Williams v. Williams

265 P. 87, 33 Ariz. 367, 61 A.L.R. 1264, 1928 Ariz. LEXIS 210
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1928
DocketCivil No. 2631.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 265 P. 87 (Williams v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Williams, 265 P. 87, 33 Ariz. 367, 61 A.L.R. 1264, 1928 Ariz. LEXIS 210 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

ROSS, C. J.

— On April 21st, 1926, John H. Williams brought this action to obtain an absolute divorce from Mattie L. Williams, his wife, alleging that the latter had wilfully deserted him on or about April 10th, 1925; also, that defendant had been guilty of excesses, cruelty and outrages towards plaintiff. To this complaint the defendant filed an answer, pleading in bar to plaintiff’s cause of action a judgment of separation from bed and board entered in her favor on December 18th, 1924, upon the grounds of desertion and cruelty. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and upon its conclusion judgment was rendered in favor of defendant.

The question is whether the defendant, who was living separate and apart from plaintiff from December 18th, 1924, under a decree of the court, could be guilty of wilful desertion. It is the contention of plaintiff that she could, and upon such assumption he attempted to prove at the trial a good-faith offer of reconciliation on his part, The rejection of such *369 offer is the basis of the only assignment that requires attention. It is contended that, notwithstanding defendant was living separate and apart from plaintiff in pursuance of a judgment of the •court, her refusal to be reconciled amounted to a desertion from the date of the refusal and ripened into a cause of action in favor of plaintiff when continued for the statutory period of one year, as in this case.

Under the laws of this state, divorces are of two kinds. The husband or wife, upon proper statutory grounds, may be granted an absolute dissolution of the marriage bond. The decree in such a proceeding frees them from the bonds of matrimony and all marital obligations to each other. In addition to this remedy, open to both the husband, and the wife, the wife, when grounds exist that would entitle her to an absolute divorce, may, if she desires the continuance of the marital relation, be freed from the obligation of cohabitation by securing a decree of separation from bed and board. In the latter case the decree may be forever or for a limited time. Par. 3874, Civ. Code 1913. This is the ecclesiastical or common-law decree of divorce a mensa et thoro. The decree interposed as a bar to the present action was of this kind. It provided for a separation from bed and board forever, and directed the plaintiff to pay defendant alimony at the rate of one hundred dollars a month, but it did not dissolve the bonds of matrimony. The status of the parties as married people remained the same, with the exception that the wife was freed from the obligation of living with her husband, and such freedom was to continue “forever” unless there should take place a change of heart and mind of the parties as provided in paragraph 3879, Civil Code, which reads as follows:

“Upon a joint application of the parties, and satisfactory proof of their reconciliation, the court grant *370 ing any decree of separation may revoke the same, under suck regulations and restrictions as it shall prescribe. ’ ’

Under this statute, it is not sufficient that the delinquent or guilty husband shall have repented' and offered to amend his life. No independent action on his part is contemplated or authorized to secure a revocation of the decree. Nothing short of a reconciliation of the parties, satisfactorily shown to the court upon a joint application, can nullify the decree of separation from bed and board, and as long as the decree exists the wife may live apart from the husband and not be guilty of wilful desertion. Her act of living apart from him is under and by virtue of a decree of a competent court; it has the sanction of law, whereas wilful desertion is not only a violation of the marriage vows, but a wrong against society. It may seem that this penalty inflicted on a husband whose wrongful conduct towards his wife has compelled her to seek redress in the courts of the land, especially after he has repented and sought a reconciliation, is more severe than is necessary or expedient, but it should be remembered that he brought it on himself; that if he had not first deserted his wife the separation from bed and board could not have been obtained by her on that ground.

What was said in Boger v. Boger, 86 W. Va. 590, 104 S. E. 49, is expressive of our convictions of the law:

“Desertion under such circumstances is a legal impossibility. The decree awarded the wife affirmed her right to live separate and apart from her husband, and absolved her from the duty to cohabit with him or even to treat him kindly. Though still his wife in a qualified sense, she was relieved of personal duty to him in any way. She could lawfully absent herself from him. Her exercise of that right could not amount to any misconduct or wrong toward him, in the legal sense of the terms. If, as the argument *371 assumes, it is wrong to deny Mm freedom from the bonds of matrimony, while he is cut off from association with his wife and children and exposed to their indifference and perhaps hatred, the wrong done him is not a legal one for which the law affords redress; wherefore he is not within the legal maxim he invokes. There are a great many moral, economic, social, marital, and other wrongs of which the law takes no notice. Presumptively his wrongful conduct brought about the altered status of which he complains, and the Legislature, in denying him a right which it has extended or permitted to her, has no doubt applied another maxim of equal wisdom, namely, that no person shall be permitted to take any advantage, or to profit in any way, by his own wrong.”

Our statute. authorizing a decree of separation from bed and board (chap. 5, tit. 32, Civ. Code 1913) was taken from Minnesota, with the exception of the last paragraph (3880) thereof. The courts of that state upon this question have asserted that:

“A separation which is sanctioned and authorized by the decree or judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is neither wrongful nor unlawful, and cannot be made a ground for divorce as against the party rightfully acting under it.” Weld v. Weld, 27 Minn. 330, 7 N. W. 267.

The divorce a mensa et thoro being available to the wife only will not bar the husband from obtaining an absolute divorce on any of the specified statutory grounds, but such ground or grounds must arise because of the unlawful and wrongful acts of the wife and not upon acts sanctioned and authorized by judgment or decree. Evans v. Evans, 43 Minn. 31, 7 L. R. A. 448, 44 N. W. 524. The wife likewise may, subsequent to a decree of separation from bed and board, maintain an action for an absolute divorce upon any of the specified statutory grounds, and under the provisions of paragraph 3880, supra, she is expressly authorized to maintain such action *372 on the same grounds as were the basis of the decree of separation from bed and board.

This exception to the general rule, requiring a joint application of the parties with satisfactory-proof of a reconciliation before a separation decree may be revoked, is made in favor of the wife and not the husband.

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Bluebook (online)
265 P. 87, 33 Ariz. 367, 61 A.L.R. 1264, 1928 Ariz. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-williams-ariz-1928.