Schoepple v. Schoepple

361 A.2d 665, 239 Pa. Super. 557, 1976 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1924
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 29, 1976
DocketAppeal, 546
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 361 A.2d 665 (Schoepple v. Schoepple) 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
Schoepple v. Schoepple, 361 A.2d 665, 239 Pa. Super. 557, 1976 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1924 (Pa. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinions

Opinion by

Spaeth, J.,

This case involves the construction and application of Rule 1187 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure, which was promulgated in response to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Boddie v. Connecticut, 401 U.S. 371 (1971), that due process forbids a state to deny a person access to its divorce courts solely because of his indigency.1 See Goodrich-Amram, Standard Pennsylvania Practice (Supp. 1975 to Binders 1 & 2) at 647, 726.

Appellant, Margarete Wilhelmine Cramer Schoepple, filed a petition pursuant to Rule 1137 on November 4, 1974, seeking leave to proceed in a divorce action without paying the costs of the action. After a hearing held on November 26, 1974, the court below found that appellant [560]*560was not able to pay the Master’s fee but was able to pay the fees of the Prothonotary, Sheriff, and court stenographer.2 The court, therefore, by order of November 27, excused appellant from paying the Master’s fee, and provided that when she had paid the other fees, a Master would be appointed. We have decided that the court erred in its construction of Rule 1137, and improperly considered certain factors in reaching its conclusions. We therefore reverse.

The parties were married on May 21, 1948, in Munich, Germany. Appellee left appellant at the end of September, 1960, while stationed in Germany with the United States Army, and appellant has not seen him since that time. Appellee’s last known address is in the Federal Republic of Germany. Appellant last heard from appellee when he telephoned her in 1968, to say that “[h]e want[ed] to come home and die” (N.T. 13). The parties have two grown male children, who, appellant testified, are financially unable to assist her in obtaining a divorce (N.T. 10-12). Appellant testified that she wanted a divorce because “I don’t need a man hanging on my shoulders, after he left us completely without a cent for fourteen years” (N.T. 13).

Appellant’s petition under Rule 1137 showed a monthly income of $172.64, consisting of public assistance payments and minimal wages earned as a cleaning lady. She owns an automobile, apparently inherited from her father (N.T. 13), with an appraised value of $200.00. Appellant’s monthly expenses are $158.31. These expenses include a monthly installment payment of $15.00 for a color television set that appellant had purchased two months before the hearing for $316.94. This purchase was the main reason for the lower court’s refusal to excuse appellant from paying all of the fees incident to her divorce action (N.T. 4-5; Memoran[561]*561dum Opinion, at 2). Appellant testified that she made the purchase to provide her with a diversion at home, stating that “I don’t go anywhere. I don’t go to no movies” (N.T. 4). The court, however, was unimpressed by this explanation, stating that it could “see no reason why she couldn’t pick up $15.00 a month to pay a lawyer after she finishes paying [for] the colored T.V.” If appellant did this, she would have to wait about twenty months before she could proceed with her divorce action (N.T. 5).

The lower court’s emphasis on appellant’s installment payments was error. Under Rule 1137 the issue is whether the petitioner has shown “his inability to pay all or part of the costs of the action.” This issue is financial, not moral. It may be that appellant was extravagant in purchasing the television set; if so, however, that fact would not by itself preclude a finding of inability to pay costs.

In Gerlitzki v. Feldser, 226 Pa. Superior Ct. 142, 144, 307 A.2d 307 (1973), we construed a statute3 that permitted a court to grant leave to appeal in forma pauperis from an award of arbitrators if the party “shall therein set forth that, by reason of poverty, he is unable to pay the costs of the suit.” The issue was whether the petitioners, who were making installment payments on a station wagon, truck, and television set, met this test. In holding that they did, we said,4 id. at 144-145, 307 A.2d at 308:

“As a matter of fact: If petitioners refuse to make the installment payments, the station wagon, truck, and television set will be repossessed. That will not make petitioners any more able to pay the costs. Presumably the installment payments are required by legally enforcible sales agreements. Petitioners cannot escape the agreements simply by submitting [562]*562to repossession. Even if they eould, it does not follow that they would then be able to pay the costs, since their only income, so far as appears from the petition, is public assistance benefits of $430 a month.
“As a matter of law: The question put by the Act of June 16, 1836, supra, is not whether petitioners are unable to pay the costs but whether they are in poverty. If they are in poverty, it follows that they are unable to pay the costs, and their petition should be granted. The Act, moreover, is to be read not with an accountant’s but a housewife’s eyes. ‘Poverty’ does not refer solely to a petitioner’s ‘net worth’ but to whether he is able to obtain the necessities of life. Where, as here, petitioners allege that they have no income except public assistance benefits, and that their net worth is minimal, it appears prima facie that they are in poverty.”

As this statement indicates, a distinction is to be drawn between the condition of “poverty” (called for by the Act of 1836) and the condition of “inability to pay all or part of the costs” (called for by Rule 1137). Of these two conditions, that of poverty is the more inclusive: one in poverty will not be able to pay costs; one not able to pay costs might not be in poverty (it would depend on the amount of the costs). However, in either case - whether determining the existence of poverty, or the existence of inability to pay costs - the hearing judge must recognize that installment payments are legal obligations, to be charged against a petitioner’s available financial resources.

In a sense, the lower court in the present case did recognize appellant’s legal obligation to make her installment payments, for it provided that she should make them, and then save up the money for the Master’s fee. Rule 1137, however, only requires proof of present inability to pay costs. If a petitioner proves such inability, he is entitled to relief. We do not say that the future is to be ignored. Thus a court might find that a [563]*563petitioner is not entitled to relief where, although unable to pay costs at the moment, he will be able to pay them in the very near future. Such a possibility is not pertinent here, however, since, as has been mentioned, if appellant makes the installment payments, it will be about twenty months before she will be able to pay the Master’s fee.

We do not suggest that a hearing judge may not disbelieve the allegations of a petition filed under Rule 1137. Gerlitzki v. Feldser, supra at 145, 307 A.2d at 308; Wilson v. Wilson, 218 Pa. Superior Ct. 344, 346, 280 A.2d 665, 666 (1971); Pa.R.C.P. 1137(a).

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Schoepple v. Schoepple
361 A.2d 665 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
361 A.2d 665, 239 Pa. Super. 557, 1976 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoepple-v-schoepple-pasuperct-1976.