Thies v. Thies

57 Pa. D. & C. 468, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 186
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County
DecidedApril 18, 1946
Docketno. 55
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Pa. D. & C. 468 (Thies v. Thies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Erie County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thies v. Thies, 57 Pa. D. & C. 468, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 186 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1946).

Opinion

Laub, J.,

Libellant filed her libel November 19, 1942, alleging as grounds for divorce cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to her person. Included in the libel was the statement: “The respondent is non compos mentis and a hopeless lunatic having been confined to Warren State Hospital on June 6, 1938, where he still is.” Service of process was had upon respondent personally and also upon his committee appointed by the court. The action was uncontested [469]*469and on November 24,1945, the master filed his report recommending that the divorce be granted.

Section 53 of the Divorce Law of May 2,1929, P. L. 1237, provides:

“Upon the hearing of any case before the court, a master or jury, where the petition or libel sets forth that the respondent is a lunatic, the question of lunacy shall be fully established by expert testimony, together with every other matter of fact that is affirmed by one party and denied by the other. No divorce shall be granted to the libellant, in any such case, unless it be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the respondent is hopelessly insane, but, if any respondent has been for ten or more years an inmate of any asylum for the insane, it shall be conclusive proof of hopeless insanity.”

At the hearing, no expert testimony was produced relative to respondent’s mental condition. There was offered in evidence a letter addressed to libellant’s attorney and signed by the superintendent of the Warren State Hospital, the concluding paragraph of which states: “We are not in a position to make a statement that the patient was at any time a ‘hopeless lunatic or non compos mentis’.” In addition to this letter the only reference to respondent’s mental capacity was a series of answers developed on the master’s cross-examination of libellant. The purport of these answers was that libellant had assumed respondent to be a lunatic because of his confinement in the State hospital.

Obviously, the letter from the superintendent of the Warren State Hospital was clearly inadmissible as evidence. It would have been inadmissible under ordinary circumstances but is particularly so because here the burden and method of proof as to mental incapacity is specifically set forth by an act of assembly. Care always should be exercised in any divorce case to observe the rules of evidence, and the fact that there is [470]*470no appearance for respondent requires that the master use more than ordinary diligence in preserving his rights. “A master occupies, for the time being, a quasi judicial position, which requires as strict impartiality on his part as if he were a judge hearing the case”: Kolopen v. Kolopen, 148 Pa. Superior Ct. 311, 313. Where a respondent is insane or alleged to be insane and is unable to be present at the hearing to controvert testimony produced against him, the libellant’s testimony should be carefully scrutinized: Simon v. Simon et al., 113 Pa. Superior Ct. 577. It must also be observed that the Commonwealth is an interested third party and its policy is a thread that must be woven into the pattern of every divorce action.

“Whether the marital contract shall be severed is the gravest of questions, not alone to the parties, but to the state, for the social structure rests upon it”: Middleton v. Middleton, 187 Pa. 612, 615.

Upon consideration of the testimony we requested a brief on our authority to grant the divorce. Libellant then, on March 18,1946, presented a petition to amend the libel by deleting from it the above-quoted paragraph alleging respondent’s insanity. Upon this petition we granted a rule to show cause.

Jurisdiction to grant divorces where respondent is a lunatic is conferred by section 18 of the Divorce Law of 1929, supra. This section provides in part as follows:

“In cases where a spouse is a hopeless lunatic, or non compos mentis, the courts of common pleas shall have jurisdiction to receive a petition or libel for divorce in which such lunatic or person non compos mentis is made the respondent, but only for a ground provided for in section ten of this act.”

Since the grounds for divorce alleged in this libel are included in section 10 of the act, our only concern [471]*471is whether or not respondent’s mental condition is such as would justify our assumption of jurisdiction. Our ultimate decision must, of course, result from a determination of the legislative intent. If the legislature intended to restrict decrees to those instances where the respondent is hopelessly a lunatic or hopelessly non compos mentis only, then we are powerless to grant the decree prayed for.

Bouvier’s Law Dictionary defines non compos mentis as “A generic term, including all the species of madness, whether it arise from idiocy, sickness, lunacy, or drunkenness. Co. Litt. 247; 4 Co. 124; 4 Comyns Dig. 613; 5 id. 186; Shelf. Lun. 1.” A lunatic is one who is insane, or mad. An idiot is not a lunatic as that term is used in medicine or lay discourse.

“There are by universal consent two great divisions of mental disorder, and these have long been recognized, both in law and in medicine. They are ‘idiocy’ and ‘insanity.’ In the former the defect is said to be acquired before, in the latter after, the normal development of the brain. In the former the patients are born insane; in the latter they become so. The insane have, at one time, enjoyed mental health; the idiots have never had a sound brain”: 1 Wharton and Stille’s Medical Jurisprudence (Pa.) §1073.

By this differentiation it can be seen that the legislature never could have intended idiocy to be included in the category comprehended by the language of section 18. For a libellant to prevail in an action of divorce against an insane spouse, the cause must have arisen prior to the incidence of insanity: Hickey v. Hickey, 138 Pa. Superior Ct. 271. In idiocy this could not be since idiocy springs into existence at birth.

“An idiot, or natural fool, is one that hath had no understanding from his nativity; and therefore is by law presumed never likely to attain any”: 1 Sharswood’s Blackstone’s Commentaries 301.

[472]*472By the addition of the words “non compos mentis” after the words “hopeless lunatic” the legislature was quite obviously attempting to extend that term so as to preclude any doubt as to the class intended to be included therein. Strictly speaking, the term “non compos mentis” is redundant for it encompasses the same group previously designated as lunatic. That the word “hopeless” is intended to modify both terms is also obvious. If this were not true, then the precise meaning desired would be expressed by either the word “lunatic” or the words “non compos mentis” standing alone and without modification.

We therefore conclude that the word “hopeless” modifies non compos mentis as well as lunatic. A different construction would imply that the legislature contemplated actions in divorce against persons temporarily insane. If such were its intendment the use of the words “hopeless lunatic” would be entirely unnecessary since the generic use of non compos mentis would include all types of mental derangement whether temporary or permanent.

Our interpretation of section 18 of the act is somewhat supported by section 45 which provides for alimony in those cases where a husband sues for divorce from an insane wife.

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Related

Verbalis v. Verbalis
211 A.2d 130 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Pa. D. & C. 468, 1946 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thies-v-thies-pactcomplerie-1946.