Opinion by
On a charge .of indignities the lower court entered a decree of divorce. In spite of the fact that the master,
In middle life plaintiff married the defendant on April 6, 1945, in New York City. It was a second marriage for him. Thereafter they lived in a more-than-adequate home provided by plaintiff in Philadelphia. He is Vice-President of Lavino Shipping Company. His duties in the management of the business are exacting. He has been successful and his income is large. Minor differences arose between the parties in 1946 and increased both in frequency and seriousness until June 1949 when the plaintiff left his wife. The gravamen of his complaint goes to the defendant’s excessive drinking beginning in 1947 and his humiliation because of her conduct on occasions in public, especially among his friends and business associates. Plaintiff also charged that frequently when drinking to excess defendant was belligerent and bent upon tantalizing him in the home by false accusations imputing adultery with named women, and otherwise by berating him unreasoningly and with profanity, making his life unbearable by day and preventing him from getting necessary rest at night.
Defendant does not defend the charge on the ground that she is addicted to alcohol involuntarily. It is not asserted that she is an alcoholic and on that account unanswerable for her conduct in public or her attitude toward her husband in the privacy of their home. On
Plaintiff complained of frequent tirades he was subjected to by the defendant at night in their common bed chamber. The adjoining room was occupied by plaintiff’s son, by a former marriage. Pursuant to prearrangement by plaintiff the son set up a microphone in the bedroom of the parties on the nights of April 7, 8 and 9th and the early morning of April 10th, 1949, and connected the device with a wire recording mechanism installed in his room. By this means he, with plaintiff’s knowledge and consent, attempted to make a recording of what was said between the parties on the four occasions. This effort was not entirely successful but the recording, insofar as intelligible when reproduced, was read into the record over appellant’s objection.
The technique to which plaintiff thus resorted in an effort to build up his case was far more reprehensible than that condemned in the recent case of Garro
way v. Garroway,
In making such recordings it is possible for a competent operator to shut out, or blur, parts of a conversation by use of the volume control and later pick it up again, thus eliminating unfavorable testimony. We do not charge the son with intentionally deleting parts of the conversations in this case. We will assume the unintelligible parts of the recordings are due to his lack of expertness in making them and not to design. But since parts of what was said by defendant, on all of the occasions are lacking, the recordings, on that ground alone, are not admissible against her. In general such conversations are admissible as a whole or not at all. In so holding however we do not intend in any way to qualify what we said in
Com. v. Clark,
But as we have indicated, even though injured, plaintiff is not entitled to a divorce. He had no complaint as to the defendant’s conduct when not drinking. His proof of indignities rests entirely upon her acts induced by intoxication in some degree. As to her conduct on those occasions plaintiff has no legal ground for complaint. Except to urge her to drink less and to suggest to her, ineptly it seems to us, that she consult a psychiatrist or doctor he made no effort to control his wife’s drinking habits. On the contrary he actually encouraged her to continue her practices. Before the marriage he sent a case of liquor to her apartment in New York City intended for their joint use and the entertainment of their friends on his frequent business trips to New York, and he. referred to at least one occasion before the marriage when she drank too much. In Philadelphia they belonged to a set with whom cocktails apparently were a necessary prelude to every social activity.: Plaintiff had cases of liquor..which he
This case is ruled by the principle of
Othmer v. Othmer,
Decree reversed and complaint dismissed.
The lower court by order allowed the defendant counsel fees in the sum of $5,000. This allowance was adequate and there is no merit in her appeal from the order of the court refusing to increase the amount.
Order affirmed.
