Bisceglia v. Bisceglia

7 A.2d 147, 136 Pa. Super. 232, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 9, 1939
DocketAppeal, 173
StatusPublished

This text of 7 A.2d 147 (Bisceglia v. Bisceglia) 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
Bisceglia v. Bisceglia, 7 A.2d 147, 136 Pa. Super. 232, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtfeld, J.,

This is a divorce proceeding filed by the libellant, the husband, on the grounds of cruel and barbarous treatment and personal indignities. The bill of particulars of alleged offenses covers a period from 1917 to 1937. The respondent filed a responsive answer, denying all charges.

The parties were married April 26, 1906, have lived in Allegheny County during the entire period of their marital relation and have six children, all of age. They lived together as husband and wife until October 26, 1936, when libellant withdrew from the common residence because of threats upon his life which caused him to take up a separate residence.

The respondent filed proceedings in desertion and non-support court and obtained an order of court against the libellant. On May 17, 1937, she again applied to the court asking that the libellant be compelled to furnish her with a home, which the court refused to do. Enraged by this, she hurried to the room in which the libellant was living and secreted herself therein. He arrived home a short time later and, as he was unlocking the door, he was met with a bullet fired by his wife from a revolver with which she was *234 waiting for him. The revolver was fired very close to the door. The bullet went completely through the door, penetrated through the heavy overcoat worn by libellant and lodged against his inside coat. Libellant was stunned for a moment but quickly regained his composure and fled to a nearby saloon where he called the police. When the police arrived, they had to break in the door in order to get to the respondent who had locked herself in the libellant’s room. Libellant was taken to the hospital and discharged when it was found that the bullet had spent itself in piercing the door and outer clothing of the libellant without causing serious injury to him.

The case was heard before McNaugher, J., of the common pleas court who, in an opinion filed, granted a decree on both grounds. This appeal followed.

According to libellant’s testimony, the respondent, beginning in 1917, mistreated him almost continuously, calling him vile and opprobrious names, threatening his life, refusing to wash his clothes or serve his meals, and generally making his life miserable and unbearable.

Things went from bad to worse until the incident of October 26,1936. Libellant testified that he came home to find all the lights on and respondent in bed asleep. He turned off the lights and went to bed himself only to have respondent jump out of bed and again turn on the lights. When his son arrived home, the mother and son started to hit libellant. She wanted to hit him with a rolling pin. Their daughter, Theresa Bombara, came from downstairs in time to hear respondent call libellant a number of vile names and save him from abuse with the rolling pin then in the respondent’s hands. The daughter, Mrs. Theresa Bombara, so testified. This incident was also testified to by another daughter, Emma Bisceglia. Her testimony fully corroborates the testimony of libellant and Theresa Bombara. Part of the testimony by this witness is as follows: “Q. Did she make threats concerning your *235 father? A. I remember on October 26th I was in bed when he came down the steps and he (libellant) was in the hall and she (respondent) followed him in the hall and she said, ‘I won’t be satisfied until I see you in the street without a cent.’ This was all said in Italian — ‘And when I get through with you they won’t be able to find a piece of your body.’ ......Q. How was your father dressed? A. He had on his underwear. Q. How was your mother dressed? A. She had on a nightgown. Q. Where did your father go? A. He went back into the hall and then down in the cellar, I guess. Q. Do you know how long he stayed in the cellar? A. Five or ten minutes. Q. And then— A. We were worried, we thought something was going to happen. Q. Did you stay in your bedroom all the time? A. Yes, I stayed in bed. Q. And did you see the rolling pin that your sister had? A. I saw it when she brought it down in the room, and she said she would sleep on it. Q. Where did she put it? A. She put it under the bed— just exactly where I don’t know — but under the bed some place. Q. That is between the mattress and spring? A. Yes.”

The daughter, Mrs. Bombara, testified in part as follows: “A. He prepared his own lunch. He used to repair houses down on Logan Street and he would get up real early in the morning and make his own breakfast and make coffee for us kids, too, to go to school. She never would get up to do anything. Then he would go down to Logan Street and sometimes walk to save a car check and pack his lunch to bring with him to eat at noon because he started to work at the Pennsylvania Railroad at two o’clock. He would come home and have to make his own lunch, pack his own lunch to eat at six o’clock at work. Then he would go to work and wouldn’t come home until twelve or one o’clock after work.......She talked loud and threatened him. Q. What kind of threats? A. She said the only time she would be glad was when she saw his *236 body floating down the river or his body out in the street. She always said things like that. Q. You say she said that to you? A. About him. She meant that about him. Q. How often would she say these things to him? A. Nearly every time he was present.......Well, he always tried to be peaceful and live with her right but you can’t. It is impossible to live with a person like that and he — he had a bed up in the attic with no mattress on and he would sleep on the springs with no covers or nothing in the winter. He even slept in the kitchen on the chair in the dark, and he never used the electric or gas. Q. Why? A. Because she wouldn’t let him use the electric or gas. We all had to sit in one room until it was time to go to bed and all the lights had to be out. We had to walk around in the dark most of the time.” Referring to the night of October 26, 1936, she testified: “The lights were all on in the hall, living room and bedroom. As I was going up the steps I couldn’t help but hear. He said, Why don’t you get out of the house. You don’t bring anything home,’ my brother said. She said, ‘Let’s kill him, he is no good here,’ and as I happened to go in the room she had the rolling pin raised above her and was ready to strike him and I grabbed the rolling pin from her hand in back of her and I slept on it for two nights. It was a long rolling pin. Q. How long did you stay in the room? A. Until he left. I followed him down the steps and I says to her, ‘I don’t care what you say to him in words as long as you don’t kill him,’ and when I happened to get in, when I got in the room, that was his chance to get out because they was fussing trying to get the rolling pin from me. Q. Who tried to get the pin from you? A. Both did, brother and mother, and my dad went down to the cellar in his long winter underwear and I went in the bedroom and locked the door because I was frightened too, and I slept on the pin for two nights, and she must have made the bed the third day and took it and I never seen it since.”

*237 A careful reading of the testimony leads to the conclusion that the respondent, by a long course of conduct, compelled the libellant to leave the common domicile.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 A.2d 147, 136 Pa. Super. 232, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bisceglia-v-bisceglia-pasuperct-1939.