76 Pa. Super. 428 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1921
Opinion by
In support of this appeal from the decree of divorce from bed and board, it is contended that (1) the common pleas of Philadelphia had no jurisdiction; (2) we should not believe the evidence for libellant because, appellant’s counsel say — it is “a manufactured case which has been many years in making”; (3) the alimony granted is too large and in any event should not have been made payable for any period antedating the final decree.
Libellant charged cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to the person. She set forth her grievances in some detail in her libel and filed a bill of particulars in response to a rule. Respondent filed an answer denying the charges and stating that “some physical conflicts were precipitated by libellant making assaults on the respondent which were repelled by him but no cruel treatment was ever inflicted on her.”
1. The libel was filed April 1, 1916, and contains an averment that libellant’s residence “is at No. 251 South 16th Street in” Philadelphia, “.and she has been a resident of the State of Pennsylvania continuously for upwards of eight years previous to the filing of this libel. The present residence of the respondent is Philadelphia Avenue, Langhorne, Bucks County, Pa.” The parties moved from western Pennsylvania to a country home at Langhorne, Bucks County, in February, 1912. Libellant withdrew therefrom March 7, 1916, and came to Philadelphia and made her home at 251 S. 16th Street. She lived there until the rent was raised so that she “hadn’t sufficient means to meet it.” At the time of the hearing she lived at the Sunderland, 35th Street and Powelton Avenue. The statute requires that a libellant reside in the state “at least one whole year previous to the filing of his or her petition or libel”: 13 March, 1815,
2. We all agree with appellee on the controlling issues presented by the second contention.
In considering the evidence, we apply the measure of proof stated in Krug v. Krug, 22 Pa. Superior Ct. 572, 573: “The act clearly distinguishes between cruel and barbarous treatment upon the one hand, and indignities to the person upon the other, as causes for divorce, and requires that the first shall endanger life. A single act of cruelty may be so severe and with such attending circumstances of atrocity as to justify a divorce. No single act of indignity to the person is sufficient cause for a divorce; there must be such a course of conduct or continued treatment as renders the wife’s condition intolerable and life burdensome. The indignities need not be such as to endanger life or health; it is sufficient if the course of treatment be of such a character as to render the condition of any woman of ordinary sensibility and delicacy of feeling intolerable and her life burdensome: Elmes v. Elmes, 9 Pa. 166; May v. May, 62 Pa. 206; Melvin v. Melvin, 130 Pa. 6; Mason v. Mason, 131 Pa. 161; Oxley v. Oxley, 191 Pa. 474. When a husband who is mentally responsible pursues such a continued course of treatment as to naturally reduce a reasonable woman to the condition defined by the statute, and thereby forces his wife to withdraw from his home, she is entitled to a divorce.”
The parties were married in 1907. She was born in 1867, he in 1872. They have no children. He is engaged in the coke business and owns coal lands in Fayette and Greene counties and for awhile lived at Uniontown. In 1911 he bought a farm near Langhorne, Pa., and after making improvements, they moved there in February, 1912. The evidence supports the conclusion that there was apparently no irreconcilable disagreement between them prior to July 20,1912, when, as libellant says “our first trouble began.” This appears to have grown out of
In a letter to his father written August 1, 1913, he said, “I am distressed and humiliated again by this crazy woman I am married to.I think she is crazy beyond a doubt.” She testified: “.Mr. Lynn even refused to speak to me at the table and on the 26th of September [1913] after breakfast he had the man who served breakfast tell me he wanted me. I walked out to the sun parlor and he said ‘I have decided to get rid of you and this is what I will do for you’ and handed me a paper”; a proposal of provisions he would make for her, received in evidence. Referring generally to the same period, counsel for appellant say, “During this time on account of divers disagreements they contemplated a mutual separation and each had employed counsel, but the matter of settlement was dropped.” A draft of this proposed agreement is in the record and bears date October, 1913. We find from the evidence that respondent threatened to get rid of his wife and we attribute the cruelty of which he was guilty to his efforts to carry out that threat. We also find that its effect was to require her to withdraw from his home. In 1913 during some dispute he cursed her and because of what he said she threatened “to get up and dress myself and leave if you will write that out on a paper and sign it.” He refused, whereupon she made a note of part of what he said; it was produced at the hearing but he testified that he “had no recollection of the card’s being written.” He admitted the dispute they then had resulted from his accusing her of having furnished information to the state taxing authorities whereby his father’s taxes were increased; she denied the accusation and no basis for it was shown. Libellant also testified that later during some quarrel, the respondent referred to the occasion just mentioned when she threatened to leave and said, “That is where I made a-damn fool of myself; I
The evidence is conclusive that respondent assaulted libellant a number of times. On February 21, 1915, in a dispute about whether or not she had lent a cane to a rheumatic servant, he seized her by the neck and arm ¡and kicked her repeatedly with his knee, in the struggle pushing her across the room and to the floor. This was a brutal assault and her evidence is corroborated by a number of witnesses. Two servants heard it and one of them interfered to stop it. Theresa Stearns, a nurse or maid, describes the bruised condition of libellant’s body resulting from it. She also accompanied libellant to
