Cole v. Blankenship

30 F.2d 211, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2359
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1929
DocketNo. 2736
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 211 (Cole v. Blankenship) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Blankenship, 30 F.2d 211, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2359 (4th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

WATKINS, District Judge.

This is an appeal from the decree of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of West Virginia, by which appellee was awarded dower in numerous tracts or parcels of land now held by appellants under differ[212]*212ent claims of title — some in severalty under deeds, others hy a number of the appellants as tenants in common through inheritance. All these titles were derived through Pat-: rick L. Blankenship, deceased.

The hill of complaint alleges appellee’s marriage to said Blankenship and his seizure of said lands during coverture, while the answer sets up the defense that dower was forfeited under the laws of West Virginia because of appellee’s willful desertion of her husband without just cause, persisted in until and at the time of his death, because of a divorce a mensa obtained by him upon these grounds, and also because of certain written agreements in which she released her claim of dower. The marriage took place on May 17, 1923, and thereafter the contracting parties lived together for only a brief and turbulent period. On June 11, 1923, they separated, after entering into a written agreement in which the wife contracted to receive the sum of $3,000 in lieu of dower, and in which she admitted that she had left her husband willfully, voluntarily, and without any just' cause that would entitle her to dower. Any effect, however, that this agreement might have had in barring the right of dower, was destroyed by a reconciliation a few days later, which resulted in the wifefe then returning to the home of the husband, where she remained until October 6, 1923, under circumstances of constant mutual recriminations. They then separated again, after executing a second written agreement, in which it was stated that they could not live together agreeably; the wife declaring her intention of leaving the husband and agreeing to accept $1,000, together with the amount of money already paid her as a consideration for the relinquishment of all dower rights and all claims of support. Subsequent to this time they never lived together or became reconciled, though there is testimony on the wife’s part that she did on a subsequent single occasion return to Beekley, where the husband lived, spent the night, and cohabited with him at his request, and from the evidence we are inclined to believe this statement to be true.

On October 18,1923, Blankenship filed his bill for divorce in the circuit court of Raleigh county, alleging inter alia that he was and had been for more than one year next preceding the' filing of the hill a resident and actual hona fide citizen of West Virginia. He also alleged willful abandonment and desertion, without just cause, by the wife, beginning on October 6, 1923, continuing until and at the time of the filing of the bill. The complaint contained no allegation that the plaintiff resided in Raleigh county, or that the last cohabitation tool¡f place therein. It was alleged, however, that the defendant then resided, and had resided from the time o* the separation, in the city of Charleston, W. Va. Process was duly served on the defendant on October 19, 1923, and, after due notice to her, depositions were taken and filed, and the commissioner filed his report, which, after stating the grounds of the divorce to be willful and continued desertion testified to by two witnesses, reported the proceeding and proof to be regular, and recommended that a divorce he granted from bed and board. The final decree in the cause was passed on December 6, 1923; it being therein recited that process had been duly issued and served, that depositions had been taken after due and legal notice, that defendant had defaulted in appearance, and it was ordered that the report of the commissioner should be confirmed, that plaintiff was entitled to the relief prayed for, and a divorce a mensa was decreed. From this decree no appeal was taken, and no direct attack upon the judgment has ever been made by appellee, by motion or otherwise, in the original cause.

While it is undoubtedly true, as shown by the testimony in the divorce ease and in the subsequent proceedings hereinafter referred to, that Blankenship, prior and at all times subsequent to his marriage with appellee, resided in the town of Beekley, in Raleigh county, and that this was the locus of last cohabitation of the parties, such fact, however, as above stated, is nowhere alleged in the bill of complaint for divorce, and is in no way inferable from the allegations thereof, unless the assertion of his being a resident of the state of West Virginia, coupled with, the proper statement of the venue in the caption of the bill as Raleigh county, furnish a basis for such inference. Certainly this would have been insufficient, if tested by proper and timely motion in the original .cause.

On or about April 5, 1924, appellee filed in the circuit. court of Raleigh county a bill to set aside the divorce decree on the ground ■ that the evidence upon which it had been obtained was false, and that the decree had been obtained by fraud and perjury. In this complaint it is shown that Blankenship’s home, from which appellee asserts that she was driven away, was in the town of Beekley, which is in Raleigh county, and she further alleges therein that her last cohabitation with him was at that place. In this suit a large volume of testimony was taken, and the case [213]*213was matured for hearing at a term of the court held in February, 1925. Meanwhile, Blankenship had died, and an order was passed reviving the suit in the name of his personal representative, and on February 28, 1925, after having heard the depositions on behalf of both parties and argument of counsel, tho court adjudged that plaintiff had failed to sustain the allegations of the bill, and the same was dismissed. It does not appear that at any time in that proceeding did the plaintiff therein raise any question as to tlxe jurisdiction of the court, and no appeal was ever taken from the final decree, nor has any attack thereon been made, by motion or otherwise, in the original canse.

The suit in tho instant case was begun on March 27, 1926. The court therein held that the divorce decree a mensa did not, under the laws of West Virginia, bar the right of dower; that the parties had separated by agreement; that appellee did not separate from her husband, except for reasons that would have entitled her to a divorce from bed and board; that the separation agreement did not bar the right of dower; and that the divorce decree was null and void, and the proceeding to set same aside was absolutely unnecessary and meaningless. If this decision of the District Court, declaring tho divorce proceeding and subsequent suit to annul the same to" he void and meaningless, should be sustained, and onr decision rest alone upon the conduct of the parties as determining the question of forfeiture of dower, it must be said that there is much in the evidence and in the law to sustain the decree of the learned District Judge. It is well settled that a decree of divorce a mensa is of itself alone no bar to the right of dower. So long as the bonds of matrimony are unbroken, the wife cannot be deprived of her marital rights in her husband’s property, if not otherwise forfeited. Kittle v. Kittle, 86 W. Va. 46, 102 S. E. 799; Hartigan v. Hartigan, 65 W. Va. 471, 64 S. E. 726, 131 Am. St. Rep. 973,17 Ann. Cas. 728; Perine v. Perine, 92 W. Va. 530, 114 S. E. 871.

This, however, does not import that the mere limitation of the decree to a divorce a mensa will preserve the right of dower otherwise forfeited under the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 211, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-blankenship-ca4-1929.