95 N.J. Eq. 39 | New York Court of Chancery | 1923
The petitioner, Mary Mikecz, alleges that she and the defendant were lawfully joined in the bonds of matrimony May 7th, 1914; that defendant deserted her in the month of May, 1918, since which time and until April, 1921, and for more than two years, the defendant willfully, continuedlv
From the above allegations it appears that the first desertion of defendant lasted for a period of about two years and eleven months. There was then a reunition and cohabitation of the parties from April, 1921, to February, 1922, when defendant again deserted. The petition herein was filed June 14th, 1923, which makes a period of a year and four months covered by the second desertion, which, by the way, is not alleged to have been continuous, unless that is tp be spelled out of the last allegation that the first desertion was revived and that the defendant has willfully, continuedly and obstinately deserted the petitioner for more than two years. In
The Divorce act (P. L. 1907 p. 484) provides in section 2, subdivision 2, that divorce from the bonds of matrimony rnay be decreed for willful, continued and obstinate desertion for a term of two years. It therefore becomes necessary to ascertain the time during which this period must run in order to entitle a petitioner to relief.
In Orens v. Orens, 88 N. J. Eq. 29, it was decided that in causes for divorce for desertion there are two periods of two years each during which the desertion must have been willful, continued and obstinate; the first, that immediately succeeding the desertion, at the expiration of which the cause of action arises and accrues, and which vests jurisdiction in the court to entertain the suit; and the second, that immediately prior to the filing of the petition, which vests jurisdiction in the court to decree a divorce. These periods may run concurrently and overlap each other in whole or in part; but, if they do not, legal proof must, nevertheless, be made of the desertioir for the whole period between its commencement and the filing of the petition, including the interval between the two periods mentioned, because, if there were a reconciliation and resumption of cohabitation by the parties during such interval, it would operate to destroy the cause of action alleged to have accrued, and necessitate another and different suit, one counting upon a cause of action accruing after the reunion had been terminated by another and subsequent desertion. And the court of errors and appeals in Myles v. Myles, 77 N. J. Eq. 265, held that the two years contemplated by the statute are those immediately preceding the filing of the petition; that if the petition left a hiatus between such period and the date of filing the petition, such hiatus might represent a complete reconciliation and reuni - tion of the parties that would entirely destroy any right to
In Byrne v. Byrne, 93 N. J. Eq. 5, I had before me the question as to whether or not a. suit for divorce between spouses was pending bona fide after condonation evidenced by reunition and cohabitation. I held that after such con-donation the pending suit was destroyed through it. Applying the doctrine of Myles v. Myles, Gordon v. Gordon and Bryne v. Bryne, supra, to the facts of this case, the cause of action accruing to the petitioner from the desertion from 1918 to 1921, was destroyed by the condonation set up in the petition itself, which also shows that the subsequent desertion has not existed for the required two years before the filing of the petition herein.
There was a time when the legislature permitted the tacking together of two periods of desertion, one before defendant’s imprisonment and the other after his discharge, so as to afford ground for divorce. But that act has been repealed, and section 31 of our present act provides that willful and obstinate desertion shall be regarded and held to be continued, notwithstanding that after such desertion is begun the deserting party shall be imprisoned. Casnyi v. Casnyi, 93 N. J. Eq. 11, 16. But the legislature has never yet provided that the time during which a desertion does not in fact continue by reason of reunition and cohabitation, shall be counted as such period, because of revival of the offense by a subsequent desertion.
As the petition in this case does not state a cause for action, the application for an order of reference to a master will be denied, and the petition must be dismissed; but the dismissal may be without prejudice.