Epstein v. Epstein

93 Pa. Super. 398, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 346
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 1928
DocketAppeals 155 and 160
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 93 Pa. Super. 398 (Epstein v. Epstein) 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
Epstein v. Epstein, 93 Pa. Super. 398, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 346 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.,

This is an appeal from a decree of divorce granted to a husband on the ground of cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to his person, rendering his condition intolerable and life burdensome. An examination of appellant’s brief discloses á palpable disregard of our rules in several respects. We find no justification for a history of the case covering, four and a half pages of the brief. Rule 51 of this, court provides that the history of the case must not contain any argument or quotations from testimony. This history contains both. Of the twenty-four assignments of error filed, several complain of the action of the master appointed by the court below, but reference to the exceptions to the master’s report discloses, that the subjects of these assignments were not suggested to the court below by any exceptions filed. All such assignments we might properly dismiss without consideration, even though this be a proceeding for a divorce in which the Commonwealth is an interested party. An assignment of error in’ the appellate court must be to the, action of the court below: Warner v. McMullin, 131 Pa. 370. *400 Our consideration of some questions not properly-raised is no indication that we will do so again. We intend rather to warn counsel that in any appeal our rules are disregarded at their peril.

The first contention made in behalf of appellant is that the decree should be reversed because the master failed to examine the witnesses in detail upon the averments of the libel and answer and such other matters as shall appear relevant and material, and failed to summon and examine such witnesses as he had reason to believe had knowledge of the relevant and material facts, as required by Buies 183 and 184 of the Courts of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County. We do not purpose to discuss this matter since the question was not suggested to the master or in the court below, and is not so fundamental as to require consideration for the first time on appeal. Buies 183 and 184 of the court below were not brought into the record and, therefore, are not properly before us. We note, however, that appellant was represented before the master and in the court below by able and experienced counsel,-who subjected the libellant and his witnesses to a thorough cross-examination. Any departure from the procedure required by the rules of court referred to was manifestly with the approval and consent of the parties, no objection having been made by either of them.

. The next question presented to us is stated thus: “Will a .divorce be sustained where the parties resumed cohabitation after the filing of the libel?” The record shows that a libel was filed March 5, 1921, and that a subpoena.in divorce went out on the same day, returnable to the first Monday of May, 1921, and that it .was returned N. E. I. • Marital -relations were resumed in May, 1921, at the solicitation of respondent’s parents. The marital relations -continued until about the end of January, 1922.. It appears that upon the resumption of the marital relations, respondent again *401 began the same course of conduct which had caused the original breach, reference to: which will appear later. On February 3, 1922, an alias subpoena was issued and served. From that time libellant and his wife, although living for a time under the same roof, did not occupy the same room, and there was no further resumption of marital relations. The contention of counsel for appellant is that the resumption of marital relations after the filing of the libel was a condonation by libellant which affected an abandonment of the action for divorce. We cannot give assent to this view. Unlike adultery, cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to the person as a cause for divorce consist ordinarily not of a single act but of a course of conduct which renders a spouse’s condition intolerable and life burdensome. In Hollister v. Hollister, 6 Pa. 449, one of the questions decided was “whether a reconciliation, after the abuse and ill-treatment alleged in the libel, and subsequent co-habitation, is a remission of the offense, and a bar to a divorce without proof of new outrages after the reconciliation.” Judge Bien, in referring to that case in Augenstein v. Augenstein, 45 Pa. Superior Ct. 258, 264, said: “As we understand the case, it decided the question in the negative, at least so far as a divorce a mensa et thoro was concerned....... Even in those jurisdictions where it is held that the principles of condonation apply to cruelty and indignities to the person, they are held to apply with this proper qualification, that any conduct which, after a reconciliation of the parties, creates reasonable apprehension of personal violence, will revive the condoned cruelty.” In Lacock v. Lacock, 74 Pa. Superior Ct. 378, this court said: “The effect of condonation of adultery as expressed in the statute does not apply to condonation of cruelty or indignities to the person. If such were the case, the fact that a wife continued, to live with her husband after he had subjected her to physical violence or repeated indigni *402 ties would prevent her from, taking advantage of the statute intended to relieve in such a situation...... In the absence of a statutory prohibition a wife is not to lose her day in court because, through affection, or the interest of her children, or the reputation of the family, she is disposed to make another effort to avoid a domestic wreck. ’ ’ The use of the term condonation in such a case is somewhat inaccurate and misleading; for it is only a conditional forgiveness and evidence to show a settlement of difficulties, and not a defense or bar to the action. What was the effect of the reconciliation between these parties upon the pending action for a divorce? While it does not appear that this question has been decided by either of the appellate courts of this State, we think that neither any principle of law nor sound public policy requires us to hold that the suit abated, or that the attempted reconciliation amounted to an abandonment thereof. There would seem to be no more reason for holding that libellant no longer had the right to proceed with the pending suit than for holding that his original cause of action was gone. This was the conclusion reached in Harn v. Harn, 158 Ga. 502, in Egidi v. Egidi, 37 R. I. 481, and also in Moore v. Moore, 7 D. & C. 423, in which Judge Smith, of Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia, discussed this question and cited numerous cases upon the subject. We hold, therefore, that it was not necessary for libellant to discontinue his original suit and begin de novo.

Another complaint is that the libel filed did not state where or when the alleged causes for divorce occurred. It is without merit. See Hancock’s Appeal, 64 Pa. 470; Realf v. Realf, 77 Pa. 31. The fact that respondent was furnished with a bill of particulars is also a sufficient answer to this complaint.

The next proposition is that the master was appointed prematurely and the libel was not legally amended.' It is urged that the filing of a rule for a *403 bill of particulars by tbe respondent April 21, 1925 ipso facto acted as a stay of proceedings and the court had no right to appoint a master on April 25, 1922, and that everything the master did after that time was illegal.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Pa. Super. 398, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epstein-v-epstein-pasuperct-1928.