71 Pa. Super. 594 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The appellant filed a libel for a divorce for wilful and malicious desertion. Testimony was taken in support of the action, and in opposition thereto. The master after a review of the evidence recommended that the libel be dismissed. The court approved the recommendation and entered the decree from which this appeal was taken. The parties were'living in a rented house in Philadelphia at the time the desertion is alleged to have taken place. They had three children. The complainant contributed little to the support of the family and his wife caused him to be arrested in October, 1906, at which time he was directed to pay to her $10 per week. Having failed to comply with this order, he was rearrested in February, 1907, and at the hearing was
In a careful examination of the testimony, we are unable to find any facts from which it can be successfully claimed that the desertion of the wife has been established. It does not appear who held the lease of the house, but there is an entire lack of evidence that the appellant was subjected to any compulsion which required him to leave. The weight of the evidence supports the conclusion that he went away voluntarily, probably because of the action of his wife in causing him to be sentenced to contribute to her support. Nothing in the evidence or the careful argument of the learned counsel for the appellant convinces us that any error was committed by the master or by the court below in reaching the determination shown by the record.
The appeal is dismissed and the decree affirmed at the cost of the appellant.