Canavos v. Canavos

108 S.E.2d 359, 200 Va. 861, 1959 Va. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 4, 1959
DocketRecord 4912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 108 S.E.2d 359 (Canavos v. Canavos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canavos v. Canavos, 108 S.E.2d 359, 200 Va. 861, 1959 Va. LEXIS 179 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

*862 I’Anson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Chris Canavos, the appellee, filed a bill of complaint on February 19, 1953, alleging that Alexandra Canavos, his wife, the appellant, in September, 1938, deserted him at his home in Newport News, Virginia, and prayed for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii. On February 28 the appellant filed an answer denying the alleged desertion, praying that the court deny the relief asked for and that the appellee be required to support the appellant and their infant son, whose custody she requested. The appellant averred that she wanted to live with the appellee and did not ask for a divorce. The deposition of John A. Gallins was taken on March 7, 1953, and was the only testimony offered by the appellee at that time. There being no further proceedings for nearly four years, the cause was dismissed from the docket by an order entered February 27, 1957. On July 18, 1957, the cause was reinstated upon motion of counsel for the appellee, depositions were taken over a period of several months, and on December 30, 1957, the chancellor entered a decree granting the appellee a divorce a vinculo matrimonii on the grounds of desertion, awarded custody of the infant child to the appellant and ordered the appellee to pay to the appellant the sum of twenty-five dollars per week for the support of the child. From this decree we granted an appeal.

The appellant’s sole assignment of error is that the evidence does not support the decree of the chancellor granting the appellee a divorce.

The parties were married in Greece on December 28, 1924. It was understood by both parties at the time of the marriage that the appellee would leave shortly thereafter for the United States where he had business interests and the appellant would live in the home of his mother and father in Kalesmeno, Greece, until he returned for her.

About one week after the marriage the appellee departed for the United States and stayed away from Greece for nearly two years, returning in November, 1927. The parties lived together until April, 1928, when again, by mutual consent, the appellee left for the United States. Nine months later he returned to Greece where they lived together for one month and in April, 1929, they left for the United States.

The parties lived together in Newport News, Virginia, from April, *863 1929, until November, 1933, when they returned to Greece with their two sons, Dennis, bom in 1928, and Sam, bom in 1930.

The family resided in the home of the appellee’s mother in Kalesmeno until the appellee completed the building of an expensive home for his family in Karpenision, Greece. In January, 1935, the appellee left Greece for Newport News.

The appellee returned to Greece in April, 1937, and lived with the appellant for six months before returning to Newport News in September, 1937. He went back to Greece in May, 1938, and lived with the appellant until August, 1938, when he returned to Newport News. War broke out in Europe in 1939, and the appellee has not been back to Greece since he left in August, 1938.

The appellee sent money regularly for the support of his wife, three sons (the third son having been born in 1939) and his mother until Greece was overrun by her enemies in 1941 and all communications were severed with the outside world. He did not resume his support of the appellant after the war except for a short period after 1947.

At the end of the war in 1946 the appellee arranged to bring his two oldest sons to Newport News to help him in his business. The relationship between the appellee and the two sons became strained and they both ultimately left him.

The appellee made no effort to bring the appellant and their youngest son, whom he had never seen, to Newport News. Although she had expressed a desire to join him, he made it plain to the appellant through correspondence that he did not want her to come.

In 1952, without the appellee’s knowledge, and through the aid of the two oldest sons, the appellant and the youngest son arrived in Newport News late one night and went to his restaurant to join him. The appellee was enraged when he saw the appellant. He refused to permit her and their youngest son to stay in his home. The appellee did, however, arrange for their temporary lodging at a hotel and later rented an apartment for them. The appellant tried on several occasions to bring about a reconciliation but the appellee refused to live with her.

The appellee contends that when he left Greece in August, 1938, to return to Newport News the appellant refused to come with him and that such refusal constituted constructive desertion.

The appellee testified that he took the appellant and their children back to Greece in 1933 at her insistence because .she was not happy *864 living in Newport News and wanted to be near her people. He stated that on many of his visits to Greece he asked her to return with him to the United States but she refused; that on his last visit in 1938 he told her that if she did not return with him this would be her last opportunity to ever live with him as his wife; that she told him she was not going back to the United States to live with him; that prior to his departure for the United States in August, 1938, he and the appellant did not get along very well; that she was always nagging him and insisting that he remain with her in Greece; that he only lived with her a part of the time on his last visit because he could not stand the sight of her; that she was a dirty, filthy woman and would not listen to him and be a wife to him (although he did get her pregnant); that he had tried to be a good husband and father; that he had never been happy since they were married; that it was one of those marriages which was arranged by the respective families in accordance with Greek custom and that he told his father two days after they were married “he had gotten him in the mud.”

John D. Gallins, who had known both the appellee and the appellant for a number of years, testified that he talked with the appellant while she was living in Newport News and that she told him she did not like living in the United States and wanted to return to Greece. When he was visiting in Greece in 1937, 1940 and 1946 the appellant told him on each occasion that she did not want to go back to the United States.

Many outstanding citizens of the community testified to the excellent reputation of the appellee for truth and veracity.

The testimony of the appellant and her witnesses is in direct conflict with that of the appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E.2d 359, 200 Va. 861, 1959 Va. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canavos-v-canavos-va-1959.