes and avers that the said libelant Augustus Hartje, is worth at least the sum of $1,500,000, and that he has an income therefrom in ex- - cess of $75,000 per year.” To which in his answer filed the.libelant replied as follows: “Respondent denies that the alleged information of the petitioner as to what this-respondent -' is worth, and what his income is, is correct; whenever-the ■ court will require information as to these matters the respond-, ent will be ready and willing to furnish it.” This is not a denial . of the averment that he was worth the amount named, and must-be treated as evasive and not responsive. The amount of his - estate and its income were important facts in determining the question before the court, and his refusal frankly to inform the court of that fact, is certainly not a circumstance favorable to. him.
The common law as well as the decisions of our own courts require a husband who wages such an assault on his wife to sup-. ply all necessary and reasonable expenses to withstand it, if he ■ is of sufficient financial-ability. Such a strenuous attack on the virtue of a wife and mother must be met either by abject sur-.
To judge of the propriety of this order, which is largely dependent upon judicial discretion, we should at least have before us the whole record of the case, as it was before the court below when the order was made. In disposing of the case the court had before him all that had preceded this rule, from the filing of the libel, through all the pleadings, the tedious and complicated trial of the case up to the final decree, and was personally familiar with all the facts as they were developed, and in assuming judicial knowledge of the facts thus learned through the hearings in the same case and in taking judicial cognizance of what he himself had done as judge, as well as of the testimony adduced before him in the trial, the court acted clearly within the authority fixed by decisions: 16 Cyc. 851. He regarded the statement of expenditures filed by the respondent as merely advisory, and treated it only as information to be considered with other matters of which he had knowledge. The payment of the items was not denied. Mrs. Hartje testified that she did pay them in full.
The only assignment urged is that they were unnecessary and unlawful. In the light of all the facts of the case, and having a due regard for the libelant’s ability to pay, the order was made directing him to pay to the respondent “ for counsel fees the sum of $7,000; and for support to January 1, 1908, and on account of expenses incurred by her in her defense, including services of writing experts and detectives, procuring the attendance of witnesses from beyond the jurisdiction of the court, cost of paper-books, and incidental expenses, the further sum of
It was stated in Graves v. Cole, 19 Pa. 171, when a wife has no separate support she must be subsisted and her necessary costs paid, pending proceedings for divorce. This rule is necessary; otherwise she might be denied justice for want of the funds required for vindication of her rights, and for this reason, if necessary, she may in general have her costs taxed de die in diem. In Breinig v. Breinig, 26 Pa. 161, the court says: It is argued that the court ought not to have allowed the respondent so much alimony, nor nothing at all for her expenses. If there was error in this, we have no authority to correct it. There is nothing on this record by which we could know whether the alimony was too much or too little. We are bound, for this reason, if for no other, to presume that the judge who had all the facts before him, decided the matter rightly. It has been the uniform practice to allow a wife, destitute of a separate estate, who is either suing or defending a case of divorce, such a reasonable sum as will enable her to carry it on. She cannot sue in forma pauperis, for she is not a pauper if she is the wife of a man who has property. To deny her the means to pay for processed professional aid is to deny her justice. The amount is a question for the discretion of the court.
In Waldron v. Waldron, 55 Pa. 231, the Supreme Court says: It is undoubtedly the duty of the court to make a proper allowance to the wife if she be not herself of sufficient ability to enable her to maintain or defend her suit, having regard to the ability of her husband, and it never fails to do so, but this is entirely within the discretion of the court, both as to amount and duration, and not subject to review. And again in Powers’s Appeal, 120 Pa. 320, after quoting from Breinig v. Breinig, it was
In Fernald v. Fernald, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 629, where the court below made absolute a rule for payment of $125 for traveling expenses and the like, and refused an order to the respondent to submit to cross-examination by the libelant, for the purpose of showing what her assets, etc., were, this court stated, “Want of sufficient ability to pay does not imply absolute destitution and dependence upon the charity of others for support. The appellate court will not reverse except for plain abuse of discretion.” And in Jones v. Jones, 37 Pa. Superior Ct. 442, we held, even if it be conceded that the appeal arises from an interlocutory order of this nature, it is clear that the appellate court will not reverse except for plain abuse of discretion, and that nothing approaching that appears in this case. Her counsel decided that it was vitally important for her to employ eminent handwriting experts in order to disclose the forgery of her alleged letters, and of detectives and special agents to expose the perjury of important witnesses for the libelant. Had the learned judge below arranged the distribution of the aggregate sum in any other manner, we should accept his conclusion as representing his judicial discretion after a full investigation and knowledge of all the facts of the case; and to reverse his order we should at least have like information and be convinced that his discretion was wrongly exercised.
The selected counsel of the respondent are gentlemen of high professional character, and it is evident that all the investigations that were made and all expenses that were incurred were subject to their supervision, and the payment of the bills was
To grant a rule as prayed for, or to take further testimony would be practically to open up the whole proceeding and retry many of its phases. It is urged, and not without a show of reason, that the principal purpose to be served by such an investigation would be, if possible, to secure evidence to be used on behalf of the libelant in his defense to a pending action of divorce which was brought against him by the present respondent. The court below was much more familiar with the facts than this court can be owing to lack of the record as above suggested, and we do not find, from our examination of the case, that there was any abuse of discretion.
The assignments of error are overruled. The decree is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
While the learned judge of the common pleas had acquired ample information in the trial of the principal case to enable him to determine that the respondent was justified in employing detectives, yet it seems to me that upon the question of the amount alleged to have been expended by her and as to the purposes for which detectives were employed it was incumbent on her to produce some evidence in addition to her ex parte affidavit and the affidavit of the chief of detectives. I am therefore unable to concur with my brethren in affirming that part of the decree relative to the sums paid for detective service.
Porter, J., concurs in foregoing.