Copeland v. Copeland

38 A.2d 364, 155 Pa. Super. 102, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 446
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1944
DocketAppeal, 116
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 38 A.2d 364 (Copeland v. Copeland) 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
Copeland v. Copeland, 38 A.2d 364, 155 Pa. Super. 102, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 446 (Pa. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

The husband’» libel, filed January 7, 1938, charged *104 his wife with having deserted him on July 1, 1932, and averred that she had “committed wilful and malicious desertion and absence from the habitation of the injured and innocent spouse without reasonable cause, for and during the space of two years.”

The wife’s answer denied any wilful and malicious desertion by her of the libellant.

The master, by accepting as verity all the testimony of the libellant and disregarding the testimony of the respondent and her witnesses, found a constructive desertion of the libellant by the respondent and recommended that a decree of divorce be granted; and the court below (Keenan, P. J.) followed his recommendation and granted the divorce. Respondent appealed.

A careful reading of the evidence in the record leads us to disagree with the master and the court below. We find no actual wilful and malicious desertion of the libellant by the respondent, nor any conduct that will justify a finding of constructive wilful and malicious desertion.

The basis for the libellant’s charge of desertion rests on the fact that on July 1, 1932 she had him arrested under the provisions of the statutes relating to ‘surety of the peace’. See section 6 of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 427, and the Act of March 18, 1909, P. L. 42, 19 PS §§23-26. The credible evidence in the case shown that she had good ground for this action. He had been sitting that morning in their home, as he had done a number of times before, with a loaded .45 calibre automatic pistol in his hand threatening to shoot her or someone else in the family. He was not drunk. He was not a drinking man. He was cold sober. But he was incensed at her because she was objecting, and with good reason, to his running around with another woman or women. He could have been released from jail on his giving bond with one sufficient surety conditioned to appear at the next court of quarter sessions, *105 and in the meantime to be of his good behavior and keep the peace toward all citizens of this commonwealth. But he either was unable or unwilling to give such bond, and remained in jail until July 6, when he was released on his signing a paper prepared by the justice of the peace, of his own motion, as follows:

“Jeannette, Pa./July 6th, 1932. To whom it may concern.
“I, John Copeland hereby agree to stay away from the home of my wife and not to cause her or my family any trouble from this date on. John Copeland (Seal).
Witness. Edward A. Egan [Justice of the Peace].”

Mrs. Copeland had not suggested this writing. Her only thought was to secure protection for herself and family against threats made by her husband, with loaded pistol in hand, when angered by her objections to his conduct with other women. And she accepted it as a means of such protection instead of the bond required by law.

From that day on John Copeland never made one move to go back to his family, which he could have done at any time that he, in good faith, stopped his philandering — to use a mild term — with the woman then involved. Instead, he expressed himself at the hearing before the master as being entirely satisfied with the separation. In the cross-examination of the libellant by the master, the following appears:

“Q. [by the Master] Who prepared this paper, libellant’s exhibit #1 [supra] ? A. Squire Egan. Q. Under what circumstances did you sign it? A. Under the circumstance I just had to sign it or come back to jail. Q. Did you and your wife agree at that time to separate and live separate and apart? A. We did. If my work picked up and I could help her I would do so. At that time there wasn’t nothing doing...... Q. Have you lived with Mrs. Copeland as her husband since July 6, 1932. A. No sir. Q. You have never stayed under same roof? A. No sir. Q. Did you and she, after *106 July 6, 1932, ever talk about going back together? A. No sir. Q. Both satisfied to be separated? A. Yes sir.”

Nor can we agree that the summary of the court below as to his relations with this ‘other woman’ was a fair or adequate statement: “The husband was seen with another woman on two occasions, once seated on a bench at Oakford Park, and on another occasion, emerging from an alley 1 .” His relations with this other woman were ‘town talk’. Her daughter had come to the respondent and asked her to “keep my man away from her mother”. The other woman’s husband had beat up the libellant for his running around with the former’s wife, and had him arrested for assault and battery. The children of the pair — four sons and a daughter, and the libellant admitted they were all fine children — knew of it personally and by public rumor, and all took their mother’s part. Several of the older sons had spoken to their father about this woman and endeavored to get him to break off his relations with her. What those relations were may be seen from the fact that since July 1933 he has been living with her alone, adulterously.

We recognize that adultery committed by a husband after his wife has maliciously deserted him for a space of two years is not a defense to his action of divorce on that groxxnd; but that rule does not apply here, where the open conduct of the husband with this woman one year after the separation sheds considerable light on their prior relations, and furnished a basis of justification for respondent’s complaints to her husband about his running around with the other woman for at least a year prior to the separation, and her refusal to have marital relations with him for the preceding six months.

A woman who has good grounds for believing that her husband is unfaithful to her is not obliged to live *107 with him as hig wife. 'She may refuse to do so, and may leave his home, without being guilty of desertion': Golden v. Golden, 36 Pa. Superior Ct. 648. If the presence of children in the home makes it impossible for her to leave the home, she may refuse to occupy the same bed with him, and she may properly complain to him of his actions, and if he grows ugly and angry about it and threatens her because of it she may take steps to require him to give bond to keep the peace, and even ask him to leave the home, without being guilty of wilful and malicious desertion without a reasonable cause. A woman with an adulterous husband is not bound to live with him as his wife nor to divorce him. To do the former would be to condone his prior infidelity; and there is no compulsion resting on any woman to divorce her husband, so that he may marry the other woman. But a woman with an adulterous husband may refuse to live with him at his home (Lodge’s Est., 287 Pa. 184, 187, 134 A. 472); or she may require him to leave her home, without being guilty of a wilful and malicious desertion without a reasonable cause. See Lowe v. Lowe, 148 Pa. Superior Ct. 439, 443, 444, 25 A. 2d 781.

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.2d 364, 155 Pa. Super. 102, 1944 Pa. Super. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-copeland-pasuperct-1944.