Abbott v. Abbott

75 Pa. Super. 483, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 48
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 5, 1921
DocketAppeal, No. 183
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 75 Pa. Super. 483 (Abbott v. Abbott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbott v. Abbott, 75 Pa. Super. 483, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 48 (Pa. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

The original libel filed in this case charged the respondent with (1) cruel and barbarous treatment endangering her husband’s life; (2) indignities to his person such as rendered his condition intolerable and life burdensome; (3) wilful and malicious desertion. The libel was subsequently amended by striking out the charge of cruel and barbarous treatment. The case was heard before a master and a large volume of evidence was taken. The charge of desertion was dismissed and a decree recommended in favor of the plaintiff for indignities to the person. The report of the master was approved and a decree entered in favor of the appellant. The evidence taken is directed to the second and third causes of complaint. The first question presented for consideration relates to the bona fides of the defendant’s residence in Pennsylvania and the jurisdiction of the court to grant the decree. The libel was filed September 14, 1917. It averred that the libellant had been a resident of the State of Pennsylvania for one or more years previous to the filing of the libel. The parties were mar[485]*485ried in the City of Washington in August, 1897. Before that they had lived in the State of Georgia. After their marriage they moved to Boston where they remained until the spring of 1902, at which time they moved to the City of New York. They never lived in Pennsylvania, and all of the evidence offered relates to occurrences in Massachusetts and New York. The libellant testified that he came to Philadelphia in May, 1916, and rented a room in a lodging house at 1935 Green street where he remained “three or four months — six months, I guess.” From there he moved to a rooming house at 2021 Green street where he had a room until February, 1918, at which time he took a room at 165 N. 15th street. While in Philadelphia, he took his meals “anywhere around town in restaurants.” He paid for his rooms by the week. His business at that time was, selling automobile trucks for the White Company of Cleveland, Ohio. The field of his activity extended from Baltimore to Boston, and he first had his place of business in New York. In 1910 there was a change in management which took him out of New York “a good deal” especially during the last five or six years. This work took him where the company sent him —to Philadelphia every week, to the factory at Cleveland, to Providence and into Connecticut, or up into New York State — wherever business called him. He received his instructions from Cleveland where to go. These instructions were sent to him to New York or to Philadelphia. Those to Philadelphia were sent to 216 N. Broad street where the White Company had an agency. He maintained his bank account in New York, but had two trunks containing clothing, shoes and personal things in his room. When in New York he stayed at a club to which he belonged. He was registered as a voter in Philadelphia in September, 1917, and voted at the following election. In answer to the inquiry how often he occupied the rooms on Green street, his reply was: “I should say sometimes once a week and twice a week, but [486]*486not every week.” In explanation lie said: “When I moved to Philadelphia I was traveling, and when I went away I would take what clothing I needed.” In further explanation he said: “I came over here to Philadelphia, when it was necessary. Our business was very slack, in fact for four years we didn’t have any business to amount to anything.” He had a room at Bockville Center, Long Island, in 1917. A witness, John B. Kendrick, Jr., a cousin and associate of the libellant and a resident of New York, testified that he was once at the apartment of the libellant at 1613 Green street, and was with him for part of an evening at 2021 Green street. Bobert J. Howley, an employee of the White Company, testified that he thought he was once at the libellant’s room at 1613 Green street, and that he was several times at 165 N. 15th street, and was also at 2021 Green street. There was no other corroborating evidence as to the fact or character of his actual occupancy of either of the rooms on Green street. The proprietor of the house on 15th street testified that he had a room there which he occupied over the week’s end — he just slept there. As he did not take the room on 15th street until February, 1917, it was necessary that he establish a residence in the Green street rooms at least from the middle of September, 1916. It does not appear that he had social acquaintances in Philadelphia, nor does he produce any witnesses from either of the Green street houses to show the extent and character of his sojourn there. The evidence of Mr. Howley is directly contradicted by Detective Wilson who went to the office of the White Company in Philadelphia in September, 1918, to secure information in regard to the libellant. He testified that he met Mr. Howley at the office of the White Company on Broad street and inquired about Charles Abbott and was informed that there was a man of that name connected with the White Company who was a salesman in New York; that he was in New York or Cleveland; and that he travelled all over the country. The witness asked [487]*487Howley to give him his address to which the latter replied : “I don’t believe I can, but we may have a record of him.” He said: “It seems to me that at one time he lived on 15th street.” Then after referring the question to a woman or girl in the office, he said to the witness: “No, we haven’t any record of his address”; that he didn’t get his mail there, but that he could be reached by writing to the company in New York, Cleveland or Boston, because he travels more out of New York and Boston than anywhere else. In reply to this evidence, Mr. Howley said that he understood the inquiry to be about George Abbott who had worked for the company. The same witness made investigation as to the houses on Green street and 15th street at which the libellant claimed to have had rooms and ascertained, as he stated, that there was no such number as 1935.Green street, and that there was no such number as 165 N. 15th street. In reply to this evidence the libellant was called, about two months afterward, and stated that the Green street address should have been 1613 instead of 1935; that he first discovered his error in looking over his receipts. In excuse of his mistake he said he wasn’t there very long, only from May until about the middle of August. The mistake in the 15th street address he claimed was chargeable to the stenographer, but the transcript of the evidence discloses the same number in three different places in the libellant’s examination. Further evidence bearing on the question of residence exists in the fact that when the libellant registered as a voter in Philadelphia in September, 1917, he made affidavit that the place of his residence at his last registration was 8th avenue and 55th street, New York City. The time of the registration was 1916. The respondent offered proof to show that the only registration week in 1916 in the State of New York commenced on Monday, October 9th, and ended Saturday, October 16th. This evidence was rejected by the master. Proof was thereupon offered of the New York statute governing elections, according to [488]*488which one week of every year is designated for the registration of voters — that week beginning on the twenty-ninth day preceding the November election, which by the statute is fixed for the first Tuesday after the first Monday of November of every year. This offer was rejected by the master on the ground that the registration in New York was a fact which obviously cannot be contradicted by testimony as to the law.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McLaughlin v. McLaughlin
87 A.2d 101 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Mingone v. Mingone
67 A.2d 573 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Parcella v. Parcella
67 A.2d 576 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Blose v. Blose
61 A.2d 370 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1948)
Bobst v. Bobst
51 A.2d 414 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1946)
Mathias v. Mathias
174 A. 821 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1934)
Hilyard v. Hilyard
87 Pa. Super. 1 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Chesebrough v. Chesebrough
6 Pa. D. & C. 765 (Schuylkill County Court of Common Pleas, 1925)
Erlanger v. Erlanger
5 Pa. D. & C. 463 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1924)
Goga v. Goga
5 Pa. D. & C. 669 (Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Pa. Super. 483, 1921 Pa. Super. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-abbott-pasuperct-1921.