Rech v. Rech

107 A.2d 601, 176 Pa. Super. 401, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 455
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 1954
DocketAppeal, 127
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 107 A.2d 601 (Rech v. Rech) 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
Rech v. Rech, 107 A.2d 601, 176 Pa. Super. 401, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 455 (Pa. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Woodside, J.,

This is an appeal from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County refusing Arnold G. Rech a divorce a.v.m.

The appellant filed a complaint against his wife, Louise M. ReCh,'on September 18, 1952 alleging cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to the person and on November 25th amended the complaint to in'-, elude adultery and named Edward Schaub as' co-respondent. On February 19, 1953, after a master had been appointed in the above case, the wife defendant in that action filed a counter suit in which she sought a divorce from bed and board. She charged her hus *403 band with cruel and barbarous treatment, indignities and adultery, naming “Bobbie” Budin as co-respondent. After numerous and determined attempts on the part of the wife to prevent and delay the hearings, the two cases were joined and finally brought before the master June 8, 1953. All parties, including both co-respondents, appeared and were heard.

The master concluded that neither party is entitled to a divorce. Neither, he held, had proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the other was guilty of cruel and barbarous treatment or indignities. He found and held that the wife had failed to prove that the appellant had committed adultery with Roberta Budin, but held that his relations with her were of such a nature that he is not an injured and innocent spouse, and “therefore is not entitled to a decree in divorce on the ground of his wife’s misconduct with Edward Schaub.”

Exceptions were taken to the report and argued before one Judge who disposed of the case with a curt, “We have examined the findings of the Master and we fully concur.”

It is our duty, as it was the court’s below, to not only examine the findings of the master, but to be satisfied by our “. . . own knowledge of the testimony that the averments of the libel have been proved by full and competent evidence.” Middleton v. Middleton, 187 Pa. 612, 615, 41 A. 291 (1898). “His (the master’s) findings have not the conclusiveness of those of an auditor or a master, in chancery. They are entitled to consideration by the court, but it is the duty of the latter to consider all the evidence in the case to determine whether the conclusion reached by the master is supported by such weight of evidence.as warrants a decree.” Rommel v. Rommel, 87 Pa. Superior Ct. 511, 512 (1926).

*404 An examination of the record leaves no doubt that the wife was guilty of adultery with Edward Schaub. The master found, and the evidence supports, that they lived together as husband and wife for a period of five or six weeks in June and July 1951.

Was there condonation? The parties separated in May 1951. The wife contended that twice thereafter, once in July of 1951, and again in March 1952 she had sexual intercourse with the appellant. The master did not believe her; neither do we. But assuming she and appellant did have intercourse on these dates, the evidence shows that the appellant did not know of her living with Schaub until September 1952.

As a person cannot condone what he does not know, there could have been no legal condonation by the husband of the wife’s adultery until he knew of it. Davis v. Davis, 145 Pa. Superior Ct. 473, 21 A. 2d 419 (1941); Act of May 2, 1929, P. L. 1237, §52, 23 PS §52.

Where we part company with the master is in his holding that the appellant should be denied a divorce on the ground that he is not an injured and innocent spouse. The master’s report showed great industry on his part and the facts were carefully considered and discussed by him. We do not differ with his findings of fact so much as we differ with his application of the Law to the facts which he found.

An. understanding of this point requires a review of some of -.the evidence..

The parties were married February 20, 1939 when he was 22 and she 20. They have two children; Bai’-bara, who is mentally retarded, was born January 24, 1940, and Diana was bom September 28, 1943. The appellant was graduated from the pharmacy school of Duquesne University in 1942 and since has been a registered pharmacist, frequently working until 11 o’clock *405 at night. The parties lived together at various places until they separated May 25, 1951.

There was some evidence concerning indignities on the part of both parties but we see no reason to refer to it. The master properly concluded neither had made out a case on the grounds of cruel and barbarous treat ment or indignities.

The beginning of the end came in 1950 when Mrs. Rech met Edward Schaub a salesman in a department store. April of the following year Schaub left his wife and two children; May, Mrs. Rech and the appellant separated, and by June Schaub and Mrs. Rech were living together as husband and wife in a small apartment at the rear of 1139 Portland Street, Pittsburgh. Later Schaub lived with Mrs. Rech’s uncle, and still later, having learned through a newspaper advertisement (he says) that Mrs. Rech had a room to rent, he went there and rented it. He lived in the house with Mrs. Rech, her mother and two children and a nurse, until he was named as a co-respondent in this divorce action nearly a year later.

Schaub and Mrs. Rech denied they had lived together as husband and wife but the evidence that they did was overwhelming.

About two months after the Rechs had separated and after Mrs. Rech and Schaub had been living together as husband and wife, Mr. Rech met Roberta Budin a nurse at Shadyside Hospital Dispensary. She lived at 131 Victoria Drive with her mother*, father and sister in a second floor apartment. The appellant met her when he took her to a banquet on a “blind date” arranged by a doctor friend. Later he took her golfing and to a night club. He spent considerable time at her home. Some mornings he took her to work.

The original hearing in this case was scheduled for March 19, 1953. It was postponed because of the al *406 leged illness of Mrs. Reeh. Effort after effort was made to postpone the hearing. Finally the court ordered an examination of the appellee, and finding no merit to her demands for delay, ordered the master to proceed to hearing on June 8th, without further delay. It then appeared that on March 14th Mrs. Rech had employed a private detective to follow the appellant. At the hearing he testified concerning the appellant’s visits to the home of Roberta Budin. It was largely on the basis of the detective’s testimony that the master refused the appellant his divorce.

It therefore requires analysis. From March 19 to June 6 the detective followed the appellant. During that period he found him with Miss Budin 26 times, or an average of a little over twice a week. This assumes that he was with her the 9 times the detective saw his car parked in front of or near the Budin home, but did not see him. It also assumes that he was with her the 7 or 8 times he saw appellant go into the Budin apartment but did not know who was in there. (Mrs. Budin testified that appellant visited the home at times when Roberta was not there).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 A.2d 601, 176 Pa. Super. 401, 1954 Pa. Super. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rech-v-rech-pasuperct-1954.