Myers v. Myers

17 Pa. D. & C. 236
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Clinton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1931
DocketNo. 72
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Pa. D. & C. 236 (Myers v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Clinton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myers v. Myers, 17 Pa. D. & C. 236 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Fleming, P. J.,

forty-ninth judicial district, specially presiding, September 23, 1931. — On July 16,1920, in an opinion and decree overruling the report of a master, the then sitting court awarded a divorce a vinculo matrimonii to the libellant, with an allowance to the respondent of permanent alimony to continue so long as the respondent remained unmarried. The respondent has not remarried, and the libellant has fully complied with the court’s order until a date approximating the awarding of the rule now before us, wherein libellant seeks a vacation of that part of the decree in divorce which awards such permanent alimony.

Three reasons are assigned in support of such rule, to wit: (1) That the decree awarding such alimony was not made and entered upon the basis of any well-defined, clear or authentic testimony or finding of fact as to the libellant’s income or ability to pay the same; (2) that the libellant was not at the time the said decree was made, nor has he since been, in a position to comply with such decree without unduly burdening himself and feeling the hardship caused thereby; and (3) that the respondent has made no effort to secure employment or to earn any money, but is avoiding the same in order to vex and annoy the libellant.

We find no merit in the last two reasons assigned. If the order for alimony was excessive at the time of its making, the libellant could have obtained a proper review of the same had he so desired. On the contrary, however, he has faithfully complied with such order for a decade, indicating conclusively that, it was not more than he could pay, as he has paid it. Nor is the order contingent upon the condition that the respondent augment it by her own labors. The ties of matrimony were wholly severed by the decree in divorce, and no legal obligations remained upon the libellant as to the sufficiency of the wife’s maintenance. He was to pay the stipulated sum, no more and no less, regardless of the respondent’s necessities, and having done so, it was legally impossible for him to be vexed or annoyed by the respondent’s failure to be employed.

The first reason, however, creates a necessity for a careful consideration of divorce legislation in Pennsylvania, in so far as alimony is concerned.

At the common law alimony was unknown. Blackstone, in his Commentaries, speaks of alimony in connection with divorce a mensa et thoro as a kind of esto[237]*237ver to which a wife, living separate and apart from her husband, may be entitled, but nowhere does he speak of alimony as an attribute in absolute divorce.

In 1785, an act was passed in Pennsylvania providing that an injured wife might be allowed a temporary sort of alimony after she had been granted a divorce from bed and board, such alimony to continue until reconciliation of the parties. This act was entitled “An act concerning divorces and alimony.” No alimony in connection with an absolute divorce is mentioned.

The Act of April 2,1804, 4 Sm. Laws 182, passed as a supplement to the Act of September 19,1785, 2 Sm. Laws 343, gave to the judges of the court of common pleas the authority to hear and determine actions in divorce, which had previously been vested solely in the Supreme Court.

On March 13,1815, the legislature passed “An act concerning divorces” (6 Sm. Laws 286), the purpose of which appears to have been to consolidate all our divorce laws into one general act, for it repealed all prior acts on the subject and lodged sole jurisdiction in the court of common pleas. No reference to permanent alimony is made in such act.

It was not until the Act of May 8,1854, P. L. 644, that a husband could avail himself of the cause similar to that for which the wife alone, under an act of 1815, could apply. The Act of 1854 is a supplement to the Act of 1815, and is as follows: “Be it enacted, . . . that, in addition to the cases now provided for by law, it shall be lawful for the courts of common pleas of this Commonwealth to grant divorces in the following cases: ... 3. Where the wife shall have, by cruel and barbarous treatment, rendered the condition of her husband intolerable or life burdensome: Provided, that in cases of divorce under this act, if the application shall be made on the part of the husband, the court granting such divorce, shall allow such support or alimony to the wife as her husband’s circumstances will admit of, and as the said courts may deem just and proper.”

The Act of June 25,1895, P. L. 308, amends this act by adding after the words “cruel and barbarous treatment” the words “or indignities to his person,” and further amends such Act of 1854 by substituting for the words “shall allow” the words “may allow,” thus making the allowance of alimony discretionary.

The Act of April 4,1925, P. L. 124, further amends the Acts of 1854 and 1895 by removing entirely the provision regarding alimony mentioned above.

The most recent legislation on the subject, The Divorce Law of 1929, approved May 2, 1929, P. L. 1237, makes no mention whatsoever of permanent alimony except in cases where either spouse is insane. The'grounds of “cruel and barbarous treatment” or “indignities to the person” are available to each spouse, and no mention of support or alimony is made in such cases.

We note, therefore, that historically, alimony has never been an incident of absolute divorce in Pennsylvania as a complete matter of right except from 1854 to 1895. From this latter year until 1925 it was a right solely contingent upon the discretion of the court, and since then it has not existed except in the case of insanity of one of the spouses.

The-divorce in the instant case was granted July 16, 1920, during that inter- , val when the awarding of alimony was discretionary with the court. Wé have carefully considered the testimony taken before the master, as well as the master’s report, wherein he recommends the dismissal of the libel. Both are wholly silent as to libellant’s ability to pay alimony. We have also carefully read the opinion of the then sitting court and find it wholly devoid of any reference to libellant’s ability to pay. The order appears to have been based upon the presumption that “the respondent is apparently destitute of any separate estate of her own,” rather than upon the libellant’s ability to pay.

[238]*238In Heller v. Heller, 27 Dist. R. 385 (1918), the court says: “In order to fix a proper and reasonable sum for permanent alimony, the husband’s circumstances and ability to pay should affirmatively appear.” Further, citing the Act of 1895, the same court says: “No reason is perceived for holding that this act has removed the necessity of a consideration of the circumstances of the husband in order to award such alimony as inquiry might show to be ‘just and proper.’ ” In this case the master’s report was referred back to him to ascertain the libellant’s circumstances and ability to pay alimony. The same procedure appears in Hocking v. Hocking, 12 Dist. R. 82 (1902).

In the instant case, we have heard the testimony as to libellant’s present ability to pay. The past does not interest us, as it is no longer material, the libellant having fully met previous requirements to the date of the granting of the rule now under consideration. He appears to be “property poor.” He owns several small pieces of real estate, but to sell the same in the present market would entail undue and improper sacrifices.

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17 Pa. D. & C. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-myers-pactcomplclinto-1931.