Swantkowski v. Swantkowski
Swantkowski v. Swantkowski
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The fifth section of the Act of 1850, P. L. 590, confers jurisdiction on the courts of common pleas in all cases of divorce for wilful, malicious and continued desertion
We cannot1 follow the judge in this reasoning. There is no doubt that the wife wished to get into the house. She could not do it because her husband prevented her. Could it be said if she had succeeded in getting in and had remained there for some time and then left that her desertion would have occurred on the. day she got into the house. The fact that she refused her husband’s offer -made some weeks after and within six months prior to the filing of the libel may indicate that she had changed her mind, but it does not' show that she did not wish to return to her husband’s house on October 11, 1919, on which day she did the only thing she could do to get back to her husband. The matter resolves itself into this anomaly that the husband’s wrongful act in preventing his wife’s return affords the basis of proving that she maliciously and wilfully deserted him on that occasion, for if he had admitted her there would not under any possible view, one might hold, have been any desertion
The libellant, therefore, had no right to file his libel. It was too soon. He had to wait six months after the actual desertion occurred. The courts cannot ignore the limitation imposed by the act of assembly: Wise v. Cambridge Springs Borough, 262 Pa. 139. The libellant is in the same position as one who brings his suit before his action accrues. The court had no jurisdiction and the libel should have been dismissed. All the assignments are sustained save the last which by reason of our conclusion on the others requires no discussion. The decree of the lower court is reversed and the libel dismissed. Appellee for costs.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Divorce — Desertion—Separation by wrongful act of libellant— Libel prematurely filed — Jurisdiction. In the trial of an action of divorce, it appeared that the wife of libellant had brought a charge of desertion and nonsupport against her husband. On the day designated she left their common domicile in the morning to attend the hearing and in the afternoon she returned. The libellant locked the doors, refused to admit her, and drove her away. The good faith of her attempt to return and continue her relations with him was not questioned.’ Six months subsequent to this incident a libel charging desertion was filed by the husband. The court’ below ruled that since it appeared that the libellant had attempted to induce the respondent to return, which she refused to do, the desertion should be dated back to the date of the actual separation, and that ■ the action, therefore, was properly brought within the provision of the 5th section of the Act of 1850, P. L. 590, authorizing an application at any time not less than six months after the cause of divorce shall have taken place. Held: the libel was filed too soon and the court had no jurisdiction. The intention to desert may be known by the declarations of the parties, but the intention cannot supply the absence of the act. A wife may intend to desert her husband and declare that intention, but desertion only occurs when she actually leaves him. The husband’s wrongful act in denying his wife admission to their home cannot afford the basis of proving that she maliciously and wilfully deserted him on the date of such act.