Langeland v. Langeland

164 A. 816, 108 Pa. Super. 375, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 198
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1932
DocketAppeal 40
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 164 A. 816 (Langeland v. Langeland) 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
Langeland v. Langeland, 164 A. 816, 108 Pa. Super. 375, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 198 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

On September 4, 1930, more than a year after the approval of “The Divorce Law” of May 2, 1929, P. L. 1237, Elizabeth Langeland filed her libel in divo.rce against Oscar W. Langeland. Although evidently intended to be drawn under clause (f) of section 10 of that act, its language was not used, but, in accordance with the former practice, she averred, as the ground of her petition, that “respondent from the 1st day of October, 1922, hath offered such indignities to the person of petitioner as to render her condition intolerable and life burdensome and did thereby force petitioner to withdraw from respondent’s house, home and family,- on the 15th day of July, 1929.”

A bill of particulars was filed; neither party took a rule for a jury trial and the court below, on motion *377 of counsel for libellant, made an order referring the case to “Joseph J. Pratt, court stenographer,” as a special master to hear the evidence and report his findings. The master recommended a decree in favor of libellant; the court below dismissed respondent’s exceptions and entered a final decree on November 28, 1931; this appeal is by the respondent from that decree.

Apart from the merits of the case, it would be our duty to reverse this decree because the procedure in the court below was irregular and the learned president judge thereof did not perform his duties in the manner indicated in numerous appellate decisions— particularly Nacrelli v. Nacrelli, 288 Pa. 1, affirming the decree (87 Pa. Superior Ct. 162) entered in that case by this court.

The person appointed master in this case is not a member of the bar. Section 36, of our present divorce law, provides that the court may “appoint a master to take testimony and return the same to the court,” and, by Section 54, it is enacted that where a master has been appointed “he shall make a report to the court of the proceedings had before him, and his opinion of the case.” The master’s office is a branch of the court, and it is expressly provided in England that the masters of the King’s Bench Division must have been practicing barristers, or special pleaders, or solicitors, of five years ’ standing. Although we seem to have no express statutory provision to the effect that a master in a divorce proceeding must be a member of the bar, it is obvious, in view of the duties assigned him, that one not learned in the law is not competent to act as master.

Indeed, this case is an illustration of at least one good reason for the rule we now announce. The only ground assigned in the libel was indignities to the person of libellant, but the master, after taking nearly two hundred pages of typewritten testimony, filed a *378 report, covering thirty printed pages, and recommended the granting of the divorce upon two grounds: (a) cruel and barbarous treatment endangering the life of libellant, and (b) indignities to her person rendering her condition intolerable and life burdensome. These are separate and distinct causes for divorce, and there was neither allegation nor proof of any cruel and barbarous treatment in this case. The final decree mentions only indignities to the person, but the court below confirmed the master’s report in its entirety, and neither in the opinion nor in the order dismissing the exceptions do we find the slightest reference to the fact that the master had injected into the case a ground for divorce not even pleaded in the libel.

Another difficulty is that it is apparent, from the opinion, that the court below gave undue weight to the conclusions of the master and did not adequately perform its judicial functions.

The parties were married at Athens, Pa., on August 26,1922; they have two surviving children, William E., born July 5, 1923, and Virginia L., February 16, 1929. The bill of particulars charged that respondent, within two months after their marriage, began a course of humiliating and degrading conduct consisting of profane and obscene language directed to libellant, making sport of her religious beliefs and church connections, threatening to accuse her of infidelity, and culminating in the display of a revolver immediately prior to their separation in July, 1929. The testimony was irreconcilably conflicting but all the conflicts therein were resolved by the master in favor of libellant.

The opinion of the court below, after referring to the conflicting character of the testimony and stating that the master had seen and heard the witnesses and knew most of them personally, continued: “If respondent’s treatment of his wife was such as she narrated, if he called her the vile names as she testi *379 tied, if lie conducted himself toward her as she says he did, and as a result of his conduct she was in fear of her life and the safety of her children to the extent that her health failed her and she became in a nervous condition, which she, her mother and her physician say she was, it, in pur judgment is sufficient to sustain the allegation in the libel that the respondent offered such indignities to her person as to render her condition intolerable and her life burdensome. Being unwilling to reverse the findings of the master, who met the witnesses, observed them while giving testimony and gave careful consideration to all the testimony as his report shows, when the determination depends upon the credibility of the witnesses, we feel it our duty to confirm his report.”

This language, we think, indicates a misapprehension upon the part of the court below of its duty in divorce cases, as defined in Nacrelli v. Nacrelli, supra. We need not repeat what was so fully considered and carefully stated in that case 'with respect to the duty, both of the court below and of this court, in such cases.

The authority for the appointment of a master in a divorce proceeding, in which the Commonwealth is always an unnamed third party, never did confer on him powers similar to those of a master in equity, or give his report and findings the force and effect of the findings of such a master. The question in a divorce case is not whether there was evidence to support the findings of the master; it is the duty of the court to make its own independent and careful investigation of the evidence to ascertain whether it does in truth establish a legal cause for divorce. No matter what drudgery may be involved, this judicial function cannot be relinquished or evaded by the appointment of even the most competent master. True, the master’s report is entitled to the fullest consideration because of his personal contact with the witnesses, but it does not come into court with any preponderating weight *380 or authority which must be overcome by the opposing party.

"What was said in the Nacrelli case, and the numerous cases reviewed therein, is particularly applicable to this case because when libellant withdrew from their home, with the children, she left a letter, addressed to respondent and reading: “You will see that I have taken the children’s things with me. What I said about separation, I meant and until you can prove you are capable of fully supporting us you need not expect us back. I had hoped to see you today and talk it over.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 816, 108 Pa. Super. 375, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langeland-v-langeland-pasuperct-1932.