43 A.2d 637 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1944
Argued April 16, 1944.
Respondent appealed from a decree in divorce recommended by the master and entered by the court below on the ground of indignities to the person, after an additional charge of desertion had been abandoned by libellant. Respondent is defectively before this court, as she has not assigned the final decree as error, but in view of the interest of the Commonwealth in the outcome of litigation for the dissolution of marriage we shall treat the assignment as properly amended and will consider the substantial questions presented by her case. Caldwell v.Caldwell,
Libellant, a minor, who attained his majority before the master's hearing, exhibited his libel on December 13, 1943, at which time he was in military service and stationed at a camp in Tennessee. The libel was acknowledged before a notary public of that state, and had not been verified before a common pleas judge, prothonotary, or clerk, a Pennsylvania notary public, or a commissioned officer of the armed forces, as required by the Act of May 2, 1929, P.L. 1237, § 25, as amended by Act of May 25, 1933, P.L. 1020, § 1, and Act of April 13, 1943, P.L. 46, § 1,
On the merits of the action our independent examination of the record has led to the conclusion that libellant has shown by a preponderance of evidence amounting to clear and satisfactory proof that respondent by a persistent course of conduct has offered such indignities to his person as to render his condition intolerable and life burdensome and that imperious reasons exist to justify the relief sought. Santilli v. Santilli,
The parties were married on November 10, 1942, and as had been previously arranged they went to live at the home of libellant's parents where they stayed until respondent returned to her own home on December 30, 1942. During this period there were frequent violent quarrels of such magnitude as to disturb the neighbors and punctuated by respondent's opprobrious and profane epithets, her false accusations that libellant was going out with other girls, statements that she was sorry she had married, and culminated on two occasions by respondent's going back to her own home for brief periods. Shortly before libellant entered the service, in February, 1943, respondent came to the table in a café where libellant was sitting with some friends and threw soup on him and one of his companions. On some of libellant's furloughs he found respondent in places of public entertainment with other men, and on one occasion when the parties had gone out together for an evening respondent pushed libellant into a police officer, called him vile names, and created such a disturbance as to be threatened with arrest. The *542 parties lived together for a week on libellant's furlough in August, 1943, and on another furlough in February, 1944, they had marital relations, although they did not effect a general reconciliation. A few days before the master's hearing, respondent met libellant and told him she was contesting the divorce action because she had "played me for a sucker before and she would keep on doing it." While libellant was in camp respondent wrote him a letter in which she asked for a divorce, stating that she no longer loved libellant, that she hated him, that she despised looking at his picture, and that she loved another man. In the letter respondent addressed libellant as "big shot" and "fool" and signed herself "Your X Wife", although at that time no divorce proceedings had been started. Libellant's testimony was corroborated in important particulars by his parents, his brother, a neighbor, and two friends, while respondent tacitly admitted the more important charges, offered no justification or excuse for her conduct, and declined to comment upon or attempt to explain away the attitude reflected by the taunting tone of the letter.
The courts have not attempted a precise definition of the affronts required to be borne before an innocent spouse's condition is rendered intolerable and his life made burdensome, as each case necessarily depends upon its own facts and is to a large degree unique. Taylor v. Taylor,
Decree affirmed.