33 W. Va. 517 | W. Va. | 1890
Appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Hampshire County rendered September 80th, 1889, in a suit brought in said court by Hiram W. Alkire against Lizzie A. Alkire to obtain a divorce from the bond of matrimony. The bill avers, that the plaintiff and defendant were legally married to each other in December 1878, and that they lived and cohabited together from that time until February 1880, at which time the defendant wilfully and without any just cause deserted the plaintiff and returned to the house of her father, where she has ever since remained, a period of more than three years, refusing to live with the plaintiff' and perform the duties of a wife; that on October 6,1879, a female
Our statute declares that the Circuit Courts shall have jurisdiction of suits for annulling or affirming marriages, or for divorces; and it further declares that “when either party wilfully abandons or deserts the other for three years, a divorce may be decreed to the party abandoned” — §§ 5 and 7, Code 1887.
It will be observed that the statute does not define what shall constitute desertion or abandonment, we must therefore resortto the recognized legal authorities for the definition and meaning of those terms. Bishop in his work on Marriage and Divorce, § 776, says: “Desertion, in divorce law, is the voluntary separation of one of the married parties from the other, or the voluntary refusal to renew- a suspended cohabitation, without justification either in the consent or the wrongful conduct of the other.” The offence of desertion consists, first, in the actual ceasing of cohabitation, and secondly, the intent in the mind of the offending party, to desert or abandon the other; these two ingredients must combine and co-exist. A mere absence of the husband or wife on business, or a separation of the parties by mutual consent, made with or without the further understanding that one of them shall apply for a divorce, is plainly not a desertion in either. Neither, as a question of evidence, can desertion be inferred against either, from the mere unaided fact of their not living together; though protracted absence, with other circumstances,may asa matter of evidence establish the original intent. Crow v. Crow, 23 Ala. 583; Gaines v. Gaines, 9 B. Mon. 295; Ahrenfeldt v. Ahrenfeldt, 1 Hoffman 47.
If the parties separate for cause, and the cause is re
In the case at bar the marriage and separation of the parties is fully proved as alleged in the bill. In respect to the cause of the separation, the intention of the defendant and the wish and offer of the plaintiff to resume the marital relation, the evidence, it seems to me, is plainly sufficient to warrant the divorce. So far as the record discloses, no cause or reason is shown for the defendant’s leaving the home of the plaintiff. The plaintiff in his deposition says: “I did not give her any cause to leave me, as I understand it. I never abused her, or struck her, or told her to leave. We had some angry words-once or twice, but nothing to amount to anything. She left without my consent and against my will.” The witness Scanlon testifies that he has known the parties well ever since the separation, and has frequently conversed with both of them. In response to the question “what reason did the defendant give for leaving the plaintiff?” this witness says : “She said that she could not live with him ; but that he had never struck her, and had never
According to the facts and the legal principles above announced, I am clearly of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed for in his bill. The decree of the Circuit Court must therefore be reversed and a decree entered by this Court granting to the plaintiff’a divorce from the bond of matrimony, leaving however the custody of the child with the defendant. It is so ordered.
Reversed. •