Peters v. Peters

10 A.2d 867, 138 Pa. Super. 534, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 387
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1939
DocketAppeal, 89
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 867 (Peters v. Peters) 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
Peters v. Peters, 10 A.2d 867, 138 Pa. Super. 534, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 387 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtfeld, J.,

The libellant applied for a divorce in the Court of Common Pleas No. 3 of Philadelphia County on the *536 ground of wilful and malicious desertion alleged to have taken place on or about June 12,1935.

An answer having been filed to the libel, the case was referred to Maxwell L. Davis, Esq., as master, who, after hearing testimony, filed his report recommending the libel be dismissed. < Exceptions were filed to the report of the master, argued and dismissed in a per curiam opinion. The libel was dismissed, and an exception to the court’s fiction in dismissing the libel, allowed.

On June 5, 1901, libellant and respondent were married at Benton Harbor, Michigan. They lived in and about Chicago, 111., from 1901 until 1916, when they moved to Glenside, Pa., where they lived together until September 13, 1933. On that date libellant- left his wife and went to live at different hotels in Philadelphia, until December 9, 1933, when he moved to 237¡South 7th Street, Philadelphia where he has since resided. The respondent still resides at their former home at 212 Rosemore Avenue, Glenside, Pa.

Libellant was born in Norway and respondent in Germany. At the time of the hearings,,he was fifty-nine years of age, and she was sixty-four years of age. He is superintendent of the Photo-Type Engraving Company of Philadelphia and earns $100 weekly. She is unemployed and has been a housewife since their marriage. Their one child, Gertrude, who was born in 1905, died in 1926.

On September 13, 1933, libellant left his wife. On November 3, 1933, he filed a libel in divorce on the ground of indignities, in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, and on May 10, 1935, the court en banc ¡dismissed his libel. On June 10, 1935, she issued a warrant for his arrest in Montgomery County for non-support. On June 5th, 1933, he went to his wife’s home in Glenside.. He states that the purpose of this trip was to effect a reconciliation, so that he could return to their former home. The evidence is *537 conflicting as to the conversation which took place at that time, but at all events, libellant received ,a telephone call a few days later, advising him that his wife did not wish him to return.,

He testified that he again called to see the respondent at her home on June 12, 1935 and asked her to live with him at Philadelphia, but that she refused to leave her home. ^

On June 17, 1935, libellant sent respondent the following registered letter: '“Philadelphia, Pa. June 17, 1935. Dear Hattie: I am sorry I could not convince you on Saturday that the best way for both of us is for you ¡'to come and live with me at my Philadelphia home (236 S. 7th Street). We will have two floors consisting of five rooms and bath furnished. I am sure you can make yourself comfortable (there for I have been comfortable in the same place for the last eighteen months. It may not be the best in the world but it is the best I can afford at this time. Think it over and let me know when you are coming. I can have it ready for you on a day’s notice. Trusting you will see it the way I do and come live with me again. Sigurd.”

On, June 22, 1935, she answered his letter as follows: “Glenside, Pa. June 22, 1935. Mr. Sigurd Peters, 236 S. 7th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Sigurd: In answer to your letter of June 17th, I do not feel that, in view of your treatment of me in the past and your present attitude towards me, anything but great unhappiness would result for both of us by me coming to Philadelphia. It is not a question of physical comfort with me. It is simply that your actions and treatment of me have rendered life with you intolerable. Yours very truly, Hattie.”

After this exchange of letters, libellant never again attempted to communicate with respondent, and on March 5, 1936, less than nine months later, he executed the present libel in divorce, which was filed on March 27, 1936, at Philadelphia. County, alleging a wilful and *538 malicious desertion on ¡tbe part of his wife on June 12, 1935.

Appellant’s entire case is based upon hi's offer to resume the marital status in the conversations held by him with his wife and upon the exchange of correspondence contained in their letters of June 17th and June 22, 1935.

In order for the appellant to prevail in this proceeding, he must meet the burden of proving that his offer to return was made in good faith and that his wife was not justified in refusing it: McClurg’s Appeal, 66 Pa. 366; Gordon v. Gordon, 208 Pa. 186, 57 A. 525; Walsh v. Walsh, 117 Pa. Superior Ct. 579, 178 A. 399; Truitt v. Truitt, 130 Pa. Superior Ct. 79, 197 A. 152.

The libellant testified that, after his divorce proceedings were dismissed in Montgomery County, he concluded that he would attempt a reconciliation, and therefore went to the respondent’s home on June 5, 1935, and offered to return. He testified that she stated he could come back only if he paid f25 for his ¡room and garage and that she would not prepare meals for him. She then refused to ¡allow him to return, but he persuaded her to agree that he should come back in two days unless he heard from her to the contrary. After he packed his things, and notified his landlady that he was leaving, he received a telephone call that she was not ready to receive him. He further testified that on June 12,1935, he again ¡visited her, first offered to copie back, and after she refused, he asked her to come live with him in Philadelphia, at 236 South 7th Street, where he had already made arrangements for that purpose. She refused to leave herbóme in Glenside. Then he mailed the registered letter, dated June 17, 1935, to which he received the reply dated June 22, 1935. He made no further attempts in any manner whatsoever towards reconciliation. The respondent, although her dates differed slightly from those given by her husband, *539 testified that when he visited her, after the divorce proceedings were dismissed in Montgomery County, he said that he desired to return ¡in order to reduce his expenses, and that he did not intend to give up his lady-friend. She denied that he stated he wanted ,to come back to her to abide by the court’s decision that he was not entitled to a divorce. |She also testified that he said that he would not be the same husband to her; that he would not be home weekends, because he would be out with the boys. She then agreed that he should come home in a few days and bring .his clothes. She called him on the telephone the following Sunday morning and told him that she decided he should not come back on Monday as she wanted a few days to think about the matter. She also testified that he made the second visit, at which time he requested her to live with him in Philadelphia. She was surprised, doubted his sincerity and questioned him as to why he asked her to leave their own home and live in a rooming house in Philadelphia. He said nothing further, and although she asked him to stay for lunch, he left.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 867, 138 Pa. Super. 534, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-peters-pasuperct-1939.