Sacks v. Sacks

94 A.2d 147, 172 Pa. Super. 543, 1953 Pa. Super. LEXIS 379
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1953
DocketAppeal, 193
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 A.2d 147 (Sacks v. Sacks) 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
Sacks v. Sacks, 94 A.2d 147, 172 Pa. Super. 543, 1953 Pa. Super. LEXIS 379 (Pa. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Ross, J.,

In this divorce action, brought on the ground of desertion by a 69 year-old husband against his 56 year-old wife, the master who heard the case recommended that a decree of divorce be granted, the court below dismissed the wife’s exceptions and granted the divorce, and the wife has appealed to this Court.

The marriage of the parties, the second for each, took place in Allentown on December 27, 1927. They established residence in their newly-built home at 1850 Chew Street in Allentown, where they lived with plaintiff’s elderly mother and his son and daughter by a previous marriage. After a year marital troubles arose and in 1932 defendant, after finding a note addressed to the plaintiff, apparently from another woman and stating times when she was free to see him, left the home and went to Philadelphia, where she procured employment. After a period of separation of approximately a year a reconciliation was effected and defendant returned to the home, where she lived with plaintiff until the date of final separation, July 31, 1947.

Plaintiff was engaged in the business of selling coal and stoves and served for four years as councilman of the city of Allentown. In autumn of 1946 he developed a heart condition and cerebral disturbance which affected his right eye, the right side of his face and his hearing, and which prevented active participation in his business for several months. At the time of the hearings he remained under the care of his physician, his health had been restored only partially, and he was still unable to take charge of his business affairs as previously.

*546 Defendant prior to the marriage agreed to have plaintiff’s mother and children live with the parties. She had had no children by her previous marriage and seems to have been fond of plaintiff’s children but found her mother-in-law difficult at times. When her parents died, defendant in 1941 inherited a sum of money. Sometime thereafter in 1944 or 1945, she began to make definite plans to build a home in the country. She testified that she determined to procure plans “about two years, three years” before she left the Chew Street residence. She gradually assembled articles of furniture and furnishings for the proposed home, which she stored in a third floor room. Plaintiff’s son and daughter in the meantime had both married and moved to homes of their own. Defendant informed plaintiff that she had purchased a tract of land on the outskirts of Allentown as the site of the “dream house” (so characterized according to the testimony of her daughter-in-law, Jane Sacks), and at her request plaintiff accompanied her to see it. Plaintiff testified that he knew nothing of the purchase of the land until that time. Plaintiff objected to living in the country, according to his testimony, “but I couldn’t stop her. I said she was foolish because, after all, she helped to select the building and helped to lay it out where we lived at, and we only lived twenty years there, and I don’t think it’s an old-fashioned home.” Plaintiff’s son and daughter testified that their father had suggested that their stepmother remodel the home they then occupied rather than spend money for a new house. However, defendant proceeded to have the house constructed and when it was completed she received an offer from a prospective purchaser. Plaintiff suggested that she sell it but she retained it, and on July 31, 1947 moved into it. Plaintiff was at home during lunchtime when the moving van arrived but at that time *547 made no effort to prevent the moving or persuade defendant to remain.

Our Divorce Law (Act of May 2, 1929, P. L. 1237, sec. 10 as amended, 23 PS sec. 10) provides that an innocent and injured spouse may secure a divorce whenever it shall be judged that the other spouse “shall have committed wilful and malicious desertion, and absence from the habitation of the innocent and injured spouse, without a reasonable cause, for and during the term and space of two years . . .” That defendant intended to remove from the matrimonial domicile is crystal clear. Having lived apart from her husband for the required statutory period, the burden was upon her to prove consent or a reasonable cause for her withdrawal from the matrimonial domicile. Mertz v. Mertz, 119 Pa. Superior Ct. 538, 180 A. 708. Defendant has based her defense on both these grounds. She contends that the separation was consensual because plaintiff at the time of actual moving failed to plead with her to remain. However, silent acquiescence is not consent; such negative evidence does not satisfy the legal requirement that there must be proof of some affirmative conduct amounting to participation in the separation. Hochberg v. Hochberg, 166 Pa. Superior Ct. 306, 70 A. 2d 864. Perhaps in an effort to qualify under this latter head, defendant points to plaintiff’s gift to her of building materials which he had obtained through his business and which she used in the construction of the new home. The evidence shows that she asked him for them and he allowed her to have them. In our view, the gift falls short of constituting “affirmative conduct amounting to participation in the separation”.

Defendant testified that she invited plaintiff to join her at the country home and that she held a bedroom in reserve for him. There is no evidence that the *548 common home of the parties was inadequate or rundown. On the contrary, Dr. Hope T. M. Ritter, family physician for many years of the parties and of plaintiffs family, characterized it “a very nice home”. In any event, if exercised in good faith, the husband’s choice of a home, according to his means, is controlling, and the wife in such circumstances must abide by his decision and live with him. Ruf v. Ruf, 168 Pa. Superior Ct. 632, 82 A. 2d 280; Fuller v. Fuller, 158 Pa. Superior Ct. 378, 45 A. 2d 231. When she fails to comply with this duty she is guilty of desertion, and no further offer of reconciliation need be made by the husband. Barnes v. Barnes, 156 Pa. Superior Ct. 196, 40 A. 2d 108.

Plaintiff’s version of his attitude is summarized in the following pertinent excerpts from his testimony: “Q. Would you have been willing for your wife to remain with you? A. Absolutely. Q. In the house which she helped to design? A. Absolutely. . . . Q. Did you at any time tell her that she could not come bach to the Chew Street home? A. No, never. . . . Q. Did you ask your wife to stay in your home that day [the day she moved] ? A. Not that day. Q. When did you ask her? A. Before that. . . . Q. When your wife told you and you talked with her about building this house, did you tell her not to build it? A. I did. . . . Q. And when was that? A. Before she started it. Q. Was there at any time any remark on your part when you went out to see that land with your wife that you would live with her there? A. No, never. . . . Q. Did you say that you might live there with her? A. No, never. . . . Q. Did you want her to buy some land? A. No, and I told her yet that time. I discouraged her from buying it. . . . Q. Did you tell her that you thought she should not build it? A. I wanted her to stay where she was. . . . She said if I’d want to come out, I could come out. . . . *549 Q. Did you at any time want her to move into the house? A. Into the new one? Q. Yes. A.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A.2d 147, 172 Pa. Super. 543, 1953 Pa. Super. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacks-v-sacks-pasuperct-1953.