Cook v. Cook

5 Pa. D. & C. 481, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 164
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedSeptember 29, 1924
DocketNo. 68
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Pa. D. & C. 481 (Cook v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Cook, 5 Pa. D. & C. 481, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 164 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Monaghan, J.,

The parties were married on Sept. 30, 1915. Thereafter they lived together as man and wife, without apparent discord, in an apartment of Hamilton Court, until May 30, 1917. On that day the husband withdrew'from the common habitation, and they have never since resumed marital relations.

It appears that on the day preceding the final separation the husband received by special delivery or registered mail, at his place of business on Broad Street, a parcel containing a batch of twelve letters, one telegram and several picture cards. He does not know, and the evidence fails to disclose, [482]*482the identity of the person, who mailed the package; but the obvious purpose of the sender, whoever he or she may have been, was to apprise R. Weary Cook, the husband, of an undue intimacy existing between H. Amanda Cook, his wife, and J. Harry Sommers; for the letters, all in the handwriting of the wife, were replete with the most fervid expressions of her love for Sommers, to whom they were addressed, and plainly showed to the husband that during the period extending from September, 1916, to May 1917, she had not only carried on a continuous clandestine correspondence with Sommers, but had also met him in secret.

Until he had read the letters so delivered to him, Cook had no knowledge, and was apparently without suspicion, of any undue intimacy between his wife and Sommers. After receiving the parcel of correspondence, the husband returned to his home the same evening and spent the night with his wife, but did not mention to her anything concerning the letters or their import. Immediately upon arising, at about eight o’clock of the morning of the next day, May 30th, he charged his wife with having written letters to Sommers. This, at first, she denied, but finally admitted that she did write to him, but only “as a sister would write to a brother.” In the course of the discussion, Cook intimated that she had improper relations with Sommers. Although she positively denied any wrongdoing, she, nevertheless, acknowledged to her husband that she had “indulged in the foolish pastime of seeing” Sommers, and offered to call him on the telephone to let him know that she “was through with him and would not have anything more to do with him.” Cook produced the letters, and was reading one of them to his wife, when she said, “that’s enough.” He read no more, but said that he would leave her. She pleaded with him to remain. Notwithstanding her importunities and protests, Cook then left the home. Before leaving, he told his wife that she might continue to live in the apartment until the expiration of the lease on Oct. 1, 1917, and he would pay the rent therefor and contribute, in addition, $185 a month for her support. Four or five days after the separation, the husband returned to the apartment for some of his clothing which he had left there. The wife then urged him to remain with her. Regardless of her entreaties, he refused to do so, and, having obtained his clothing, left the home. The wife continued her residence in the apartment of Hamilton Court until about Oct. 1, 1917, when she surrendered the same, and then went to live at Atlantic City, New Jersey, where she has ever since dwelt at various addresses with her mother, without, however, establishing a permanent residence there. From the time the husband left his wife, he has continued to maintain his permanent residence in this city, actually living here, excepting for a period when he was engaged as captain in the military service of the United States, and for a short time in Baltimore.

On Aug. 16, 1917, the husband filed his libel, in which he charged that his wife, at various times between August, 1916, and May, 1917, committed adultery with one “Harry” in the Hamilton Court apartment-house, and in other places in Philadelphia and in the City of New York and Atlantic City. A bill of particulars was filed, and in due course the respondent made answer, denying specifically each accusation. The cause was assigned to William F. Rorke, Esq., as master. Before the taking of testimony had been completed, Mr. Rorke died, and John M. Scott, Esq., was appointed in his place.

On Feb. 16,1920, Mrs. Cook filed a cross-libel, asking for a decree of divorce a mensa et thoro on the ground of wilful and malicious desertion by her husband on May 30, 1917. In this libel Mrs. Cook'alleged that her residence was then temporarily at the Hotel Dennis, Atlantic City, New Jersey, that she [483]*483had been a resident of the State of Pennsylvania for forty years previous to the filing of the libel, and that the present residence of her husband was No. 1904 Spruce Street. The court, upon petition duly presented, allowed the allegation of residence to be amended as follows: “That the present residence of the libellant is with the respondent at No. 1904 Spruce Street, in the City of Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, and she has been a resident of the State of Pennsylvania for the past forty years previous to the filing of this libel. That she has no other residence in any other state other than above set forth.” The husband filed an answer, in which he asserted that the allegation of residence, as set forth in the libel and its amendment, was untrue, and averred that Mrs. Cook had been a permanent resident of Atlantic City, New Jersey, continuously since the year 1917, and still resided there; and he further averred that he had given up residence in the City of Philadelphia in May, 1919, and lived continually in Baltimore until the latter part of July, 1919, when he returned to Philadelphia and resided at No. 1904 Spruce Street, and had lived there but seven months when the cross-libel was filed; wherefore, he said, this court was without jurisdiction in the matter of the cross-libel. The husband, in his answer, also denied that he wilfully and maliciously deserted his wife, and averred that, in consequence of the wife’s letters to J. Harry Sommers, she had acquiesced and consented in his separation from her since May 30, 1917. The wife’s cause on the cross-libel was also assigned to John M. Scott, Esq., as master, who, after the completion of the hearings on libel and cross-libel, filed his report, in which he recommended the dismissal of the husband’s libel because he deemed the evidence insufficient to establish adultery. He also recommended that a decree of divorce a mensa et thoro, including an order for alimony at the rate of $300 per month, be entered in favor of the wife. To this report the husband filed exceptions now before us for consideration.

The husband, R. Weary Cook, or, as he is sometimes called in these proceedings, Ralph W. Cook, was, during the period of cohabitation with his wife, employed as a manager of an automobile concern at a very substantial salary. He was a busy man; nevertheless, he spent the evenings, Saturday afternoons and Sundays with his wife, except when he was absent on about six business trips, of two or three days’ duration each, in Cleveland or Canton, Ohio, or in the City of New York. He made proper provision for the maintenance of the wife and home, and frequently accompanied her to dining parties, to the theatre, the opera and to other places for their social diversion. He was in every way a dutiful husband. To him, she seemed the dutiful wife, for there was nothing in his personal knowledge or observation of her conduct that could lead to a suspicion of any infidelity on her part, until he received the parcel of letters which caused him to leave her. In the first year of their married life the wife was in fact true to her husband.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Pa. D. & C. 481, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-cook-pactcomplphilad-1924.