Commonwealth Ex Rel. Betz v. Betz

193 A. 338, 127 Pa. Super. 98, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 187
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1937
DocketAppeal 367
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 193 A. 338 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. Betz v. Betz) 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
Commonwealth Ex Rel. Betz v. Betz, 193 A. 338, 127 Pa. Super. 98, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 187 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

We have read and considered all the pleadings and testimony in this voluminous proceeding, going back to its inception in 1927. As the appeal was allowed in forma pauperis we have had to read the original record. It is a proceeding for support under the Act of April 13, 1867, P. L. 78.

The appellant, Mary B. Betz, and the appellee, John P. Betz, Jr., were manned at Cumberland, Maryland, on November 25,1925. Mrs. Betz was then 31 years old and her husband 35 years old. He was a lawyer, practicing in Philadelphia, but also a member of the Bucks County Bar. His father and mother lived in Bristol, Pennsylvania.

The appellee and appellant lived together as husband and wife until March 24, 1927, when after a violent quarrel he left her. They had lived together in Philadelphia until January 1927; after that, in Bristol.

In May 1927 Mrs. Betz brought a proceeding for support against her husband. The latter was then employed — and had been for several years — by a well-known firm of lawyers in Philadelphia to assist in the preparation of accident cases, and received a salary of $75 a week, and was permitted to attend to any private practice on his own account. His name appeared on the office door and was separately listed in the telephone directory. At the time of the hearing in the support proceedings Mrs. Betz was pregnant and the court in entering an order on the defendant to pay her $40 a week took her condition into consideration, to some extent. The child, a son, John Philip Betz, 3d, was born on October 3, 1927. On November 16, 1927 Mrs. Betz brought proceedings against her husband for the support of the child, and after a hearing, the court made an additional order on the husband to pay his wife $5 a week for the support of the child — undoubtedly taking into consideration that the original order of $40 a *100 week included something because of Mrs. Betz’s being with child. Several petitions were filed by the husband for a reduction of these orders, which it is not necessary to recite in detail, and on June 25, 1929 the court reduced the order in favor of the wife from $40 to $20 a week, but allowed the order for the support of the child to remain at $5 a week. The reduction above was based on proof by the husband that his weekly salary had been cut from $75 a week to $50 a week.

Between November 18, 1929 and June 5, 1930 several petitions were filed by Mrs. Betz asking for an increase in the order for the child’s support, but they were either dropped or refused.

On January 13, 1933 Mr. Betz filed a petition to have the order for his wife’s support further reduced. Several hearings were had in court. It was shown that the $50 a week salary which he had received from the Philadelphia law firm had been discontinued on December 31, 1932; that for the future he would have no income except from his own private practice in Philadelphia and Bucks Counties, which in 1932 had produced $379.50. He opened a law office in Bristol, and was allowed to continue to use the law office in Philadelphia where he had been employed, without charge, but received no salary after January 1, 1933. His name still remains on the Philadelphia office door and is listed in the Philadelphia telephone directory. He goes to Philadelphia about once a week on his own law business; the rest of the time he spends in his office at Bristol and at court in Doylestown. On April 11, 1933, the court reduced the order for Mrs. Betz’s support to $5 a week, leaving the order for the child’s support stand at $5 a week. It is clear that the court recognized that these amounts were inadequate for the support of defendant’s wife and child, but represented, in the conditions then present, all that the defendant could possibly pay.

Mrs. Betz filed several petitions for an increase of *101 her order in the years 1933 and 1934, which it is not necessary to do more than refer to. They were dismissed.

On April 13,1936 and on April 27,1936 she presented petitions on behalf of her son and herself, respectively, asking for an order of $20 a week for the support of her son and from $20 to $35 a week for the support of herself. The petitions were inartificially drawn, contained charges of fraud against her husband and averred that the reduction of her support order to $5 a week had been obtained by fraud, but they could be considered as petitions for an increase of the several support orders and the court below very properly so treated them and heard and considered them together.

The allegations of fraud in the preparation of defendant’s income tax returns for the year 1933, made by Mrs. Betz, were not substantiated. The court on July 3, 1936 made an order, “That the defendant pay the costs of this proceeding, and that he pay from this date the sum of $7.50 per week to his wife towards her support, and the order for the support of the boy is continued as heretofore, making this increased order amount to $650 a year, which is somewhat over half of his highest income. It means an increase of $2.50 a week, or about $100 a year, little over $100 a year, and we make that, of course, on the basis of the increased income during that time. We do think that in 1935 the total expenses were rather high compared to the increase of income.” Mrs. Betz appealed to this court.

The defendant testified that in 1933 his gross income, including all receipts from his law practice and his insurance agency, was $662.07, and his expenses were $491.30; net income $170.77; that in 1934 his gross income was $1,133.49, expenses $663.39 and net income, $470.10; and that in 1935 his gross income was $2,606.12, expenses $1,410.94, net income $1,195.18. For *102 the first half of 1936, he testified, his gross income was $1,256.56, expenses $698.11, net income $558.45. While Mrs. Betz disputed his figures as to income she had no competent testimony to rebut them, and we are led to accept them as far as they go. But we held in Com. v. Wilmsen, 112 Pa. Superior Ct. 119, 170 A. 418, that in proceedings of this kind the court, in fixing the amount of a support order for a wife and child or for children, can take into consideration gifts which a parent regularly makes to a defendant son, in the way of money or other valuable thing, which increases his means of support and ability to maintain his family. In that case a father carried his son — the defendant in the support proceeding — on his salary roll, although he did not work, and we held that the amount so received by the son, although in effect a gift, was to be taken into consideration in fixing the support payable for his children.

We feel that the lower court was most patient in its hearings on these proceedings. The appellant did much to prejudice and injure her case by her actions in court and by her exaggerated ideas and statements as to her husband’s income and resources; but we are satisfied that the court below was not affected by these matters and rendered a wholly dispassionate judgment in the case. But, in our opinion, the court erred in accepting too readily the expenditures claimed by the defendant as being justified in the circumstances here present, and in failing to give due regard to the gifts by way of aid or support which the defendant regularly received from his mother. A man’s first duty is to his wife and family.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 A. 338, 127 Pa. Super. 98, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-betz-v-betz-pasuperct-1937.