Shirley v. Shirley

185 S.E. 849, 117 W. Va. 434, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 92
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1936
Docket8330
StatusPublished

This text of 185 S.E. 849 (Shirley v. Shirley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shirley v. Shirley, 185 S.E. 849, 117 W. Va. 434, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 92 (W. Va. 1936).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

This suit for divorce was instituted in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County by R. K. Shirley against Ruby A. Shirley. The bill of complaint makes the ordinary averments of marital relationship, residence, issue of the marriage and circumstances of the parties. The bill then alleges that on the 13th day of September, 1930, the wife deserted and abandoned the husband and that in the same month she brought a suit for divorce in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County seeking relief on the ground of cruelty, and that on the 17th day of March, 1931, a decree was entered in that case denying her relief.

The bill alleges that after the denial of relief in her suit, the wife’s desertion and abandonment continued *435 and still continues; and that the wife, since the 13th day of September, 1930, has refused . to cohabit with the plaintiff, and still continues so to refuse.

The bill further alleges that in the month of July, 1931, the husband, plaintiff in this suit, instituted a suit for divorce against his wife in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, praying for a decree from bed and board on the ground of desertion; that in that suit, the wife filed her answer and cross-bill seeking a divorce on her part on the ground of both cruelty and desertion. It is alleged that on the 1st day of June, 1932, the court entered its final"decree in this second suit, by which relief was denied both on the plaintiff’s bill of complaint and on the wife’s answer and cross-bill. The bill goes on to allege that, despite the fact that the court refused to grant the wife a divorce in the suit (the first suit) that she brought against her husband in which a divorce was sought on the ground of cruelty, and despite the fact that in the suit (the second suit) brought by the husband against the wife a divorce on the ground of desertion was denied the wife upon her answer and cross-bill, she has made no effort to return to the husband and to take up the marital relationship with him; that shortly after the wife’s original desertion on September 13, 1930, the plaintiff pleaded with her to return and to live with him; that in the original suit, the judge of the court then presiding tried to effect a reconciliation between the plaintiff and the defendant, at which time the plaintiff herein expressed his willingness and desire to have the defendant herein return and resume the marital relationship with him; and that at that time the wife refused. On the basis of these allegations, the bill of complaint seeks a divorce a vinculo based upon the desertion of the wife commencing before the first divorce suit was brought at the time she ceased to reside with the husband on the 13th day of September, 1930.

After her demurrer to the plaintiff’s bill was overruled, the defendant answered. The answer admits the jurisdictional averments of the bill of complaint, and admits that the wife left the home of the husband on *436 the 13th day of September, 1930, and has not since returned. It denies the charge of desertion, states that the wife left the husband on the 13th day of September, 1930, and has not since returned on account of her fear based upon the cruel and inhuman treatment of the husband, and alleges that the wife has always been willing to live with the husband if she could be assured that he would not continue to treat her cruelly. The answer admits the bringing of the first suit by the wife, and admits that the wife was denied relief on her allegation of cruelty. It alleges affirmatively that, in the first suit, the husband, by his answer and cross-bill, sought relief as against the wife on the ground of desertion, and that the decree denied relief to him also. The answer alleges that on at least two different occasions since September, 1930, the wife, in the presence of the court, has expressed her willingness to return to and live with the husband, but that on each occasion, the husband has refused to allow her to return. There is no averment that such an offer was made by the wife after the decree in the second case. The answer admits that suit was brought by the husband against the wife for divorce in July, 1931, and that in that suit she was denied relief on her answer and cross-bill. The answer denies that the plaintiff is entitled to relief, and upon its affirmative averments, seeks alimony and a decree of divorce a mensa.

The plaintiff filed a special replication denying substantially all of the averments of the defendant’s answer and cross-bill.

After proof was taken, upon final hearing, the trial chancellor denied relief to both the husband on his original bill and the wife upon her answer and cross-bill, and dismissed the case. From that decree, the plaintiff husband appeals. There is no appeal on the part of the wife and no brief is filed for her on this submission.

The testimony of the husband upon the hearing begins with the fact that the wife left him in September, 1930, and that he sought on several occasions to have her return, continuing that attitude until just before the submission of the first divorce suit, and at that time ex *437 pressing to the court his willingness to take his wife back. He testified that on every such occasion, Mrs. Shirley refused to return and live with him. He does not testify that he made any such effort after the decree in the first case. On cross-examination, he testifies that since the first case, he has made no effort to have his wife return and live with him, and, in response to a question by the judge of the court, states that after the first suit was terminated and while the second suit brought by him against his wife on the ground of desertion was pending and about to be submitted, the judge of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County undertook to persuade the parties to become reconciled, and that upon that occasion, he, the husband, although the wife expressed her willingness to return to him, refused the reconciliation.

The testimony of Mrs. Shirley is to the effect that prior to the decree in the second divorce case, she made several attempts to have her husband permit her to return and live with him, all of which were repulsed. She testified that in the fall preceding the submission of this case, probably in November, the plaintiff, on one occasion, had threatened to kill her.

The record in the second divorce suit is made a part of the record in this case, but it was not brought to this court as a part of the record on this appeal.

From the record before us, it appears that there is no testimony that would materially alter the situation as it existed in the second divorce suit. No exception to this seems to be created by the testimony of Mrs. Maude Mason, who said only that on several occasions within the past two years she had gone to the defendant and had entreated her to return to her husband, but that each time the defendant had declined to do so, stating that she feared to return on account of her husband’s violence and cruelty. We do not think that this testimony has a material bearing upon the decision of this case.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that, on the basis of this record, the wife stands convicted of deserting her husband because she left him on the 13th day of September, 1930, and because her reason for doing so. *438

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.E. 849, 117 W. Va. 434, 1936 W. Va. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirley-v-shirley-wva-1936.