Leslie v. Leslie

132 A.2d 379, 184 Pa. Super. 18, 1957 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 11, 1957
DocketAppeals, 147 and 148
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 A.2d 379 (Leslie v. Leslie) 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
Leslie v. Leslie, 132 A.2d 379, 184 Pa. Super. 18, 1957 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206 (Pa. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

Opinion by

Watkins, 3.,

These appeals are from a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, dismissing exceptions filed by the appellant wife to a master’s report recommending the grant of an absolute divorce to the appellee husband, on the ground of indignities, and the dismissal of the appellant wife’s action for divorce from bed and board on the grounds of, (1) cruel and barbarous treatment; (2) indignities to the person.

Both cases were heard simultaneously before the Same master. The parties were married on February 2, 1945, while the husband was in military service. The husband, at the time of the hearing, was 36 years of age, the wife 35. There is one child of the marriage, a boy, born March 22,' 1947. He resides with his mother. The husband, at the time of the hearing, was a taxi-driver but during his marriage, and prior thereto, was a funeral director.

The wife knew of his occupation as a funeral director at the time of their marriage and made no objection to it. After his return from military service, three years after the marriage, they resided with the husband’s parents for one year and three months. The wife could not get along with her husband’s parents and constantly criticized his occupation as a funeral director, stating that all he did was “sit around waiting for people to die.” Finally, acceding to her pressure, he gave up the funeral business and sought employment elsewhere. He took any kind of job available, indicating his desire to meet his wife’s objections, both to his business and his family. This is indicated by his acceptance of a job as bartender in Frankenmuth, Michigan, and the fact that, at the time of the hearing, he was working as a taxi-driver.

The family lived together in Frankenmuth, Michigan when the appellee husband reenlisted in the- H. S. *21 Air Force, and then the parties lived at Rapid City, South Dakota. In 1950, the husband received a discharge. His father having died, the appellee returned his family to 721 Brushton Avenue, Pittsburgh. This time, however, they occupied the entire home, the appellee’s family having moved out.

Despite the fact that the husband’s family were no longer present she continued her course of conduct of ridicule and abuse. She insisted on having the child, then three years old, share their bed and sleep between them; and finally, in the spring of 1952, forced the appellee to sleep in a separate bedroom.

The record shows that the appellant, in the presence of others, referred to the appellee as “the great one” and the “big shot”. When questioned, she said she thought the terms appropriate. She called him a “vulture” because he was a funeral director; that he played on other people’s sorrow; ridiculed his membership in the masonic order, calling it a “cloak and dagger” organization. She continually upbraided him about their difference in religion and claimed they were not married because they had not been married by a catholic priest. She refused to have any more children, although there was no physical reason for this decision. She called the appellee a “thief” and a “liar” in the presence of members of his family.

This course of conduct was continuous from a time shortly after their marriage, until March 8, 1953, when the appellee left his home. From September 1951, until March 8, 1953, appellant refused to eat meals with her husband and refused to permit the child to have his meals with the appellee.

She told him she would ruin his business and his entire family and while he was in the funeral business did everything possible to accomplish her threat by refusing to answer business telephone calls; cut off the *22 heat in the home; and by her actions discouraged business callers and hurt his hope of prospective business.

The appellee testified that on one occasion the appellant threw a chair at him and tried to hit him with her purse, and at another time she kicked him in the privates.

The lower court made a very careful analysis of the testimony and we quote with approval the following portions of the opinion of Judge Wbiss. “In reviewing the report of the Master in these cases, this court has given detailed consideration to all the testimony presented in behalf of both parties and to the briefs and arguments of counsel on the exceptions filed. Although the Master’s report does not specifically set forth his findings of fact in consecutively numbered paragraphs as is ordinarily done in these cases, a review of the entire report discloses that specific findings of fact were made throughout the Master’s report so that both the parties and the court are adequately apprised of those findings upon which the Master bases his conclusion of law. It is the opinion of the court that the findings, conclusions, and recommendations of the Master in these proceedings are supported by the evidence and are in accordance with the applicable law. . . This court concurs in the conclusion of the Master that the entire course of the defendant’s conduct, as placed in evidence by the plaintiff and as corroborated by the defendant herself, was such as to evidence settled hate and estrangement on the part of the defendant. In support of such a conclusion the report of the Master states on page 10 of his report: ‘Further, defendant’s demeanor on and off the stand, in the hearing room (especially during plaintiff’s testimony) was such as to bring words of caution from the Master and such as to plainly reveal her contempt and disdain for plaintiff. She displayed in the hearing room itself intentional in *23 civility, manifest disdain and malignant ridicule of her husband, and her answers prove her guilty of like conduct in the past to the extent that plaintiff was required to secure medical treatment for a nervous condition and to leave the common abode in March 1952 to become a cab driver.’

“The Master further found that the plaintiff’s testimony was forthright and erect and that the defendant was either evasive, vague, or contradictory or clearly revealing of her disdain for her husband. Under such circumstances, this court is inclined to give considerable weight to the observations of the Master during the course of the hearing. He was able throughout the proceedings to observe and study the behavior of both of the parties and their demeanor on and off the witness stand; many times such observations may well be more convincing and persuasive in drawing conclusions from the evidence than the actual testimony of the parties themselves. . . . However, it is appropriate at this time to consider briefly the testimony of the defendant relating to certain indignities alleged to have been committed by the plaintiff. Defendant testified that the plaintiff called her a ‘bitch,’ a ‘slut,’ a ‘chippy,’ a ‘stupid moron,’ but she did not state when or how many times, or in the presence of whom, if anyone, the alleged name calling took place. She complained that her husband accused her of going into bar rooms, but then admitted that she and her girl friends did stop into a bar on several occasions.

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Related

Carle v. Carle
162 A.2d 38 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Sims v. Sims
149 A.2d 528 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
132 A.2d 379, 184 Pa. Super. 18, 1957 Pa. Super. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-v-leslie-pasuperct-1957.