Welsh v. Welsh

16 A.2d 672, 142 Pa. Super. 421, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 577
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 20, 1940
DocketAppeal, 127
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 A.2d 672 (Welsh v. Welsh) 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
Welsh v. Welsh, 16 A.2d 672, 142 Pa. Super. 421, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 577 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Parker, J.,

Opinion by

A decree of absolute divorce was entered in favor of libellant, after testimony before a master and on his recommendation, on the ground of indignities to the person as that term is defined by the statute. The court *422 below adopted the findings of fact and recommendations of the master without discussion. As this appeal involves no new or novel question of law, our task is principally to pass our independent judgment on the facts.

This is not a case free from difficulty, due to the circumstance that there is a serious conflict in the evidence supplied by libellant and respondent. It has even been suggested that some of the testimony indicated perjury on the part of some witnesses. It is our conclusion that there were exhibited on each side instances of exaggeration and inaccuracy in testifying. If we were to point out all the discrepancies and analyze the testimony it would unduly extend this opinion.

We approach the problem with a few well settled principles in mind. “The burden of proof is upon libellant. He must establish his case by clear and satisfactory evidence and the weight of the evidence must be in his favor”: LaClair v. LaClair, 128 Pa. Superior Ct. 469, 471, 194 A. 224. “Never ought divorces to be easily obtained, for marriage is the most sacred of human relations, and should never to be dissolved without clear proof of imperious reasons. We may do wrong to the parties and their children, and to the public, when we aid one party in severing the relation without a clear necessity. Indignities provoked by the complaining parties are of course no ground of divorce, unless when the retaliation is excessive”: Richards v. Richards, 37 Pa. 225, 228.

The libellant, chief of police of Doylestown Borough, charged his wife with cruel and barbarous treatment and indignities to the person. He is a strong, powerful man who has kept himself physically fit, and he is a former member of the State Highway Patrol. The respondent weighed less than one hundred pounds. As the master and court below found, the charge of cruel and barbarous treatment was without merit as an in-' dependent cause for divorce, but the facts* relied upon, *423 if believed, were competent as bearing on the other charge.

The libellant and the court below in its opinion relied upon several classes of alleged indignities: petit larceny by respondent; the use of violent, opprobrious and vile language directed against him, privately and in the hearing of others, some of the epithets suggesting moral turpitude; the accusation of his infidelity without proof; the use of vile language in his presence in referring to his parents; the unjust endeavor to persuade him not to aid his parents, who required his assistance, and the raising of controversies over that subject; the endeavor to have him discharged from his position; and physical abuse. As the libellant produced a number of witnesses whose testimony, if interpreted as the master did, corroborated many of his charges, it is necessary at this point to refer to the contentions of the respondent.

The wife made denials or attempted to explain away all of his charges. While there were inconsistencies and what we regard as inaccuracies in his testimony, if there were not other important matters of defense to which we will refer, he would probably have made out a case. This makes it necessary at. this point to refer to the wife’s contentions and particularly to an important feature of her case which is interwoven in the whole controversy.

The respondent’s testimony, tended to show that the parties, who were married in 1928, led a normal married life until about August, 1934. She, testified, that at that time he began to neglect her and used vile language in addressing her, but that she did not know definitely the cause of the rift. It was shown by his own witnesses that libellant and respondent had been accustomed to visit the parents of both parties three or four times a month, but when Christmas arrived he took his wife to her mother’s home and left her there rather unceremoniously, promising to call for her. He did not *424 do so and she was required to get a relative to bring her to their home. She also stated that for the first time he made her no Christmas present that year.

A few days after Christmas she had occasion to use a wrench to turn on the water in a heater in the basement of their home when she went to his automobile for the wrench and found in the pocket of the car seven rubber protectors designed to be used in preventing conception. Two of these, having been used, were in handkerchiefs and five were in the original box in which they were sold. She confronted him with the evidence, saying, “Now I know why you are staying out to all hours; you are going with a woman.” We quote further from her testimony: “He said, ‘you dirty son-of-a-bitch, you,’ and he jumped out of bed and I said, ‘Here is the proof I have,’ and he grabbed them out of my hand, these two used rubbers that were in the individual handkerchiefs......and he grabbed them out of my hand saying, ‘Don’t worry, you dirty rat, you will never get this evidence on me’ ...... He grabbed the both of them out of my hands and took them down to the furnace and burned them, but I still had the five brand new ones that he left in the pocket of the car marked four dollars a dozen...... I said, ‘You have been talking so much all through my married life about this Marion Brown.’ I said, ‘Is it she that you are going out with?’, and he admitted to me that it was, and he said to me also, ‘I have been doing this since the first time we were ever married.’ ” The respondent testified that she immediately called his brother and that afternoon went with libellant to his home in another municipality and advised him and his wife as to what she had found and what their difficulties were.

Within a few days she called Marion Brown at her home and arranged to have Marion Brown come to their home. We quote from her testimony: “I said to this Mrs. Brown, ‘Mrs. Brown,’ I said, ‘You are going out *425 with my husband; do you want to be the means of breaking up my home?’ I said, ‘You. ought to be ashamed of yourself, going out with a married man.’ I said, ‘I want to know what you are going to do in regard to leaving my husband alone,’ and she said, ‘I am through with him.’ Q. Was anything else said? A. Yes, then again before she left I said, ‘Now I want to make sure and I want your answer whether you are going to leave my husband alone and not break up my home,’ and she said, ‘I am finished with him,’ and in my presence before Mrs. Brown, when I asked the last time, Jimmy Welsh said to me, ‘Do you want her to whistle it?’ Q. Was anything said by Mr. Welsh after Mrs. Brown left? A. No, he left and went uptown.” We will refer later to other circumstances which tend to corroborate respondent’s testimony with reference to the finding of the “rubbers” and what was said and done in that connection.

The master virtually adopted' the testimony of the libellant as to all the essential facts. We believe he erred in so doing and particularly in disregarding much of the testimony of libellant’s own witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A.2d 672, 142 Pa. Super. 421, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-welsh-pasuperct-1940.