delivered the opinion of the court.
Petitioner, Mary E. Shelton, filed her bill in the Corporation Court for the city of Lynchburg against her husband, John Henry Shelton, alleging that he had willfully abandoned and deserted her for more than three years prior to the institution of her suit, and praying for a divorce a vim-culo matrimonU. At the hearing the court entered the decree under review, reciting that the charge of willful abandonment and desertion of the plaintiff by the defendant for more than three years had been proved, and decreeing that the marriage between the plaintiff and defendant be dissolved, and that the plaintiff be forever divorced from her husband, the defendant, to which decree was added the following provision: “And it appearing to the court from the record in this cause that the defendant has been several times divorced, and that this is the second divorce for the plaintiff, the court doth adjudge, order and decree that neither of said parties shall marry again, as provided in section 2265 of the Code of Virginia (edition of 1904).”
Petitioner also assigns as error the provision in the decree that gives leave to either party to move the court to reinstate the suit without notice.
For these errors, the decree in the particulars referred to must be reversed, and this court will enter such decree as the corporation court ought to have entered, granting the parties a divorce from the bonds of matrimony in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided, and subject to no other restrictions.
Reversed.
