Richardson v. Richardson

3 Va. Cir. 491, 1922 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1
CourtRichmond City Circuit Court
DecidedJune 24, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Va. Cir. 491 (Richardson v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richmond City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Richardson, 3 Va. Cir. 491, 1922 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1 (Va. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

By JUDGE BEVERLEY T. CRUMP

This proceeding is a suit by the plaintiff to obtain a divorce from bed and board from the defendant upon allegations of cruelty and desertion made in the plaintiff’s bill, as to which she has taken testimony and now submits the case to the Court for adjudication, the defendant not having appeared.

It is shown that the plaintiff and defendant have been domiciled in Virginia for more than twelve months, their home and residence having been in Louisa County for many years past.

The defendant, being a resident of this State, the only ground upon which this Court of the City of Richmond can have jurisdiction over him must arise from one of two facts: (1) that the defendant is a resident of the City of Richmond or (2) that the parties last cohabited in this City.

It plainly appears that the defendant, at the time this suit was brought, resided in the County of Louisa and not in the City of Richmond, and that he still resides in Louisa.

The plaintiff endeavors to sustain the jurisdiction of this Court by testimony tending to show that in October 1921 various acts of cruelty on the part of the husband culminated in his compelling her to [492]*492leave their home in Louisa County, and she came to Richmond where she has been since residing; that on several occasions prior to the institution of this suit, which was on the 8th day of March 1922 the husband came to see her at her residence in Richmond and that on these occasions, which were mainly on Saturdays, they occupied the same room and bed, that the wife submitted to this through fear of the husband and against her volition; and that the last such occasion was on the 10th day of November, 1921. With those statements as a basis the witnesses testify that the parties last lived together as husband and wife in the City of Richmond.

Do these facts meet the requirement of the statute that the suit shall be brought in the County or City in which the parties last cohabited (Code of Virginia, section 5105)? I do not think so.

Cohabitation or matrimonial cohabitation means, in the law of divorce, the permanent or public living together or dwelling together in the marital relation. One of the necessary elements of desertion is the intent on the part of the offender to break permanently the cohabitation or continuance of the marital or family life. The wife alleges, that she has rightfully taken up her residence in Richmond, while the defendant still resides in Louisa County, where he deserted her, and that up to the time of such desertion there had been no breaking off of the matrimonial cohabitation or dwelling together. It is manifest that the parties cannot be regarded as cohabiting or dwelling together as man and wife in the same dwelling or the same place, so long as the separate dwelling and place of residence of the plaintiff is in Richmond and that of the defendant is in Louisa County, although while on a visit to Richmond the defendant may force the plaintiff to admit him to her bed, and she may submit to him as her husband through fear. If the cohabitation or continuous dwelling together of the parties as husband and wife in Louisa County was terminated by cruelty and desertion on the part of the husband, the evidence does not show that there was a presumption by the parties of the condition of cohabitation by their coming together or dwelling together in Richmond in such manner as to show that they had again taken up the thread of this marital cohabitation [493]*493where it was broken off. Cohabitation, in its proper meaning in the law of divorce, has reference to a continuing condition and not to an act. In Bishop on Marriage, Divorce and Separation, section 1669, the author gives the following definition: "To cohabit is to dwell together. So that matrimonial cohabitation is the living together of a man and woman ostensibly as husband and wife."

Judge Christian in Bailey v. Bailey, 21 Gratt. 43, says, "Desertion is a breach of matrimonial duty, and is composed first of the actual breaking off the matrimonial cohabitation, and secondly an intent to desert in the mind of the defendant." The learned judge here evidently uses the phrase in the sense of a continuing condition in which the parties live. And this is the meaning attached to the term generally in our decisions, the latest being in Ringold v. Ringold, 128 Va. 485, where the Court, after referring to the principle generally recognized that the mere cessation of marital intercourse in the sexual sense does not amount to cruelty or desertion, adds on p. 495, "Here we have not only an unjustified refusal on the part of the husband to permit the wife to occupy his room and bed, but a cruel and heartless course of conduct on his part which amounted to a general withdrawal from matrimonial cohabitation," and on p. 499 reference is made to the case of Bailey v. Bailey. See also Tutwiler v. Tutwiler, 118 Va. 724. I do not cite these cases as having any relevant bearing upon the question here, other than to show that, within the purview of the divorce law, the term cohabitation or matrimonial cohabitation means a continuing condition in which the consorts live.

In Jennings v. McDougle, 83 W.Va. 186, the Court says,

The phrase "in the County in which the parties last cohabited," used in the statute necessarily means the place where the parties ceased to live together as husband and wife in the same house, and ordinarily carries with it the idea of a substantial measure of continuity and regularity.

[494]*494In prosecutions under the statute against lewd and lascivious cohabitation it is held that cohabitation, according to its ordinary signification, is the living together of the parties in the same house as man and wife, and that occasional acts of incontinence do not make out the offense. Jones v. Com., 80 Va. 18; Pruner v. Com., 82 Va. 115.

My conclusion is that, in the case at bar, the parties last cohabited according to the meaning of that language in our Virginia statute, in Louisa County, and not in the City of Richmond.

This Court has therefore no jurisdiction of this case, because the defendant does not reside in Richmond, and the parties did not last cohabit here.

The defendant has not appeared, and the record shows that process to commence the suit addressed to the Sheriff of the City of Richmond not having been served, an alias subpoena in chancery was issued addressed to the Sheriff of the County of Louisa and was returned by him showing service on the defendant in Louisa County. It may be questionable whether this process is valid; and if it is not valid then the Court has not acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and cannot proceed in this case for that reason.

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Related

Watts v. Watts
61 S.E. 593 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1908)
Jones v. Commonwealth
80 Va. 18 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1885)
Pruner & Clark v. Commonwealth
82 Va. 115 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1886)
Savings Bank v. Powhatan Clay Manufacturing Co.
46 S.E. 294 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1904)
Dowell v. Cox
62 S.E. 272 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1908)
Coleman v. Virginia Stave & Heading Co.
70 S.E. 545 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1911)
Tutwiler v. Tutwiler
88 S.E. 86 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1916)
Blankenship v. Blankenship
100 S.E. 538 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1919)
Towson v. Towson
102 S.E. 48 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1920)
Ringgold v. Ringgold
104 S.E. 836 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1920)
Jennings v. McDougle
98 S.E. 162 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Va. Cir. 491, 1922 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-richardson-vaccrichcity-1922.