Lytle v. Lytle

583 S.W.2d 1, 266 Ark. 124, 1979 Ark. LEXIS 1427
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 25, 1979
Docket78-289
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 583 S.W.2d 1 (Lytle v. Lytle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lytle v. Lytle, 583 S.W.2d 1, 266 Ark. 124, 1979 Ark. LEXIS 1427 (Ark. 1979).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

The parties to this appeal were married in 1952. They separated February 13, 1977. Appellee Gula Lytle, the wife, filed a petition for separate maintenance against appellant, Dr. Jimmie Lytle, on March 1, 1977. Dr. Lytle filed a counterclaim for absolute divorce on the ground of indignities to the person. After several preliminary hearings and orders, the case was set for trial on February 28, 1978. On February 13, 1978, Mrs. Lytle filed an amendment to her petition, alleging that Dr. Lytle had deserted her without cause and remained away since their separation. She sought a divorce on the ground of desertion. The trial court held that Mrs. Lytle was entitled to a divorce on the ground of desertion, that Dr. Lytle did not have grounds for divorce and therefore had left Mrs. Lytle without reasonable cause. The chancery court awarded Mrs. Lytle possession of and title to certain real property, including the home in which the parties had resided in Batesville, along with certain personal property, cash and alimony of $1,500 per month. Appellant raises the following points for reversal:

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT THE APPELLEE WAS ENTITLED TO A DIVORCE FROM THE APPELLANT ON THE GROUND OF DESERTION.

II

THE COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE APPELLANT A DIVORCE ON GROUNDS OF GENERAL INDIGNITIES.

III

THE CHANCELLOR ERRED IN GRANTING APPELLEE TITLE TO THE PARTIES’ RESIDENCE.

IV

THE COURT ERRED IN AWARDING APPELLEE’S SOLICITOR A FEE OF $7,500.00 AND CHARGED TO THE APPELLANT.

I

It is appellant’s contention that the statutory requirement of absence from his spouse for a period of one year was not satisfied. He contends that there was not wilful desertion in the sense of Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1202, Second (Supp. 1977) because he was absent with the consent (implied if not express) of Gula Lytle. He based his contention that appellee consented to his absence upon her petition for separate maintenance, coupled with the fact that on April 19, 1977, the chancery court entered an order restraining either party from going around the other.

Of course, the statute provides for divorce where one party wilfully deserts and absents himself from the other for a space of one year without reasonable cause. There is evidence that Mrs. Lytle begged Dr. Lytle not to leave on the day before he actually left but there is no evidence that he ever made any attempt to return or to offer to return. Appellant cites cases from other jurisdictions holding that the period during which a prior matrimonial action is pending may not be included in the period of desertion necessary to support a divorce on the ground of desertion and that a matrimonial action by a deserted party which precedes a suit for divorce manifests that party’s consent to the spouses’ living apart. Some of the cases cited are obviously inapplicable because they relate to situations quite different from this one. For instance, there may be a valid reason to hold that the pendency of a wife’s petition for separate maintenance would operate to toll the desertion statute so the husband could not base a ground of desertion on the wife’s absence during the period that action was pending. See 24 Am.Jur. 2d 272, Divorce & Separation, § 110. Separate maintenance to a wife is granted upon the premise that the wife is without adequate means of support and has been abandoned, without fault on her part. Rosenbaum v. Rosenbaum, 206 Ark; 865, 177 S.W. 2d 926; Kientz v. Kientz, 104 Ark. 381, 149 S.W. 86. See also, Bonner v. Bonner, 204 Ark. 1006, 166 S.W. 2d 254.

Cases holding that a suit for limited divorce interrupts the continuity of the period of desertion are not persuasive. There is a significant difference between an action for separate maintenance and an action for a limited divorce or divorce from bed and board. See Womack v. Womack, 247 Ark. 1130, 449 S.W. 2d 399. A limited divorce is called divorce from bed and board in our statute. See Ark.Stat. Ann. § 34-1202. It is also known as divorce a mensa et thoro. See Rose v. Rose, 9 Ark. 507. In order to obtain such a divorce, it is necessary for the moving spouse to establish grounds. Ark.Stat. Ann. § 34-1202; Myers v. Williams, 225 Ark. 290, 281 S.W. 2d 944; Clyburn v. Clyburn, 175 Ark. 330, 299 S.W. 38; Gray v. Gray, 98 S.W. 975 (unreported in Arkansas Reports). The grounds on which such a divorce may be granted are the same as those specified for an absolute divorce, which is also called divorce from the bonds of matrimony or divorce a vinculo matrimonii. See Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1202. In a wife’s action for separate maintenance, it is unnecessary for her to establish any grounds except the separation and the absence of fault on her part. Hill v. Rowles, 223 Ark. 115, 264 S.W. 2d 638; Rosenbaum v. Rosenbaum, supra. So an action for separate maintenance may be based upon a husband’s wrongfully leaving his wife and is in nowise inconsistent with his continued absence being without reasonable cause. Nor does its pendency give him cause for continuing to absent himself. It is simply a means for a dependent wife to obtain support from her absent husband during his absence, when the absence is not her fault.

We do not agree with appellee, however, that the question is one which was settled in McKay v. McKay, 172 Ark. 918, 290 S.W. 951. In that case, the wife’s two suits for divorce on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment by her husband had been dismissed. In her third suit, based on alleged desertion by the husband, the husband was granted a divorce on his counterclaim on the ground of desertion. The decree was reversed because the wife had offered to return to the husband within a year after she left him. We cannot say that we refused to hold that the prior divorce suit affected the running of the statutory period. We simply failed to so hold and it was unnecessary to do so, because the wife attempted, in good faith, to attempt a reconciliation. We did hold that a decree denying the wife a divorce for cruelty in her first suit, entered more than a year prior to the filing of her third suit, was not a bar to the suit on the ground of desertion.

We do not mean to say that there is no support for appellant’s view in cases from other jurisdictions. But it is pointed out by textwriters that it has even been held that a decree of separate maintenance establishes that the plaintiff is living apart without fault, and may, if the other spouse persists in staying away after the decree is entered, establish the commencement of a desertion by the losing spouse. 27A CJS 102, Divorce § 36 (1). It is also said that, even though a wife could have obtained an absolute divorce on the ground of desertion at the time she obtained a decree for separate, maintenance, she could later obtain an absolute divorce on the ground of desertion which began before the entry of the decree for separate maintenance and continued until she sued for an absolute divorce. 24 Am.Jur. 2d 271, Divorce & Separation, § 110.

Appellant may well be correct in his assertion that in a majority of the cases dealing with the question, it has been held that the period of pendency of a prior matrimonial action will be excluded in computing the period of desertion as a matter of law, and that some of them are fairly recent.

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583 S.W.2d 1, 266 Ark. 124, 1979 Ark. LEXIS 1427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-lytle-ark-1979.