This appeal is from a judgment of the District Court,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey voluntarily separated. Within a short time Mrs. Dorsey was adjudicated insane and committed to Saint Elizabeths Hospital, where she has since remained. Occasionally she was allowed to visit the home of Mr. Dorsey and their children, yet she never indicated a desire to resume family or marital relations. On the contrary, she always expressed a desire to return to the hospital.
The trial court held that the wife’s insanity, occurring within the five year period, terminated the voluntary nature of the separation. We agree.
Although this court has never before dealt directly with the present question, it has established the principle which we think must control. In Blandy v. Blandy, 1902,
The fact that in her visits to the home Mrs. Dorsey manifested no change of attitude regarding the separation is immaterial, for since the adjudication it must be presumed she was mentally incompetent to make a responsible decision to renounce the separation.
We see no reason why the rule so well established concerning desertion should not apply with equal force to voluntary separation as provided by the local statute. It is so held in Galiano v. Monteleone, 1933,
Affirmed.
Notes
. 16 D.C.Code 1940, § 403.
“A divorce from the bond of marriage * * * may be granted for * * * voluntary separation from bed and board for five consecutive years without cohabitation * *
