Humphreys v. Humphreys

85 Pa. Super. 488, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 308
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 5, 1924
DocketAppeal, 181
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 85 Pa. Super. 488 (Humphreys v. Humphreys) 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
Humphreys v. Humphreys, 85 Pa. Super. 488, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 308 (Pa. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The parties were married in 1896, and cohabited together as man and wife until 1914. The appellee charged in his libel that “Respondent wilfully and maliciously deserted, absented herself from the habitation of libellant, without a reasonable cause, for a period of upwards of two years last past, and such desertion persisted in from thence hitherto, in that, on June 1, 1914, libellant then living with his wife and family at Brock-way ville, Jefferson County, Pennsylvania, removed to Eldred, McKean County, Pennsylvania, and established a home there and practiced his profession as a physician and thereafter, on or about June 25, 1914, libellant requested respondent to join him at Eldred aforesaid, and live with him as theretofore, and respondent absolutely refused to join libellant or live with him.” The respondent filed an answer denying the allegations and Specifically denying that she had deserted the libellant and demanded a jury trial. The court refused to award a jury trial and appointed a master, who after hearing the testimony, reported the same to court together with his opinion of the case, and recommended a decree of divorce be granted. Exceptions were filed to the report of the master, which the court overruled and entered a decree divorcing the parties. We have this appeal from that decree.

The opinion filed by the learned judge of the court below, after quoting from the opinion of Mr. Justice Dean, in Middleton v. Middleton, 187 Pa. 615, in which the duties of the court, in divorce proceedings, are distinctly set forth, clearly indicates that the court below was of opinion that the nature of the duties to be performed by the judges had been modified by legislation since the case cited was decided. The concluding paragraph of the opinion filed in the court below was as fol *490 lows: “Middleton v. Middleton, supra, was followed by the Act of March 10, 1899, P. L. 8, which defines the duties and powers of masters in divorce and authorizes the court to appoint a master who shall take testimony and return the same together with the report of the proceedings before him and his opinion of the case to the court. The settled practice seems to be under this act, that the master’s findings of fact in cases of sharp conflict in the testimony will not ordinarily be reviewed further than to ascertain if there be adequate support in the proofs for his conclusion. In this particular at least his report will be treated as that of a master in equity or auditor.” In this the learned judge erred. The Act of March 10, 1899, provided that in suits of divorce in any court of common pleas, “it shall and may be lawful for the court when the case is ready to be proceeded with, either upon answer not demanding a trial by jury or ex-parte, to appoint a master, who shall take the testimony and return the same, together with a report of the proceedings before him and his opinion of the case, to the court.” We have repeatedly held that the report of the master, appointed under the provisions of this statute, is advisory only. It was not intended that judicial functions should in any material degree be relinquished by conducting the proceedings before a master in his office, or that weighty judicial responsibility should be evaded by shifting it over to a member of the bar. It still remains the duty of the court to exercise its own independent judgment, as to the law and the facts, to state its reasons for overruling or sustaining exceptions to the report of the master, and in addition to review in writing the case on its merits: Hirch v. Hirch, 70 Pa. Superior Ct. 584. It may be doubted whether under a strict construction of the Act of 1899 the court had authority to appoint a master in the present case, for the answer did demand a jury trial, but we do not deem it necessary, in view of the conclusion reached upon the merits, to now decide that question. It must be kept in *491 mind that prior to the Act of 1899, when the facts had been found by the court below, except where there had been an issue and jury trial, the Supreme Court had always held it incumbent on it to review the testimony, and adjudge whether it sustained the complaint of the libellant. This applied to findings of fact by the judge of the court below, who had heard the testimony. Mr. Justice Dean, in his opinion in Middleton v. Middleton, supra,.thus states the principle upon which the Supreme Court had acted: “It has not adopted, in such appeals, the rule generally applicable to proceedings before a master or an auditor, that a finding of fact will not be disturbed except for manifest error. In every case in which the appeal was from a decree not based on the finding of a jury......it has taken up, analyzed and reviewed the testimony, and in nearly every case, has embodied its views in an opinion filed.” “Whether the marital contract shall be severed is the gravest of questions, not alone to the parties, but to the state, for the social structure rests upon it.”

We have carefully considered the evidence in this case, in all its details, and are convinced that the learned master and the court below failed to give due weight to the fact that there was no desertion, by the respondent, from the habitation of the libellant. The libellant was, in point of fact, the first to desert. The parties were married in 1896 and had lived together happily until the fall of 1913. There was a conflict of testimony as to the manner in which the disagreements in October, 1913, began and as to the nature of the communications and conversations of the parties, but whatever it was it was patched up and, as the libellant testified, “blew over.” They lived together and continued to cohabit as man and wife until February, 1914. The libellant is a physician and about the middle of February, 1914, the respondent asked him for some aspirin tablets, whether for the use of herself or her sister we do not deem material. The libellant finding that the aspirin bottle in *492 his medical case was empty went to his office for the purpose of filling the bottle, and the light not being good he, through a mistake, filled the bottle with bichloride of mercury tablets instead of those composed of aspirin. After his return to his home the respondent went to the medical case and taking some of the tablets from the aspirin bottle, swallowed one of them, soon afterwards becoming very ill. After violent vomiting she seemed to be more comfortable and they retired for the night. The next morning the libellant discovered his mistake and summoned the sister of the respondent, who is a trained nurse, her brother, who is a physician, and called in the assistance of other physicians. The respondent continued very ill for a considerable period of time, but did not know until several weeks had passed and after the libellant had deserted his home that she had taken poison. The libellant testified that he was led to believe that the brothers and sisters of the respondent were of opinion that he had intentionally attempted to poison his wife, this belief being due to the fact that there was always some person else present when he visited his wife, who was then critically ill. There was not a scintilla of competent evidence tending to establish that the respondent or any of her relatives at the time said anything to him or anybody else indicating that they thought he had intentionally poisoned his wife. The libellant according to his own testimony, seemed to have listened to the idle gossip of his own brother.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Pa. Super. 488, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphreys-v-humphreys-pasuperct-1924.