37 N.E.2d 850 | Ill. | 1941
Appellant, Mary Ellen Van Dolman, filed her complaint in the circuit court of Cook county January 27, 1940, *100
praying for a divorce on the ground of desertion, from appellee, Alvin T. Van Dolman. The complaint also prayed for a partition of certain real estate owned by the parties in joint tenancy. The defendant answered denying that he had deserted the plaintiff, but was living separate and apart from her pursuant to a decree of separate maintenance obtained by appellant. After a hearing, the court entered a decree finding that it did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter; that defendant had not wilfully deserted appellant for more than one year prior to the time the complaint was filed, and dismissed the complaint for want of equity. Since a freehold is involved where the right to partition is denied (Albers v. Central Republic Bank and TrustCo.
The complaint charged the desertion of defendant existed since December 18, 1938, but it appears there had been a former suit between the parties since that date and the institution of the present case, to which reference is made in the complaint and made a part thereof, but no copy of the decree or pleadings in such former proceeding is attached to the complaint, nor was it offered in evidence. However, during the trial, counsel for the respective parties agreed that a suit for divorce was commenced by appellant December 20, 1938, charging appellee with cruelty, and that a decree was entered in that case May 1, 1939, awarding appellant separate maintenance after the complaint had been amended. The answer admits such a decree was entered but denies appellee was guilty of wilful desertion for one year.
Appellant contends the decree in the former case finds she was living apart from her husband without fault because appellee had deserted her, and claims this is conclusive that desertion constituting a ground for divorce commenced at the time set out in the decree, viz., December 18, 1938. On the other hand, defendant claims the time *101 consumed in litigating the first case cannot be counted in computing the duration of the desertion set out as a ground for divorce, and urges, further, that since a decree of separate maintenance provides for the parties living separate and apart there can be no desertion upon his part because the wilful element is absent. With the record incomplete by a failure to incorporate the decree and pleadings in the former proceedings, several essential facts necessary to a decision of all of the points raised by counsel are absent.
However, the following facts are established: The parties separated December 18, 1938; a suit for divorce was filed December 20, 1938; a decree for separate maintenance of appellant was entered May 1, 1939; the present divorce suit was filed January 27, 1940, and a hearing had and decree entered January 10, 1941. It is also agreed that the parties owned the property described in the complaint as joint tenants, and the evidence shows that the parties have not lived together since the separation. The facts not established are: The actual findings in the decree of separate maintenance; the time the amendment to such complaint was made, or the ground set out in the amended complaint upon which relief was granted.
Appellant claims the court erred in denying her a decree for partition of the jointly owned premises, and this point is well taken, as partition is a remedy that may be demanded as a matter of right (Yedor v. Chicago City Bank and Trust Co.
The contention made by appellant that the decree of separate maintenance, assuming it was allowed because the husband left her, is conclusive that desertion as a ground for divorce existed at that time, is not an adjudication of that question, because the issue decided in the separate maintenance case is whether the appellant was living apart from her husband without fault upon her part, and this *102
issue may be decided for or against either party without adjudicating that a ground for divorce did or did not exist.(Hoffman v. Hoffman,
The decree entered by the trial court, however, dismissed the complaint for want of equity, and in view of *103 that part of the answer in which defendant says he was living apart from his wife pursuant to the decree in the former case, it might forever conclude appellant from charging desertion as a ground for divorce, even though it existed for the statutory period. The statute does not contemplate that separate maintenance once awarded shall forever bar the wife from obtaining a divorce on the ground of desertion, if the husband shall wilfully refrain from living with her for a period of more than one year after a decree is entered, and she is without fault in the separation. The defendant to such a separation proceeding may resist the charge by showing the plaintiff is at fault, or that the separation is by consent, or that he, in good faith, offered to resume marital relations, but when the decree is entered the one at fault is determined, and absence, if wilfully continued thereafter, may be sufficient to commence desertion as a ground of divorce under the statute. Johnson v. Johnson, supra.
Cases are called to our attention from other jurisdictions which on casual examination would seem to support the contention of appellee that the rule is otherwise, but close inspection discloses practically all of the States from which such decisions are cited authorize limited divorces a mensa et thoro. While it was said in Floberg v. Floberg, supra, that an action for separate maintenance corresponds to an ecclesiastical divorce from bed and board (a mensa et thoro) it should be understood that this similarity extended only to the fact that the husband and wife are living apart, and not to the results flowing from the decree entered in the several proceedings. At common law a divorce from bed and board could only be decreed upon the grounds of cruelty and adultery. (1 Blackstone's Com. 440; Hamaker v.Hamaker,
For the foregoing errors the decree of the circuit court of Cook county is reversed and the cause is remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded.