Hickey v. Hickey

11 A.2d 187, 138 Pa. Super. 271, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 348
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 3, 1939
DocketAppeal, 153
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 187 (Hickey v. Hickey) 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
Hickey v. Hickey, 11 A.2d 187, 138 Pa. Super. 271, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 348 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This is an action of divorce brought by a husband against his wife on the grounds of cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to the person. When the action was brought, the wife was confined in the Norris-town State Hospital for the Insane, on the certificate of two physicians. The libel was accordingly served on a committee appointed by the court to represent the respondent. The committee appeared, filed an answer and vigorously defended the action.

The governing question is whether the libellant was a competent witness to testify to the acts of cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to the person relied upon as grounds for divorce. The master received his testimony, found that the grounds charged in the libel had been clearly and satisfactorily established and that respondent had become hopelessly and permanently insane, and recommended the granting of a decree of divorce. With the libellant’s testimony in the record, the evidence sustains the master’s findings and recommendation. On exceptions to the master’s report the court below ruled that under section 5, clause (e), of the Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, the libellant was not a competent witness to testify to anything but the fact of marriage; that excluding the libellant’s testimony the evidence was not sufficient to support a decree of divorce and dismissed the libel. The libellant appealed.

If the lower court were right in its ruling on the libellant’s competency as a witness, we would be inclined to agree with its action, but a review of the relevant statutes leads us to disagree with its conclusion that the libellant was not a competent witness for all purposes.

*273 It-is our opinion that clause (e) of section 5 of the Act of 1887, supra, has no relation to actions of divorce. Clause (c) of section 5 of that act dealt with the competency of husband and wife to testify against each other generally and in actions of divorce, and provided: “(c) Nor shall husband and wife be competent or permitted to testify against each other, except in those proceedings for divorce in which personal service of the subpoena or of a rule to take depositions has been made upon the opposite party, or in which the opposite party appears and defends, in which case either may testify fully against the other, and except also that,in any proceeding for divorce either party may be called merely to prove the fact of marriage.” The later clause (e) dealing with cases “where any party to a thing or contract in action 1 is dead, or has been adjudged a lunatic and his right thereto or therein has passed either by his own act or by the act of the law, to a party on the record, who represents his interest in the controversy”, did not include or apply to actions in divorce, which had been covered by the prior section. Furthermore, an action in divorce which has not progressed to a final decree, dies with the death of either party, and in 1887, when the act relating to the competency of witnesses was passed, there was no means of bringing an action of divorce against, or serving the subpoena in divorce upon, an insane spouse, although section 8 of the Act of April 13, 1843, P. L. 233, p. 235, (since repealed) authorized the filing of a libel in divorce by a relative or next friend of a lunatic wife. Section 5, clause (e), therefore, was not concerned with the competency of husband and wife to testify against each other generally or in divorce actions. This same distinction was observed in the first statute in this Commonwealth allowing parties in interest to be witnesses in civil proceed *274 ings, Act of April 15, 1869, P. L. 30. It provided in section 1, as follows: “That no interest nor policy of law shall exclude a party or person from being a witness in any civil proceeding; Provided, This act shall not alter the law, as now declared and practiced in the courts of this commonwealth, so as to allow husband and wife to testify against each other, nor counsel to testify to the confidential communication of his client; and this act shall not apply to actions by or against executors, administrators or guardians, nor where the assignor of the thing or contract in action may be dead, excepting in issues and inquiries devisavit vel non and others, respecting the right of such deceased owner, between parties claiming such right by devolution on the death of such owner.”

In 1905 (Act of April 18, 1905, P. L. 211), the Act of April 13, 1843, supra, was amended so as to permit an action of divorce to be brought against a husband or wife, who is a hopeless lunatic or non compos mentis, and directed service of the subpoena in divorce “to be made upon the committee of such lunatic.” In Baughman v. Baughman, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 271, where it was properly held that hopeless insanity is not ground for divorce in Pennsylvania, and that the Act of April 18, 1905, supra, did not make insanity a new ground of divorce, the opinion erroneously stated that the Act of 1905 merely extended the provisions of the Act of April 13,1843 “to cases where the husband is a hopeless lunatic or non compos mentis, and provides for special procedure and the degree of proof required, but it goes no further.” On the contrary, the Act of 1905 provided for actions in divorce against a husband or wife, who is a hopeless lunatic — for grounds, of course, existing before he or she became a lunatic — and directed that service of the subpoena in divorce should be made upon the committee of such lunatic; whereas the Act of 1843 authorized the filing of a libel in divorce by a relative or next friend of a wife who wasi a hopeless lunatic, *275 the affidavit to the libel to be made by such relative or next friend. Subpoenas in divorce are not served upon libellants but upon respondents, and the provision in the Act of 1905 that service of the subpoena in divorce shall be made upon the committee of the lunatic, show's that it authorized the filing of a libel in divorce against a lunatic husband or wife, as respondent, while the Act of 1843 only authorized the filing of a libel on behalf of a lunatic wife as libellant; so, too, in clause C of the Act of 1905 it was provided that no divorce shall be granted under said Act “to any petitioner or libellant unless it be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the husband or wife of the petitioner [libellant] is hopelessly insane”; and the Act of 1905 expressly provides (Clause E) that it “shall in no way interfere or prevent an insane wife from obtaining a divorce from a husband, as provided in the Act of April 13, 1843, to which this is a supplement.”

In 1915 (Act of April 21, 1915, P. L.

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.2d 187, 138 Pa. Super. 271, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickey-v-hickey-pasuperct-1939.