Titter v. Titter

10 A.2d 873, 138 Pa. Super. 555, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 389
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 21, 1939
DocketAppeal, 351
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 A.2d 873 (Titter v. Titter) 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
Titter v. Titter, 10 A.2d 873, 138 Pa. Super. 555, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 389 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

This is an appeal by the wife-respondent, in a divorce action by the husband, charging adultery, cruel and *556 barbarous treatment and indignities to the person, wherein a decree was granted by the court, on the ground of adultery and indignities. The libel was filed May 28, 1937. The subpoena was served personally on the respondent. A bill of particulars was filed by libellant,¡and an answer to the libel and bill of particulars was filed by respondent. By leave of court, the libel was amended, changing the date of the alleged adultery from 1934 to 1932. The case )was referred to a master, who filed his report recommending a decree on the two grounds above stated and recommending a dismissal on, ¡the charge of cruel and barbarous treatment.

The record is unduly large, covering 614 pages. After reading the same, we agree ' with the conclusions of the master and the court below that the charge of cruel and barbarous treatment is not supported by the testimony and the same was properly dismissed.

The parties were married on April 2, 1906, at Lansdowne, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, and have continuously resided at various places in said county until the filing of the libel in this case.

The libellant, at the time of the hearing, was 51 years of age, and engaged in raising vegetables, flowers and evergreens and in landscape gardening. The respondent is 50 years of age, and is not employed outside of her home.

Three children. were born of thel marriage: Marie Levis Titter, 30 years of age, who is married to Earl Young; John Gordon Titter, 28 years of age, who is an epileptic and resides with the libellant; William Vincent Titter, 26 years of 'age, who is married and supports himself.

The libel alleges adultery with one John E. Morton and fixes ;the time as August 1934, and later amended to the summer of 1932. The only act of adultery alleged in the amended libel is in 1932 with John E. Morton, an adopted /son of libellantis sister. Morton *557 testified that he was twenty at the time of the hearing. The hearings having been held in November and December of 1937, he (was, therefore, between the ages of fourteen and fifteen years in the summer of 1932. He testified as to one act of adultery, which was objected to. He testified that he had intercourse with her at no other time; that she "talked about it many a time to him and re-affirmed this under questioning by the master.

Wayne Bernecker, also a foster son of Mrs. Laura T. Morton, but not legally adopted, testified that he has lived with the libellant’s parents at Douglasville for 4 or 5 years, and that one evening when the respondent was there, she and his brother, John Morton, went up to the barn together to get the milk. They were gone for some time and he went up to look for them. He found the milk can in front iof the barn door, but did not see his brother and the respondent, so he went to the upper floor of the barn and saw them lying down at the same place on the floor. He testified the incident took place in the early summer “about June”, about seven o’clock in the evening, standard time, when it was still light. He first said it occurredii4 or 5 years ago, when he was thirteen or fourteen years old; then he definitely stated it was 1932. i

Mrs. Laura T. Morton, foster mother of the two boys whose testimony has been summarized, testified that her son, John, and the respondent went out together, and when they had not returned at the end of half an hour, she sent the boy, Wayne, to look for them. He came back out of breath and said they were up in the barn. The witness corroborated the time of day and season of the year given by the other two, but gave the date first as 1932, then'as 1934; the testimony by which she attempted to fix the year was not very clear.

The respondent denied having had intercourse with John Morton in 1932 or ¡1934 or at any other time. She testified she was in Douglasville in 1932, but John *558 Morton was not there, and she had not seen him since Christmas,il933.

John Titter, the libellant, testified he first heard of the Douglasville incident from his sister, Laura Morton, about a week after it occurred. He could not fix the year with certainty but thought “it was nearer 1934”. He had previously stopped sleeping with respondent and had not slept with her nor had intercourse with her since he heard of the Douglasville incident. The respondent admitted the libellant left their common bedroom and went to sleep with the son, Vincent, about 1932, but said she used to go to his room to “visit” him for 2 or 3 years. I In rebuttal, the libellant denied such visits.

That is substantially all of the testimony concerning any act of adultery. There is no confession by the respondent, nor was there any accusation of it made to her. It will be noted that neither of these witnesses testified as to any'surroundings of the alleged act. The co-respondent himself gives no details, except that intercourse was had. No mention is made as to the condition of dress or undress of the parties. The co-respondent himself does not say where i't occurred. All that he knows is that there was one act of adultery. Neither does Bernecker :say whether the parties were dressed or undressed, or in what position they were, except that they were lying on the floor. Bernecker testified that he talked with his ,!mother after that, and that John did not stay around but that he thinks he went back to Connecticut the next day.

Mrs. Laura T. Morton, a sister of the libellant herein, testified of the incident immediately preceding the going out to the bam as follows:

“Q. Now, you heard John testify and also Wayne about this occurrence at Douglasville? What is your recollection of it, if you have any?
“A. Well, we'were there and we had gone down that *559 year to spend the summer, as usual, as we had ever since I had the boys.
“Q. Yes.
“A. And that evening, after dark or after supper, why, mother said she had to have the milk from the barn so she asked my son to go out and get it for her. He was always willing to help, you know.
“Q. Yes.
“A. So my brother’s wife said, f‘I will go with you.’ So John was a man that always protected This wife and he had never said things against her.”

Therefore, the purport of this testimony would seem to be that it was after dark when they went for the milk and that being the i case, the possibility of Bernecker seeing the respondent and co-respondent lying on the floor of the barn is quite remote. She further testified that she said to the respondent, “I can’t understand why people can’t behave themselves.”

She further said that this incident occurred in the summer of 1932, but further testified that the libellant himself- was there at the time, yet there was no protest and Mrs. Morton evidently did not feel that the incident was important enough to communicate it to her brother, the husband of the respondent herein.

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24 A.2d 15 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.2d 873, 138 Pa. Super. 555, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/titter-v-titter-pasuperct-1939.