Respondent denies these assaults. He said “I spanked her once,” but could not say when; it may have been “The time she tried to hit me with a chair,” but he could recall no details. He gave his weight as about 200 pounds and hers as about 140. He admitted taking from her a cane but says he neither lacerated her hand in doing so nor did he strike her with it as she testified. He admits he swore at her, called her bad names and said she was crazy; he also conceded “I have no doubt I said she lied.” He testified: “Q. The only time, then, according to your present statement that you ever laid violent hands on her, was one occasion when you spanked her and you can not even tell us what year it was, is that right? A. It all happened along about the early part of 1914 I think. That’s when I had the most trouble with Mrs. Lynn. “Q. When she had the most trouble with you? A. In 1915, maybe.” He also testified, “She was a nuisance in every way.” He deprived her of control over the household servants and refused to permit her to exercise such household supervision as ordinarily falls to a wife; he testified: “I thought it a most uncalled-for matter for a woman to interfere with the running of the house.” He humiliated her in the presence of their servants. He ordered her sister out of the house in circumstances not creditable to him. After he went to
He testified that about April 28,1915, his business interests in Fayette County required him to be in Union-town. When he left, libellant was seriously ill as already described. On or about the 15th of June, with the consent of her physician Dr. Lovett, she went to Long Island to visit a friend. After being there several days, a heart attack required immediate hospital care and she was taken to the Polyclinic Hospital, New York, under the care of Dr. Bishop. Respondent was sent for at once and came to New York and desired to take libellant away from the hospital immediately. Her physician protested that she was “in no condition to be moved.” An unseemly and unnecessary dispute about expenses then took place in her room with the result as the doctor testified that libellant’s “condition was becoming impaired as a result of the excitement and discussion.” He then took respondent out of the room and afterwards again met him with Dr. Lovett, his family physican, who had been sent for. Dr. Lovett agreed that the patient could not be moved that day. Three days after-wards she was brought to her home at Langhorne in charge of a Polyclinic Hospital nurse; there Dr. Lovett took charge of her. Respondent was at Langhorne when she arrived, but within an hour, leaving his wife sick in bed, left for Uniontown and did not again return to live in the Langhorne home so long as libellant remained there. He did make at least one trip to Langhorne in February, 1916, and spent about an hour in the house' during the day while libellant was out; he spent that night in Langhorne as the guest of a friend, although his house was open and libellant was there. When respondent left her sick in bed on April 28,1915, and went to Uniontown to attend to his business affairs, she asked him to leave “money to run the house” and he said “You will hear from me.” She testifies: “.When it came time to pay the servants I had nothing to pay them with
In attempting to justify himself for leaving her in such difficult circumstances, respondent testified that “she had credit at Langhorne, at Gilliams and Linton’s meat market and Showell and Fryer, Philadelphia, she could buy at Cornell, another meat man, in fact anybody would'extend credit to her that took in Langhorne.” But we can predicate little upon that statement because several months before he stopped her credit at a number of stores in Philadelphia and withdrew the privilege she had theretofore enjoyed of drawing checks on Ms bank account; his letters from Uniontown in 1915 show frequent and obviously mean criticisms of her expenditures in his absence. There is evidence that she needed clothing which she had no money to buy and borrowed from friends and relatives to get along when her husband failed to furnish necessities. He made no effort to have her come to Uniontown, and while each was doubtless willing to remain away from the other, he is responsible for his conduct. As it is unnecessary to do so, we have not here recorded all the disputes, quarrels, indignities and assaults referred to in the evidence.
3. The alimony is reasonable. The master recommended $13,000 a year and the court below reduced it to $8,000. It was made payable in monthly installments “from the 15th day of December, 1919.” Appellant contends that as the decree was signed on the 15th of September, 1920, the court was without power to make the alimony at that rate retroactive to the 15th of December, 1919.
This court reviewed the order requiring the payment of counsel fees, expenses and alimony pendente lite in an opinion reported in 68 Pa. Superior Ct. 32, in which
royalties or rents,...¡.$ 19,126.80
dividends paid by the coke corporation,. 104,250.00
dividends from the Simpson Supply Company, .. 500.00
interest on the certificate of deposit,... 1,011.10
In 1916 he received:
royalties and rents,. 23,965.00
divilends paid by the coke corporation,.... 6,250.00
dividends paid by the Simpson Supply Co.,.. 500.00
total, ....... ...... .$155,602.90
or an average per year of $77,801.45 gross and we are advised that the sum paid as royalties in 1917 included 'deficits or penalties applicable to the years 1914 to 1916.
We must, however, modify the decree by eliminating so much thereof as makes it retroactive to December 15, 1919. On the application pendente lite, we ordered that the amount then fixed be paid “until final decree of the court below”; that final decree was made on the 15th of September, 1920, so that until that date our order prescribed the amount payable.
The decree is affirmed with the modification that the alimony is hereby made payable in monthly installments of $500 each, the first installment being computed from September 15, 1920. The costs of this appeal shall be paid by appellant.