Commonwealth ex rel. Link v. Link

55 Pa. D. & C.2d 60, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 184
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedAugust 26, 1971
Docketno. 1152
StatusPublished

This text of 55 Pa. D. & C.2d 60 (Commonwealth ex rel. Link v. Link) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth ex rel. Link v. Link, 55 Pa. D. & C.2d 60, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 184 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

MONROE, J.,

An appeal having been taken by respondent in the within habeas corpus proceeding from an order of this court of June 2, 1971, refusing to amend or modify an order of the court entered March 23, 1970, wherein custody of the two minor children of the parties to this litigation was awarded to the mother, the within opinion is filed in compliance with Rule 46 of the Superior Court of Pennsylvania.

The action involves the custody of Theresa Marie Link and Andrew John Link, minor children of Kevin Link and Ronald Link, their natural parents. Kevin Link, the mother, is now 25 years of age and Ronald Link, the father, is now 28 years of age. The parties were married on April 18, 1964, the child Theresa was born April 20, 1965, and the son, Andrew John, was born July 4, 1967. At the time of the marriage, Ronald Link was in the military service, stationed on the west coast of the continental United States. He was discharged from military service in January 1966, and promptly became employed as a coordinator at the United Aircraft Corporation in Trevose, Bucks County, Pa. In March of 1969, the parents purchased a home at 54 Aspen Lane, Levittown, Pa., where the father, Ronald Link, still resides. On September 9,1969, Kevin Link left the family domicile, taking with her her two children and moving to an apartment at Groveville, N. J., which she shared with a Mrs. Cremer and her children, without the consent of respondent and without giving him any knowledge of her whereabouts. After several weeks, respondent learned of petitioner’s whereabouts, removed the children from the apartment and returned them to his home on Aspen Lane in Levittown.

This action was instituted by the mother’s petition filed February 2, 1970, and hearing thereon was held [62]*62on March 23, 1970. An answer to the petition was not filed by respondent but his position at the hearing appeared to be that petitioner is unfit morally and emotionally to have her children and that the surroundings in which she was residing were not suitable for the general welfare of the children. The burden of respondent’s attack upon petitioner was that unfitness was particularly evidenced by the fact that she had previously been married and had deserted two children born during the period of that marriage, one as the result of the marriage and the other resulting from extramarital relations. The burden of respondent’s attack upon her moral fitness was his effort to establish that she had deserted the Link domicile because of improper and illicit relationships with a Mr. Frank Wollman. The evidence at the first hearing established the following facts.

The parties resided in a reasonable degree of happiness with each other until the summer of 1969. Both parents were fond of each other and fond of and devoted to their children. The father, however, at times did not control his temper and five or six times had imposed physical violence upon his wife prior to the summer of 1969.

In May of 1969, the Link family was in financial straits with approximately $3,000 of bills outstanding, most of which were for medical services to petitioner and for the boy, Andrew John Link. Petitioner desired to help in the financial difficulty and offered to obtain a job as a waitress or as a nurse’s assistant, to both of which respondent objected. A neighbor of the parties was a go-go dance girl. After discussions with the neighbor, petitioner offered to get the same kind of a job, to which the respondent consented. Petitioner obtained such a job at a cafe, Charlie’s Bar, in Trenton, N. J., for several nights a week. On occasion, [63]*63respondent visited the establishment where petitioner was employed, watched her perform and also observed that she spoke with individual patrons sitting at the bar. To this he objected in July of 1969, and asked petitioner to quit her job. This she refused to, saying that she wished to continue to work until September of 1969. While working at the establishment, petitioner met a Frank Wollman, who was first a patron and then became an employed bartender at the establishment. In the beginning, friendly relations existed between Mr. Wollman and Mr. Link and on two occasions Mr. Wollman was invited by Mr. and Mrs. Link to the Link home. Also, on one occasion, when Mr. Wollman was making a delivery for his employer in the neighborhood of the Link home, he stopped during the daytime to visit with Mrs. Link. Eventually, in July, Mr. Link became of the opinion that his wife and Mr. Wollman were becoming too friendly and he thereupon demanded that she quit her job, which she did. Mr. Wollman was a married man and had been separated from his wife. He and his daughter, a child about three years old, were residing with his parents in Trenton, N. J., at 1423 South Clinton Street.

About the first of August 1969, petitioner received a phone call from a female friend or acquaintance, Bernice, stating that she was at the New Jersey seashore with Frank Wollman and that he had suffered a severe neck injury and she asked petitioner to drive Mr. Wollman from the seashore to a hospital in Trenton, N. J. Without phoning to her husband, the respondent, at his place of work to get his permission to comply with the request or to inform him of what she intended to do, petitioner drove to the seashore and then drove Mr. Wollman therefrom to a hospital in Trenton, N. J. That same day, respondent was told by petitioner what she had done. He told her that it was [64]*64wrong for her to have done so and it was at this time that he asked her to quit her job as a go-go dance girl at Charlie’s Bar, and she did, in fact, quit.

On August 4, 1969, the parties quarreled over what petitioner believed to be physical violence by respondent upon their son. Respondent has denied committing any violence upon the boy. During the course of the argument, respondent did use violence upon his wife. There is a difference in their respective versions as to what happened. We accept petitioner’s version “He grabbed me around the neck and squeezed until I blacked out, then threw me to the floor, and I must have came to right away, and then he hit me on my back. I got up, and I staggered to the bedroom and called my doctor and I told him I was hurt badly.” Respondent then drove petitioner to the family doctor, who confined her to bed for a period of four days until there was a hospital bed available, there being none available at the time of the occurrence. During the four-day interval, at times petitioner intentionally struck her head severely against the headboard of the bed. At the end of the four days, petitioner was admitted to the hospital and remained therein for three and a half weeks. She described her treatment as “I had brain scanning. I had spinal tap. I was in traction. I had intravenous fluid every day. I had needles, pills. I was tested by a neurologist.” Petitioner attributes her hospitalization and treatment therein to the physical violence to which she was subjected by respondent on August 4, 1969. Respondent attributes the hospitalization to preexisting physical conditions from which petitioner suffered, and beating her head on the headboard. The evidence discloses that she had “internal troubles” and kidney trouble during the course of the marriage and was hospitalized therefor one or more times each year. Neither party called an attending [65]*65physician to testify. It appears to us that the hospitalization was due to respondent’s violence upon petitioner, either as the prime cause or as aggravation of an existing condition.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. D. & C.2d 60, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-link-v-link-pactcomplbucks-1971.