Court Opinion

ID: 6281389
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 16:17:17.635945+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:00:12.474345
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Trexler, J.,
Tbe parties were married October 1, 1917, and tbe desertion, wbicb is tbe basis of this action of divorce, is said to have occurred October 25,1917. Tbe lower court concurred in tbe recommendation of tbe master that tbe divorce should be refused. Tbe portion of tbe testimony wbicb we quote justifies tbe conclusion wbicb they reached: “Q. Had you ever considered instituting an action for divorce before this lawyer from Boston saw you? A. No. Q. Did you start this action because tbe lawyer asked you to? A. Yes. Q. He said be was your husband’s lawyer? A. Yes. Q. What did be tell you? A. He told me nothing. He came to see if I wanted a divorce or not, and I said, ‘I want a divorce.’ Q. What did be tell you to do? A. He told me to try to get a divorce. Q. What did you do? A. I tried. Q. That day? That-same day? A. Tbe same day. Q. What did you do that day? A. He gave me tbe address of Mr; *175Sterling. Q. You went up to Mr. Sterling and said you wanted to get a divorce? [It does not appear in the testimony that Mr. Sterling knew that his client was sent to him by her husband’s lawyer.] Q. Has he given you any money? A. Support money. Q. How much? A. $200. Q. When is he to give it? A. When I get the divorce then I get the money. Q. Did he pay you any money for expenses? A. He said he would pay all the money.”
Without discussing the meaning of the word collusion, upon which the appellant has furnished an elaborate brief, we feel safe in saying that under present laws, this court should never sanction the granting of a divorce when it appears that the respondent is in fact instituting the action against himself, is selecting the attorney who is to have charge of the case against him, and engages to pay all the expenses, and a fixed sum to the libellant when the divorce is secured. When all these facts are considered, we have no hesitancy in coming to the conclusion that the divorce should be refused. The libel alleges desertion; the respondent in his answer denies it. He thus is playing fast and loose with the court. Having caused the suit to be brought, the successful outcome of which depends upon the proof of his desertion, he declares, under oath, that the desertion never occurred, and the libellant lends her aid to' the scheme and is a beneficiary under it. “The libellant can no more buy the release or default of the respondent, than a defendant in a criminal prosecution can buy off the prosecutor and compound a felony”: Kilborn v. Field, 78 Pa. 194; and by the same token neither can the respondent, who is said to have furnished by his acts the grounds for the divorce, reap the benefit of his own wrong by suing himself and furnishing the instrumentalities required in the conduct of the suit. The courts will not lend their aid to any such contrivance. In Latshaw v. Latshaw, 18 Pa. Superior Ct. 465, where, after a separation and before suit brought, the husband agreed *176not to defend the action, the divorce was refused and this court took occasion to state that, “If it appear that the purpose of the application......is simply that the parties may be freed and separated from each other, or that the libel is not founded upon motives of sincerity and truth, but demanded for light reason, or in a manner smacking of collusion, the decree must be invariably refused,” and to the same effect is Micheals v. Micheals, 65 Pa. Superior Ct. 464.
The assignments are overruled, and the decree affirmed at the cost of the appellant.