Argued April 24, 1928. This is an action of divorce on the ground of desertion. The libellant, having filed a libel charging in due form a wilful and malicious desertion by the respondent in April, 1916, persisted in for the space of two years and upwards and down until the filing of the libel, in this proceeding in October, 1924, the respondent entered a rule for a bill of particulars and the libellant without waiting for an order of court on the rule filed such a bill of particulars. The respondent then filed an answer, which was a combination of an answer to the libel and to the bill of particulars. The second paragraph of the bill of particulars filed by the libellant averred that the respondent left the habitation of the libellant without cause on January 19, 1910, and from that date to the present time had not lived with or cohabitated with the libellant. In answering this averment the respondent admitted that on January 19, 1910, she had left the habitation of the libellant and had not lived with or cohabitated with the libellant since that date, but denied that said leaving was without cause. She did not in her answer to the bill of particulars state what her cause for leaving was, nor is there any suggestion in the evidence of anything which could have justified her in thus terminating the marital relations. The libellant in the bill of particulars averred that he had, in February, 1916, made to the respondent a bona fide offer to resume *Page 260 marital relations and requested her to come with their child and live with him at the apartment which he then occupied, and after negotiations between the parties the respondent had definitely refused, in April, 1916, to resume marital relations. The respondent, in her answer, denied that the libellant had in good faith requested her to return and live with him as his wife. The respondent presented her petition to the court below praying that the issues of fact, raised by the libel, the bill of particulars and the answer filed by the respondent should be tried by a jury; whereupon the court granted a rule on the libellant to show cause why the prayer of the petitioner should not be granted, which rule was made absolute. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of the libellant, finding that the respondent had wilfully and maliciously deserted the libellant on April 21, 1916 and had persisted in said desertion for a period of two years since said date. The respondent at the trial presented a point asking for binding instructions, and subsequently made a motion for judgment in favor of the respondent notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial. The court below overruled these motions, directed judgment to be entered on the verdict and entered a decree divorcing the parties. The respondent appeals. The only question raised by the assignments of error is whether the court should have given binding instructions to the jury, under the evidence, to find in favor of the respondent; or, in other words, whether the case should have been submitted to the jury.
This is the second proceeding by this libellant to obtain a divorce from his wife upon the ground of desertion. The first proceeding reached this court upon appeal and the report of our decision in that case is found in
The question before the jury in this case was whether libellant subsequently to the decision in his former proceeding for a divorce had made a bona fide offer to resume marital relations and receive the respondent and her daughter into the home which he then occupied, and thus withdrawn his consent to the separation. As there was a jury trial we are relieved of the burden of reviewing the evidence with reference to its credibility. The provision for an appeal to a jury implies that its verdict shall determine the facts in the case if there be competent evidence. Our only inquiry is whether the case should have been submitted to the jury on the evidence offered by the libellant: Fay v. Fay,
The decree is affirmed.