The plaintiff in a suit for absolute divorce appeals from a judgment dismissing his complaint.
The District Court found these facts. The plaintiff husband deserted his wife, the defendant, without cause, on April 18, 1932. They have not lived together since. On November 25, 1932, they signed a separation agreement; “the defendant was compelled to and did sign * * * in order to obtain funds for the purchase of food and other necessaries.” Until August 15, 1933, the plaintiff paid the defendant SI 00 a month under the agreement. On May 24, 1934, the defendant sued for a limited divorce on the ground of desertion. It was granted May 8, 1935, and is still in effect. Parks v. Parks,
The 1935 amendment of the Code permits absolute divorce for “voluntary separation from bed and board for five consecutive years without cohabitation.”
1
This amendment is retroactive. Tipping v. Tipping,
Six consecutive years of separation had elapsed. The separation was not at first voluntary on the defendant’s part; when the plaintiff deserted her, she begged him not to go. But from that time on she neither asked him to return nor made any other attempt to bring about a reconciliation. It is perhaps a fair inference that she reconciled herself to separation. But that, we think, is not the question. Even if she did, in fact, wish her husband to return, in the course of time her silent acquiescencé in the separation made it voluntary in the statutory sense. Desires which are not reflected in conduct have little or no social or legal significance. The law is full of instances in which the will that counts is the apparent rather than the secret will. The liberal purpose of the 1935 amendment points to this construction. That purpose was to permit termination in law of certain marriages which have ceased to exist in fact. This is such a marriage. We think the defendant’s silent acquiescence made the separation voluntary, in the statutory sense, within less than a year after it began, and therefore more than five years before the plaintiff filed this suit. It follows that he is entitled to a divorce.
The fact that the separation resulted from the husband’s fault is no defense, since the statute does not require that the separation originate in any particular way. 3 It requires only that for five con *558 secutive years the separation be voluntary. The separation agreement is no defense. The economic pressure which led the defendant to sign it weakens it as evidence that she wished to live apart but does not show that she expressed, or even that she felt, a wish to live with her husband. The Maryland court has held that when husband and wife live apart, with no attempt at reconciliation, for the statutory period, he is entitled to a divorce on the ground that they have lived apart “voluntarily,” though the separation resulted from his fault and she entered into a separation agreement only to get support. 4
The fact that a defendant has obtained a limited divorce does not prevent a plaintiff from obtaining an absolute divorce on the ground of separation 5 or of “voluntary” separation. 6 Parks v. Parks, 7 a bill to review the limited divorce obtained by this defendant, does not bar this suit. A deserted spouse is not required to make attempts to end the separation in order to obtain a divorce. Even actual unwillingness on her part to take the deserter back does not prevent her from obtaining a divorce. 8 “The undisclosed emotions of the deserted party do not affect his rights.” 9 We need not consider whether a refusal to take back the deserter would, under our present statute, affect the deserted party’s right to a divorce. Mrs. Parks neither refused to take her husband back, nor made any effort to get him back.
The plaintiff expresses willingness to continue to pay alimony, and we think the decree should require him to do so.
Reversed.
Notes
D.C.Code, Snpp. V, Tit. 14, § 63.
D.C.Code, Tit. 14, § 66.
Herrick v. Herrick,
Campbell v. Campbell,
Herrick v. Herrick, supra; Brown v. Brown,
Salinko v. Salinko,
Hitchcock v. Hitchcock,
Ford v. Ford,
