Meyerl v. Meyerl

21 Pa. D. & C.3d 729, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 285
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County
DecidedJuly 6, 1981
Docketno. 11
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Pa. D. & C.3d 729 (Meyerl v. Meyerl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyerl v. Meyerl, 21 Pa. D. & C.3d 729, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 285 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

WETTICK, J.,

Plaintiff instituted this divorce action under section 201(d)(1) of the Divorce Code of April 2, 1980 P.L. 63, 23 P.S. §201. In his complaint, he alleged that he and his wife have lived separate and apart for a period of at least three years and that their marriage is irretrievably broken. Defendant filed an answer in which she did not deny that the marriage is irretrievably broken but contended that the parties have not lived sepa[730]*730rate and apart for a period of three years because both parties resided at the marital residence from December 1979 until June 1980.

A hearing was conducted before this court to determine whether the parties have lived separate and apart for three years within the meaning of section 201(d)(1) of the Divorce Code. Both parties testified; their testimony presented the same factual picture.

The parties were married on March 13, 1953. Plaintiff built a four bedroom single-family house in Evans City, Pa., which the parties and their children occupied from 1958 to 1972, at which time plaintiff left the house. Plaintiff moved back into the house for a short period in January 1974 and left again. He did not five in this house again until he returned in late December 1979 at which time he remained until the end of June 1980. Plaintiff returned to this house because he was out of work and could not afford to five elsewhere. Plaintiff moved into the house without advising his wife beforehand; she neither invited him nor welcomed him.

Throughout this six months’ period, plaintiff lived in the basement while his wife and the children fiving at home occupied the first and second floors of the house. During his entire stay at this house, he talked to his wife on only one occasion. This conversation occurred in the basement on the day in which he moved back into the house; in this conversation his wife strenuously objected to his returning to the house, and the conversation did not last for more than one minute. His wife was never again in the basement and plaintiff was never upstairs except for an occasional instance when he entered the kitchen to take to the basement a meal that a child had apparently put out for [731]*731him. Plaintiff lived in the portion of the basement which is a gameroom. In the basement, there is a sink, shower and toilet. He entered and exited the basement either through a separate door to the basement or through a garage door that led to both the basement and the first floor. He slept in a bed which he brought with him when he moved into the house and cooked on a hot plate located in the basement. He never visited, slept, or used any facilities in the first and second floors of the house. During defendant’s six months’ stay at the house, his wife never cooked meals or performed any other tasks for him and he did nothing for her. Also, defendant never invited plaintiff to participate in any activities with her or other members of the family and he participated in no such activities. In fact, his daughter was married during the period in which he was residing in the house and he was not informed of or invited to and did not attend this wedding.

The grounds for divorce are set forth in Section 201 of the Divorce Code. The only ground that may be applicable is that set forth in section 201(d) which permits a court to grant a divorce if the court determines “that the parties have lived separate and apart for a period of at least three years and that the marriage is irretrievably broken.” Because defendant does not dispute plaintiff’s allegation that the marriage is irretrievably broken, the issue presented in this case is whether plaintiff may be deemed to have lived separate and apart from defendant for at least three years when he has lived within the last three years in a separate portion of the house in which defendant also resided.

The term “separate and apart” is defined in section 104 of the Divorce Code as a “[c]omplete cessation of any and all cohabitation.” The term “cohabi[732]*732tation” does not have a fixed meaning.1 According to Black’s Law Dictionary (4th Ed. 1968), the term may mean “Dwelling together,” “Intercourse together as husband and wife,” or “Living, or abiding or residing together as man and wife.” Also compare Totino v. Totino, 176 Pa. Superior Ct. 108, 106 A. 2d 881 (1954), where the court for purposes of defining desertion as a ground for divorce stated, at p. 113: “Cohabitationis living or dwelling together. It means having the same habitation, so that in the [733]*733words of Chief Justice Agnew, ‘where one lives and dwells, there does the other live and dwell always with him’: Yardley’s Estate, 75 Pa. 207.” And also stated in Com. ex rel. Dittman v. Dittman, 174 Pa. Superior Ct. 599, 101 A. 2d 145 (1953), where the court ruled that parties who after entering into a marriage spent only one night together as a consummation of their marriage cohabited for purposes of legislation legitimizing a child where the child’s mother and father “enter into the bonds of lawful wedlock and cohabit.”

For the reasons set forth later, we hold that under certain circumstances the requirement of a “complete cessation of any and all cohabitation” should be construed to permit a finding that persons have lived “separate and apart” within the meaning of section 201(d) during a period in which they resided in the same dwelling. In reaching this decision, we recognize that the substantial majority of cases from other jurisdictions contain language that parties are not living separate and apart so long as they five in the same house even though they no longer engage in sexual intercourse or otherwise act as husband and wife. The case law is accurately summarized in DeRienzo v. DeRienzo, 119 N.J. Superior Ct. 1945, 192, 290 A. 2d 742, 743-744 (1972), where the New Jersey Superior Court held that parties who had lived for the past seven years in the same house with plaintiff’s bedroom having locks on both sides of the door and he alone having the key had not resided in “different habitations”:

“See Lillis v. Lillis, 235 Md. 490, 201 A. 2d 794 (Ct. App. 1964) (separate rooms in the same residence occupied intermittently by both is not living separate and apart); Brimson v. Brimson, 227 Ark. [734]*7341045, 304 S.W. 2d 935 (Sup. Ct. 1957) (where the spouses, owners of a drug store, lived separately in up and downstair apartments and where the husband had a key to the wife’s apartment in which was the only bathroom, the parties were not living separate and apart); Rogers v. Rogers, 258 Ala. 477, 63 So. 2d 807 (Sup. Ct. 1953) (living separate and apart means a complete cessation of all marital duties and relations between husband and wife and their living separate and apart in such a manner that those in the neighborhood may see that they are not living together); Neff v. Neff, 30 Wash. 2d 593, 192 P. 2d 344 (Sup. Ct. 1948) (continued occupation of the same residence barred divorce on the ground of separation); McNary v. McNary, 8 Wash. 2d 250, 111 P. 2d 760 (Sup. Ct. 1941) (living separate and apart means in separate residences); Dudley v. Dudley, 225 N.C. 83, 33 S.E. 2d 489 (Sup. Ct. 1945) (when husband and wife live in the same house and thus hold themselves out to the community as man and wife there is no separation); Young v. Young, 225 N.C. 340, 34 S.E. 2d 154 (Sup. Ct.

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21 Pa. D. & C.3d 729, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyerl-v-meyerl-pactcomplallegh-1981.