We regret that we are obliged to recommit this report to the master. Except for the defect which we shall point out, it is an able and exhaustive report, and evinces the learned master’s conscientious effort to solve properly and justly a case bristling with difficulties in respect to the facts. But these very difficulties require us to return the report. There are no findings of those facts concerning which controversy exists. The fifth paragraph of the finding of facts, viz., “that because of indignities to the person of the libellant, the libellant was compelled to withdraw from the respondent’s home and family, and that the respondent has been guilty of cruel and barbarous treatment, endangering the libellant’s life,” is a conclusion of law, or, at most, a conclusion compounded of law and facts. Beyond that there are no findings of the disputed and controverted facts, unless certain references to the testimony made by the learned master in that part of his report called the “discussion” might be taken as findings. In a pinch, we might so regard them, if they were there stated as findings, but even in the “discussion” the learned master does not so treat them. To illustrate: The
In short, the master will remember that he is a master and not a mere examiner. Masters are, since the Act of March 10, 1899, P. L. 8, expected to do something more than relieve the court of the drudgery of hearing and taking the testimony: Middleton v. Middleton, 187 Pa. 612. A master is now appointed to “take the testimony and return the proceedings, together with a report of the proceedings before him and his opinion of the case, to the court” (Act of March 10,1899, P. L. 8), and this clause of the act has been construed to require the master to frame his report in the manner of masters in chancery: Moore v. Moore, 11 Dist. R. 253; Campbell v. Campbell, 11 Dist. R. 253; Pomeroy v. Pomeroy, 11 Dist. R. 299. While such findings have not the effect of a verdict of a jury nor of the finding of a chancellor (Edgar v. Edgar, 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 220; Naylor v. Naylor, 59 Pa. Superior Ct. 547), nevertheless, they cannot be dispensed with, and in a contested case it is particularly important that they be drawn carefully and exhaustively. Such findings must be made by some one in the court of original jurisdiction (Middleton v. Middleton, 187 Pa. 612; Howe v. Howe, 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 193), and it seems entirely reasonable that the master should assume this duty in the first instance. Certainly, unless we are fully advised of the facts upon which the master bases his opinion, we are not able to pass judgment upon his recommendation.
Now, Sept. 18, 1922, the report is referred to the master for findings of fact, which he may supply in a supplemental report; whereupon the case may again be ordered upon the argument list.
From James L. Schaadt, Allentown, Pa.
