Vickers v. Vickers

122 S.E. 279, 95 W. Va. 323, 41 A.L.R. 266, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 3
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 279 (Vickers v. Vickers) 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
Vickers v. Vickers, 122 S.E. 279, 95 W. Va. 323, 41 A.L.R. 266, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 3 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Meredith, Peesident :

Tbe plaintiff husband was decreed a divorce from bed and board; defendant appeals.

It is necessary to review various suits heretofore pending *325 between the parties, wbicb we will do as briefly as possible. Tbe parties separated December 30, 1917, the defendant remaining in the home. On July 11, 1918, the hnsband brought suit in the Cabell County Circuit Court for divorce alleging cruelty; defendant answered, a hearing was had and on March 25, 1919, the suit was dismissed on plaintiff’s motion, but without prejudice. The husband immediately brought another suit in the same court for divorce, but failing to file his bill, the cause was dismissed at May Rules following.

On May 1, 1919, the wife brought suit in the same court for maintenance, alleging that the husband had .abandoned her without just cause about January 1, 1918, and that he had ever since then refused to live with her or support her, except to furnish her a residence and pay the water, gas, telephone and light bills on the premises. She prayed that he be required to pay her a specific sum per month-so long as they should live apart, and certain sums expended by her out of her separate estate for support and maintenance since January 1, 1918. The husband answered her bill,- denying the material allegations thereof; averred that he was justified in leaving his wife in December, 1917, on the ground of cruelty. The wife obtained a decree April 15, 1920, for $250.00 per month for maintenance and for other sums for attorneys’ fees and expenses. This decree was affirmed by this court on October 18, 1921.

On April 5, 1920, the husband instituted proceedings in the Second Judicial District Court, in Washoe County, Nevada, for a divorce from the defendant, alleging in substance the same matters alleged by him in his answer to her bill for maintenance, filed in the Circuit Court of Cabell County, West Virginia. To his petition she filed answer, pleading the decree of the Cabell County Circuit Court as a former adjudication of the matters set up in the petition. The Nevada District Court decreed in her favor and this was affirmed by the Supreme Court of that state, July 1, 1921. Petition for rehearing was denied, December 3, 1921.

On March 7, 1922, the husband brought this suit in the Court of Domestic Relations of Cabell County. In his original and amended bills he alleged that defendant was guilty of *326 cruel and inhuman treatment, so much so, that he was compelled to leave his home on December 30, 1917, and she thereby willfully abandoned and deserted him and still continued to do so; that on January 26, 1922, he made an offer of reconciliation and requested his wife to return to and live with him in apartments provided by him in the city of Huntington, but that she refused to become reconciled and wholly ignored his request.

To this bill the wife by pleas and answer pleaded the decrees entered by the West Virginia courts and the Nevada courts as former adjudications of the issues as to cruelty and the alleged desertion of December 30, 1917; as to the offer of reconciliation made January 26, 1922, she averred it was not made in good faith; and she further averred that the husband willfully abandoned her on December 30, 1917, and his desertion had continued for more than three years thereafter, by reason whereof a right to an absolute divorce had already accrued to her at the time of the alleged offer of reconciliation, wherefore she was justified in law in refusing his request and he was barred of relief.

We therefore have three defenses urged:

1. Res adjudicata by the former decrees.

2. Want of good faith in plaintiff’s offer.

3. That defendant’s right to absolute divorce because of plaintiff’s willful and continuous desertion for three years had become complete and therefore he could not maintain his suit on the ground that after the lapse of that period she refused to live with him.

1. The wife brought suit for maintenance in the Circuit Court of Cabell County; to this the husband pleaded her cruelty as a defense. The court found against him on that issue. He also brought suit for divorce in Nevada on the ground of cruelty, setting up the same acts of cruelty alleged in his answer to her bill filed in the Cabell County Circuit Court. Upon her pleading the former decree, the Nevada Court found the husband was concluded by it, saying in point three of the syllabus:

“In husband’s suit for divorce for cruelty, a prior *327 decision, in a snit in another state by the wife for separate maintenance, that the wife was not guilty of cruelty, was res judicata as to the issue of cruelty, where the identical matters were relied on in both suits to establish the wife’s cruelty.” Vickers v. Vickers, 45 Nev. 274, 199 Pac. 76, 202 Pac. 31.

This is in accord with our holding in Kittle v. Kittle, 86 W. Va. 46, 102 S. E. 799; Purcell v. Purcell, 4 Hen. & Munf. (Va.) 507. See, Lang v. Lang. 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 950. Had she been guilty of cruelty or other offense, sufficient to warrant the court to grant her husband a divorce from bed and board or from the bonds of matrimony, she could not have maintained her bill for maintenance. This was one of the issues necessarily determined in the maintenance suit. We therefore hold that the present decree can not be sustained on any alleged acts of cruelty.

2. But this is not decisive of the ease. His complaint shows that he made an offer of reconciliation, and that she refused to become reconciled, and to live with him, though it is shown that he had a comfortable home for her in the same city where she resided. Notwithstanding a great deal of recent legislation, the husband is still the head of the family, and unless the circumstances be exceptional, he has the legal right to choose the place of the family residence. This is conceded. But defendant claims his offer was not in good faith. The parties testified in chambers;, the trial judge heard their testimony and was fully conversant with the whole story. Besides, there is not a word in defendant’s testimony tending in the least degree to show that she would be willing to live with plaintiff under any circumstances. Many courts hold that if it be shown that the offer would be futile, no offer' need be shown. We need not decide that point. Plaintiff shows that he made the offer by letter; a copy appears in the record. Its receipt by defendant is admitted." Plaintiff testifies it was made, in good faith, and the court so found. There is nothing in the record that negatives that finding, so that issue we must resolve in favor of plaintiff.

3. Defendant’s counsel insistently stress the third point. They contend that the husband abandoned and deserted the *328

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 279, 95 W. Va. 323, 41 A.L.R. 266, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vickers-v-vickers-wva-1924.