Goodwyn v. Goodwyn
222 Va. 53 (1981)
PER CURIAM.
The
sole question for review in this appeal is whether the evidence is sufficient
to support the decree of the trial court awarding a divorce on the ground of
wilful desertion.
Juliette
Walker Goodwyn filed a bill of complaint for divorce on the ground of cruelty
in June of 1975. In a cross-bill,
Frederick R. Goodwyn, her husband, alleged that she had deserted him on or
about May 10, 1975. Having determined
that the wife had Aremoved herself from the bedroom formerly occupied by
herself and (her husband)@ and that this act was not caused by her husband, the
Commissioner in Chancery reported that the wife had deserted her husband and
thus was not entitled to spousal support.
The Chancellor, confirming the Commissioner=s report, awarded the husband a divorce on the ground
of desertion and denied spousal support to the wife.
The
parties were married in Wilmington, North Carolina, in 1955 and have three
children. The events in controversy
occurred after approximately twenty years of marriage. In may of 1975, after brief visits with her
sister in New Jersey and her husband=s
brother in Portsmouth, the wife returned to the marital residence in Portsmouth
and remained there until June 25, 1975, when she was hospitalized for a
cerebral hemorrhage. From the time of
her return from her visits until her hospitalization in June, she occupied a
separate bedroom from the one she had previously shared with her husband. Nevertheless, during this period, the wife
had a job and participated, along with other family members, in the cooking of
meals, purchasing of groceries, cleaning of the house, and taking care of the
children. In his report, the Commissioner noted that until the wife was
hospitalized, she was Aworking...and performing her usual and customary tasks
about the home.@
After
her hospitalization in Portsmouth, the wife was transferred to another hospital
where she remained until September of 1977.
Since her release from the hospital, she has lived with her mother in
North Carolina.
Whether
one=s unwillingness to have sexual intercourse with one=s spouse constitutes desertion is a question we have
addressed in many cases. In Chandler
v. Chandler, 132 Va. 418,
112 S.E. 856 (1922), we held
that a spouse=s unjustified withdrawal of sexual intercourse
constituted desertion Awhen such withdrawal is accompanied... with such
wilful breach and neglect of other marital duties as to practically destroy
home life in every true sense, and to render the marriage state well nigh
intolerable and impossible to be endured.@ Id.
at 430-431,
112 S.E. at 860-861. See also Ringgold v. Ringgold, 128
Va. 485, 495-96, 104 S.E. 836, 840 (1920). In Albert v. Albert, 137 Va.
1, 119 S.E.61 (1923), however, we ruled that a wife=s refusal Ato
cohabit@ with her husband for a period of three to six months
did not constitute desertion where they lived together in the same house, the
wife cooked and cleaned for him, and they had their meals at the same
table. We reaffirmed the rule that the Amere withdrawal of sexual intercourse, although based
on no just cause or excuse, where the marital duties are otherwise performed,
does not constitute desertion.@ Id. At
3, 119 S.E. at 61. Accord, Hoback.
Hoback, 208 Va. 432, 436-37, 158 S.E. 2d 113, 117 (1967); Davis v. Davis,
187 Va. 63, 69, 45 S.E. 2d 918, 921 (1948).
See also Carneal v. Carneal, 211 Va. 162, 176 S.E. 2d 305 (1970),
and Aichner v. Aichner, 215 Va. 624, 212 S.E. 2d 278 (1975), where we
held that a showing of mere cessation of intercourse, absent evidence of
permanent and unexcused refusal, was insufficient to establish cruelty or
desertion as a ground of divorce.
The
evidence in this case fails to reveal that the wife neglected her familial
responsibilities. The Commissioner
reported that she contributed to the well-being of her family by working and by
sharing in the responsibility of cleaning the house, cooking meals, and caring
for the children. All that the evidence
shows is that there was a cessation of sexual intercourse for a period of less
that two months prior to the wife=s
hospitalization. Thus, this case is
distinguishable from Kinggold, supra, and Chandler, supra, and
the evidence is insufficient to support a finding of the trial court that the
wife wilfully deserted her husband.
We
will reverse the judgment of the trial court, reinstate the wife=s bill of complaint, dismiss the husband=s cross-bill, and remand the case for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed
and remanded.