Kerstetter v. Kerstetter

29 Pa. D. & C. 495, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 202
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedDecember 28, 1936
Docketno. 1178
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Pa. D. & C. 495 (Kerstetter v. Kerstetter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerstetter v. Kerstetter, 29 Pa. D. & C. 495, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 202 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Hargest, P. J.,

Plaintiff in this case seeks to have her husband’s real estate charged for her maintenance.

Abstract of pleadings

The bill, which was filed February 17, 1936, avers that plaintiff and defendant were married December 25, 1890, and that defendant deserted her, without reasonable cause, February 9, 1936; that plaintiff had no definite knowledge of the whereabouts of her husband except that it was in the vicinity of Donna, Texas; that she was in destitute circumstances and unable to support herself on account of her age; that her husband is of sufficient ability to provide maintenance for her; that he owns personal property and real estate in this county, the latter yielding a rental income of $72 per month. She asks that defendant be restrained from alienating his real estate ; that the court direct the sale or mortgaging thereof under the appointment of a trustee, and for a decree fixing the amount of money she is entitled to receive.

[497]*497 Abstract of ansiver

The answer denies that defendant failed or neglected to provide for plaintiff; avers that plaintiff deserted him on December 1,1935; that she always knew of his whereabouts; that he went to the State of Texas for his health and she unreasonably refused to accompany him; that he has at all times been ready and willing to support her and frequently asked that she return to their matrimonial home at Elizabethville; that he is desirous of having her return; but he denies that he is able to provide for her separate support at any other place; admits that he receives $72 per month for two properties in Elizabethville, out of which it is necessary to pay taxes, water rent, and insurance.

Testimony was taken from which we find the following

Facts

1. Plaintiff and defendant were married February 25, 1890, and since the year 1892 lived as husband and wife in the Borough of Elizabethville, until November 1934, when they went to live with a married daughter in Middletown, this county.

2. While living in Middletown defendant made a trip to Texas and returned with an overwhelming desire to go to Texas to live. He had seen in Texas an establishment consisting of a restaurant, filling station and 12 cabins, which he desired to purchase and operate.

3. On December 1, 1935, plaintiff and defendant had arranged to make a trip back to Elizabethville and the preparation made by defendant for that trip indicated that he intended to go from Elizabethville to Texas. He was insistent that his wife accompany him. She was physically unable to make the trip at that time by automobile and declined to leave Middletown if defendant persisted in making the trip to Texas. Defendant thereupon went to Elizabethville, unaccompanied by plaintiff. On February 8, 1936, plaintiff and her daughter made a [498]*498trip to Elizabethville by automobile and found that much of the furnishings had been removed out of their residence and that defendant was arranging to go to Texas the next day.

4. Defendant requested plaintiff to accompany him to Texas and she declined to do so. There was some altercation between them, in which Rev. Paul A. Gottschall attempted to conciliate both parties, and defendant said that he would not go to Texas the next day if Mrs. Kerstetter would come back to Elizabethville, but the married daughter of the parties concluded that in view of the altercation that had taken place it was not advisable for her mother immediately to return. Thereupon he refused to give his wife any money or the keys to the house, and declared that he was going to Texas, and “I have somebody to stick to me and stick by me”.

5. During the period from December 1,1935, when defendant left Middletown, until he left for Texas, he was living in Elizabethville, and Mrs. Laudenschlager kept house for him for, at least, part of the time.

6. On February 9,1936, he left for Texas in his automobile, taking with him Mrs. Laudenschlager and her son. He said he took the son along so it would not look suspicious.

7. Between the time he left Middletown and the time he went to Texas his daughter and plaintiff importuned defendant to return to Middletown and not go to Texas.

8. On February 1, 1936, Dr. H. W. George, of Middle-town, examined plaintiff and determined that she was not in a physical condition to travel by automobile at that time.

9. Shortly after defendant arrived in Texas he wrote his wife a letter, dated February 20, 1936, stating what he would do with reference to the money which he owed her, directing her to take her goods out of the house, saying that he would sell “all personal town lots, cemetery plot, camping stock. Then if you release me for good I will give you the money for the two notes you entered [499]*499against me. When the depression is over I will sell all properties to pay your $3,000”, saying, also, that he had sent the keys to I. S. Daniel, and that “I do more than the law would ask of me. . . . Show letter to attorney,” and, “so we may meet some happy day in a better world.” He also sent a postcard to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hoffman, Halifax, Pa., signed “The G. M. Kerstetters.”

10. Defendant returned from Texas March 9, 1936, taking Mrs. Laudenschlager to Michigan on the way, and has been living in Elizabethville since that time.

11. Susequent to his return he invited his wife to come back and live with him in Elizabethville, but made no real effort to effect a reconciliation.

12. Defendant wanted to sell his property in Elizabethville even to the extent of sacrificing it to raise money to purchase the property in Texas.

13. Defendant’s property in Elizabethville is worth approximately $9,000, against which there is a mortgage of $3,000 due his wife, which does not bear interest and by its terms is not collectible during defendant’s lifetime. Defendant also has received other large sums of money from his wife, perhaps aggregating $5,000, for which she has no evidences of indebtedness. The other indebtedness against the property amounts to approximately $2,700. The gross income is $81 per month, or $972 a year, against which there are taxes of $170, $40 for insurance, and $162 interest, about $200 for repairs, making the present net income from the property about $33.33 per month.

14. One of defendant’s tenants, the American Stores Company, has refrained from paying the rent due, $30 per month, since the first day of March 1936.

15. Defendant deserted and abandoned his wife.

Discussion

Defendant contends that the court has no jurisdiction to maintain this bill and enter the decree requested, first, because there is an adequate remedy at law, second, be[500]*500cause the evidence does not bring the case within the provisions of the act of assembly providing for a proceeding of this kind, and, third, because there was no desertion.

This bill is brought under sections 1 and 2 of the Act of May 23, 1907, P. L. 227, section 2 being amended by the Act of July 21, 1913, P. L. 867, 48 PS secs. 131, 132. The statute provides, in part, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
29 Pa. D. & C. 495, 1936 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerstetter-v-kerstetter-pactcompldauphi-1936.