Dunlap v. Dunlap

97 Pa. Super. 405, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 28, 1929
DocketAppeal 73
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 97 Pa. Super. 405 (Dunlap v. Dunlap) 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
Dunlap v. Dunlap, 97 Pa. Super. 405, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

After a married life of thirty-four years on libellant’s farm in Sandy Township, Clearfield County, libellant filed a libel in divorce in 1927 alleging indignities to the person within the statute as amended June 28, 1923, P. L. 886. The parties have four living, married children.

The evidence was taken by a master who retired on account of illness. The master who succeeded him considered the evidence taken and on that evidence filed a report and recommended a decree on the ground that respondent’s conduct “is under the law what has been legally determined to be cruel and barbarous.” *407 Exceptions were filed, considered by tbe court and were dismissed; a decree of divorce was then entered and is challenged by this appeal.

The learned court below in an opinion filed, stated, no doubt inadvertently, that “the master had before him the witnesses, observed their manner, their conduct, and the court should give great weight to the findings of the master as to credibility and weight to be given to the witnesses’ testimony.” As that was a mistake and as neither the master who recommended the decree, nor the court below saw the witnesses while testifying, the judges of this court are at no comparative disadvantage in weighing the testimony.

The decree cannot be sustained. It has’always been the law in this state that a divorce may be granted only when the evidence brings a case clearly within the statute: Twaddell v. Twaddell, 95 Pa. Superior Ct. 429, 432, and cases there cited. That measure of proof is lacking in this record; the overwhelming weight of the evidence considered in the light of the corroboration appearing, is with the respondent; moreover, we think the libel was not filed with that good faith required by the statute (1815, 6 Sm. L. 286, 287) in force when this libel was filed, requiring that the complaint be “not made out of levity: or by collusion between the said husband and wife . •.____”

The parties had for many years led a somewhat quarrelsome existence, apparently about whether libellant was receiving his half share of what is described in the record as the “milk and egg money” collected by respondent on a “milk route” operated by her. In May, 1926, libellant became ill so that he could do no farm work, and for about two weeks was confined to his bed. He left his home in April, 1927, and thereafter lived with a son. The farm was small — only 50 acres — and respondent did as much or more work than libellant did on the farm, certainly for considerable *408 time prior to the date when he left. Her testimony contains the following: “What was yonr nsnal day, how was your time taken up ?

“A. Well, I got up at that time, [four or five o’clock in May] made fire, fed three horses, milked eight cows, left the milk cool while I got breakfast, bottled the milk, then I would go to town and deliver the milk. When I got home, which was around noon or after dinner, I washed the milk bottles, washed the dishes, got supper and maybe sometimes while the milk was cooling I would sit down and pick up a paper. I had to harness the horse to go and deliver the milk. When that was all done, it was time to go to bed and get up in the morning and start all over again.” In part she is corroborated by one of their sons and by a daughter who said her mother worked on the farm as a man would work; libellant, in referring to her milk-route, said that when “she drove the car she would get home along about ten o’clock and when she took the horse it would be the middle of the afternoon lots of times.”

Libellant testified that when he was ill in May, 1926, his doctor prescribed beef broth and that his wife would not give it to him. There is evidence that their son and daughter-in-law lived with them at the time and that the daughter-in-law did the family cooking and household work, and did what was necessary for him, and that in addition, a Mrs. Bothel was in the house for four or five days during the two week period he spent in bed, and supplied him with what he then needed. During that period of course much of respondent’s time was given to her milk-route and necessary preparation therefor. The witnesses agree that libellant and respondent cursed each other, (both admit their cursing) and we gather from the evidence that generally the libellant’s language provoked the reply received. Libellant emphasizes another grievance: in *409 1926 “she grabbed a knife and said she would” stab him. Eespondent testifies that the incident occurred in 1925 and she described it as follows:

“Q. What happened at that time?
“A. My horse was crippled and he told me I was late getting home. I told him my horse was crippled and he said I just loafed along the way and I said he was a liar and he called me a damn liar. Then he grabbed a milk can and was going to throw it at me. Then he backed me up against the door and grabbed both my wrists. I stood it just as long as I could and I got one hand away and grabbed a little paring knife.
“Q. Did you after that fight show any marks to anybody?
“A. The next morning I showed Harry Long black and blue marks on my arm. ’ ’

The witness, Harry Long, referred to in her answer, testified that he lived on the adjoining farm, had known libellant since they were children, and that in 1925 respondent showed him a mark on her arm and that he said to her “I was a friend of hers and Charlie’s and didn’t want to hear this stuff.” Libellant testified that she told other persons that she wished he would die and that she would kill him; it does not appear when he was informed of those statements, if they were made. Their daughter and her husband, who stated that they were not on friendly terms with the respondent (respondent had the daughter arrested for assault and battery) testified that respondent stated to them that she wished libellant would die. Eespondent denied making the statements.

Eespondent. not only marketed milk, but also produce raised on -the farm. They seem to have had an understanding that the money realized by the sale of the milk and produce belonged to both of them in equal shares, and he contended that after she paid for seeds, taxes, insurance, and other farm expenses she did not *410 always give him one-half of the money remaining or as much as he thought he was entitled to. In answer to the direct question whether the cause of their quarrels, particularly her alleged assault upon him with a knife, was about money, libellant replied that it was. At another place in the testimony when he was asked for the cause of their differences, he said “I wanted my money.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 Pa. Super. 405, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-dunlap-pasuperct-1929.