In a divorce action filed by Shirley Cooper Heckman, the appellant, against Walter Heckman, Jr., the appellee, the Superior Court denied a decree. She now asks us to reverse that decision. The appellee did not contest the suit below and has not appeared in this Court.
The action is based upon voluntary separation under 13 Del.C. § 1522(11), as follows:
“The causes for divorce from the bonds of matrimony shall be * * *
(11) When husband and wife have voluntarily lived separate and apart, without any cohabitation for three consecutive years prior to the filing of the divorce action and such separation is beyond any reasonable expectation of reconciliation.”
The parties were married September 12, 1953. The trial Judge found that they had for more than three years prior to the beginning of the action, “lived completely separate lives, occupied separate bedrooms, and shared none of the numerous customary marital relations, including, but not limited to, sexual intercourse”. He held also that there is no reasonable expectation that the customary marital relations will be resumed. He assumed, without deciding, that the cessation of marital relations was voluntary on both sides. He held, however, that a decree could not be granted solely because the parties had continued to live in the same single-family dwelling house until shortly before *551 the suit, along with their children and the wife’s mother, the house containing four bedrooms.
The Court below held that the statutory provision of living separate and apart is not met unless the parties live in different abodes. As shown by the annotations in
This Court, commenting upon the voluntary separation ground in Owens v. Owens,
Ever since the decision in Reppert v. Reppert,
It must be recognized that various reasons may impel spouses to remain in the same dwelling after all marriage relations have ended between them; examples are economic necessity, stubbornness, or jockeying for position as to possession of the house and contents. The continued joint residence may make it difficult to prove to a Judge’s satisfaction the fact of desertion or voluntary separation, as the case may be, because of the natural inference that a married couple living in the same house are presumably exercising some of the usual incidents of cohabitation between married persons. But difficulty of proof i,s not synonymous with impossibility of proof. In the present case, the trial Judge found that the severence of marital relations was complete, with no reasonable expectation that they would be resumed; we have no reason to disagree with that finding. We do, how *552 ever, disagree with the holding that our statute forbids the entry of a decree simply because both spouses continued to live under the same roof. In our opinion, under the findings made below, appellant is entitled to a decree if the separation was voluntary on the part of both spouses.
The order entered below will be reversed and the record remanded for further proceedings in accordance herewith.
Notes
. This case was decided several years after voluntary separation became a ground for divorce in Delaware. Accordingly, even if it be true that our act was “borrowed” from Maryland, there is no presumption that our Legislature also intended to “borrow” the Lillis interpretation of its meaning. See 60 Am.Jur. 475.
