Glass v. Glass

63 A.2d 696, 164 Pa. Super. 118, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 337
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 16, 1948
DocketAppeal, 256
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 63 A.2d 696 (Glass v. Glass) 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
Glass v. Glass, 63 A.2d 696, 164 Pa. Super. 118, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 337 (Pa. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Fine, J.,

The libellant filed this action in divorce, alleging desertion and such indignities to the person as to render his condition intolerable and life burdensome. A bill of particulars and answer thereto were filed, and hearings were held before a mhster who found no desertion but recommended a divorce on the ground of indignities.. The report of the master, his findings of fact and conclusions of law were approved and adopted by the court below, and a divorce was granted. Respondent appealed.

*120 We have reviewed the testimony carefully, reading the whole record and scrutinizing the evidence as we are required to do, and we are of the opinion that the facts essential to the right of the husband to a decree in divorce have not been established by clear and satisfactory proofs.

Carl M. Glass, libellant, and Estella E. Y. Glass, respondent, were married on August 20,1918, and when the libel was filed they were aged forty-six and forty-three years, respectively.. Their, .entire married life was spent in Butler County, Pennsylvania, and to this marriage were born four' children, their names and ages at the time of hearing were: Dorothy (Mrs. J. M. Butler), aged twenty-nine; Howard* aged twenty-one; Floyd, aged twenty; and Betty) aged sixteen. The parties have not lived together since respondent’s admission into the Torrance State Hospital where she was-treated for almost eight months and from which she was released on April 10, 1942. The libellant is district manager of the Socony-Vacuum Company and is a man of more than ordinary abilities. He is“ambitious and industrious. He applied himself to community and fraternal affairs with the same ardor until forced to relinquish such activities by his wife’s antagonistic attitude. On the whole, his time during Most of his married life was occupied by activities and interests which were not only helpful to advancement in his employment but were in aid of the betterment of the community in which they lived.

The libellant testified that since the first Christmas (1918) succeeding their marriage when she spurned his gifts of a fur muff and neck piece, the respondent has manifested a contemptuous disposition toward him. Prior to July, 1925, when the respondent was first hospitalized there were three bther alleged acts of indignities, all of which were separated by intervals of approximately two years or more. Since 1925, ' libellant’s testimony is to the effect that she complained and nagged *121 him with great frequency about his infrequent homecomings at late hours and absences from home; that she was critical of the friends of the libellant so that they ceased their visits to the home; that she possessed a decidedly jealous disposition and entertained suspicions that he was guilty of immoi’ality with different women; that she frequently voiced those suspicions, sometimes in the presence of the children; that she cursed and ridiculed him; that she interfered with his employment by disturbing his sleep during the night and by calling employes of his company, including superior officers, to instill doubt of libellant’s character and qualifications. The libellant stated she kept him in a constant state of fear and trepidation, which induced his nervous condition, loss of weight and impairment of health.

The respondent denied the indignities alleged by her husband and strongly intimated that during the last two years they lived together his affections cooled. She admitted that he was a .very good provider, a splendid husband and at all times a devoted father. Since the separation, all the children remained with the father until they either married or voluntarily left because of their employment or other engagements.

We are of the opinion, concurring with the master, that the evidence of .the. libellant is of such integrity and probity that there is no doubt the acts complained of did occur. The corroborative proofs of third parties, especially of their two children, decidedly favored the libellant. We too agree with the libellant that there exists no ground for reconciliation. Furthermore, assuming libellant’s relations .with Mary Brigamen were more than platonic, nevertheless such relations were subsequent, to the commission of the alleged indignities and could not successfully be asserted in defense of the wife’s actions. Cf. Com. ex rel. Cartmell v. Cartmell, 164 Pa. Superior Ct. 108, 63 A. 2d. 691.

. Conceding then, the libellant was the target for, and the recipient of, unmerited, grave and continued abuse, *122 nevertheless an essential of indignities is missing, — to wit, a deliberate, insulting and humiliating intent such as may emanate from a mind not weakened by disease or nervous disorder. As stated in Crock v. Crock, 96 Pa. Superior Ct. 377, 383, “The situation of the husband doubtless is, and has been, a most unfortunate one, requiring patience and forbearance, but the law does not recognize this as a ground for divorce.” A divorce was there refused because the respondent was a “sick woman,”' “suffering with hysteria and 'had a very marked emotional disturbance,’ ” - and her conduct resulted largely from her highly nervous state which “was caused by her physical condition.”

The respondent’s position, too, is most unfortunate. In 1925, while enroute to the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, where she was hospitalized for a few days, her nervous condition was so bad that she attempted to wreck the automobile by grabbing the steering wheel. Again, in 1931, she was confined to'a hospital (unnamed) for a few days, shortly after the death of her mother. For the next few years the respondent had no hospital treatment which, we may reasonably infer, was due to libellant’s reluctance to consider commitment of his wife to a mental institution, either because of his affection for her or because of the clash with his pride. However, beginning in March or April, 1940, when she was admitted to the Mercy Hospital for eleven or fourteen days, the respondent Avas a recurrent patient of numerous hospitals. She' remained at home Only two- or three days after her discharge from the Mercy Hospital when she Avas obliged to enter the Butler County General Hospital, where she remained for three weeks. After two weeks at home under the care of her own nurse, she was then sent to the Mercer Sanitarium where she underwent treatment for eight or ten weeks. She next was admitted to the Overlook Sanitarium where she spent another ten weeks. The intervals at home betAveen these *123 hospitalizations, did not exceed two weeks. Grove City Osteopath Hospital was then entered and there she stayed for three weeks, during which time she had-“an inward Operation, lacerations from child birth '. . . had teeth pulled, tonsils out, slight tumor and lacerations all taken care of in, one operation.” Upon her discharge she was sent' to her brother in Detroit, Michigan, stayed there a few days and then returned to Butler. After the lapse of two weeks she was taken to the St. Francis Hospital,, Pittsburgh, where she was treated as a mental patient for five or six months. When discharged from there she was again sent to the same place in-Detroit, stayed there a few weeks and upon her return to Butler the libellant allegedly was in Atlantic City- with Mary Brigamen- and the latter’s sister.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A.2d 696, 164 Pa. Super. 118, 1949 Pa. Super. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glass-v-glass-pasuperct-1948.