Opinion by
We have before us for consideration decrees of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County in two divorce actions. On July 30, 1947, Perry E. Walper instituted an action for divorce a.v.m. against his wife, Margaret V. Walper, on the ground of indignities. Process was served and, after requesting a bill of particulars, the wife filed an answer. The case was not proceeded with further until October 31, 1960, when the husband amended his complaint by adding a charge of desertion. After filing an answer to the amended complaint, the wife instituted a cross-action in divorce a.v.m. on December 5, 1960. The grounds alleged were desertion and indignities. The wife’s complaint was subsequently amended to request a divorce from bed and board. The two actions were consolidated for the purpose of trial. After taking testimony for two full days, the hearing judge, on November 14, 1961, entered a decree dismissing the wife’s complaint, and a decree granting the husband a divorce on the ground of desertion. In each case the wife has appealed.
The parties were married on September 9, 1946, in Washington, D. C., which had been the wife’s hometown. After a wedding trip, they resided at the home of the husband’s parents on Fordham Avenue in the City of Pittsburgh for several months. They then moved into a furnished apartment on Hornaday Road, where they continued to reside until the birth of a son on June 19, 1947. After the wife’s discharge from the hospital the parties resided on Ormsby Avenue in Mt. Oliver until their separation. Their marriage was not a happy one, and the explanation appears in the following excerpt from the opinion below:
“The testimony of the parties and their witnesses differed in almost every respect, however the court is of the opinion that the crux of the parties’ marital difficulties centered around their opposing beliefs regard *412 ing methods of birth control. Mrs. Walper had a difficult pregnancy which included a threatened miscarriage. The parties had numerous arguments before and after the birth of their child concerning the advisability of planning their family. The record discloses that these differences between the parties were due to their respective religious faiths, the wife being of the Roman Catholic faith and the husband being Protestant”.
On or about July 15, 1947, at the time of the child’s baptism, the husband informed the wife that he thought it would be best if they separated, and that he wanted a divorce. His reason for this request appears in the following excerpt from his testimony: “Q. What was your reason? A. My reason was, as I had specified, Counselor, that she would not accept the use of contraceptives for birth control”. As previously stated, the husband’s divorce suit was commenced on July 30, 1947, at which time the parties were living together. He testified as follows: “My sole purpose in filing for a divorce at that time was to endeavor to make her see the light: this was a serious proposition, and that we were gbing to remain as a family unit”. The law never intended that a divorce action should be used in this manner. See
Kusner v. Kusner,
So far as the counter-charges of indignities are concerned, we do not propose to burden this opinion with a detailed analysis of the testimony. The burden of proof was the same in each action:
Reddick v. Reddick,
Similarly, so far as the counter-charges of desertion are concerned, we do not find in the conduct of either party the necessary element of malice. See
Jablonski v. Jablonski,
Attempts at reconciliation failed because of the conflicting attitudes on birth control. In this connection the husband testified as follows: “Q. Now, insofar as that second condition, the one involving birth control was concerned, did you, in fact, place such a condition upon the reconciliation that you were attempting to effect? A. Yes”. The wife’s position appears in the
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following excerpt from one of her letters: “As you remember you left me when Joseph was about one month old, and later made a condition that you would return if I would agree to live under circumstances which I am forbidden to do (even for a short time) under pain of grievous sin. You were aware of this at the time of our marriage”. We are clearly of the opinion that, under the circumstances presented by this record, the wife was not guilty of desertion. The husband’s offer of reconciliation was not complete, but was accompanied by a condition which was contrary to his agreement at the time of the marriage. Cf.
Peters v. Peters,
Nor do we propose to interfere with the determination of the court below in the action a mensa et thoro that the husband was likewise not guilty of desertion. Under the provisions of The Divorce Law,
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the malicious abandonment which is a ground for a divorce from bed and board is the practical equivalent of the wilful and malicious desertion for which a divorce from the bonds of matrimony may be granted. It is no less severe in its requirements and is to be applied no less strictly:
Semmens v. Semmens,
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A decree of divorce must be founded upon compelling reasons, and upon testimony that is clear' and convincing:
Baxter v. Baxter,
The decree of the court below in No. 65 April Term, 1962 is reversed, and the husband’s complaint is dismissed. The decree in No. 66 April Term, 1962 is affirmed, appellee to pay the costs.
Notes
Act of May 2, 1929, P. L. 1237, 23 P.S. 1 et sea.
