Opinion
No. 46/250.
05-02-1910
Royal P. Tuller, of Vinelaud, for petitioner. Herbert C. Bartlett, of Vineland, for defendant.
Petition for divorce by Abram Pitel against Anna Pitel. On petition of defendant foralimony pendente lite. Alimony denied, and counsel fee awarded.
Royal P. Tuller, of Vinelaud, for petitioner.
Herbert C. Bartlett, of Vineland, for defendant.
LEAMING, V. C. By the petition filed herein, Abram Pitel seeks a divorce from his wife on the ground of statutory desertion. The desertion is alleged to have occurred in August, 1915, and to have continued since that time.
Defendant by her answer denies any desertion on her part, and by way of cross-petition seeks a divorce from her husband for desertion, alleging the desertion to have occurred June 5, 1914, and to have continued since that time.
Petitioner, the husband, has answered the cross-petition denying the desertion therein alleged, and setting forth that the issue raised by the cross-petition has been heretofore determined by this court in a suit in which defendant was complainant and the petitioner herein was defendant.
Cross-petitioner herein has now filed in this cause a petition for alimony pendente lite. In that petition, verified by her affidavit, she states that the charge of desertion made by her husband is untrue, and that the truth is that her husband deserted her June 5. 1914, and that his desertion has continued since that time. Her petition for alimony further specifically sets forth certain abuse and neglect by her husband on and prior to June 5, 1914.
The husband has answered the petition for alimony by a verified answer, setting forth that on August 8, 1916, his wife filed in this court a bill of complaint against him for maintenance, which bill contained substantially the same averments made in her present petition for alimony pendente lite, and that he then answered the bill for maintenance by denials of the desertion therein alleged and by averments that his wife had deserted him; that the cause proceeded to final hearing, and a final decree was entered therein in this court July 10, 1917, dismissing his wife's bill, and that the decree of this court was thereafter affirmed by the Court of Errors and Appeals. The affidavit and exhibits of that court record, which are annexed to the answer to the present petition for alimony, fully disclose that the issue then heard and disposed of by this court was whether the husband had at that time by his conduct brought himself within the provisions of section 26 of our Divorce Act! (2 Comp. St. 1910, p. 2038) by abandoning his wife or separating himself from her and refusing or neglecting to maintain and provide for her, and that to support the affirmative of that issue the wife relied upon substantially the same averments which are now contained in her petition for alimony pendente lite, while in that suit the husband denied those averments and also claimed successive efforts on his part to induce his wife to live with him, which efforts had continued down to about the time at which the desertion of the wife is now alleged in the husband's petition for divorce to have occurred. The exhibits annexed to the answer of the husband to the wife's present petition for alimony also disclose that these issues were resolved by the court against the wife, and that they were so resolved especially because of the efforts of the husband to induce his wife to live with him. The court specifically found those efforts on the part of the husband to have been sincere on his part and to have been improperly resisted upon the part of the wife. It is thus made to appear that the former litigation arose from a separation of the parties which occurred June 5, 1914 (the date the wife now alleges her husband deserted her), and which separation was claimed by each party to have been the fault of the other, and that the husband further defended upon the further claim that since the separation and down to August, 1915 (the date he now alleges as the date of his wife's desertion), he had made repeated efforts to induce his wife to live with him; and that the court by findings of fact ascertained that the wife had wrongfully refused to accede to her husband's efforts to induce her to return to him, and accordingly dismissed her bill.
Upon this record it is clear that it must now be accepted as an adjudicated fact between these parties that up to the date last referred to the wife was not entitled to enforce support from her husband. That issue is clearly res adjudicata. Smith v. Smith, 55 N. J. Eq. 223, 37 Atl. 49; Freund v. Freund, 71 N. J. Eq. 524, 63 Atl. 756, on appeal, 72 N. J. Eq. 943, 73 Atl. 1117; Lake v. Lake, 89 Atl. 534; Wilber v. Wilber, 105 Atl. 664. It would also seem that at the final hearing of the present suit the wife must be regarded as an obstinate deserter of her husband on the date last named (August, 1915), since the court then determined that on that date, and prior thereto, the husband had, in good faith, endeavored to induce his wife to return to him, and that she had wrongfully refused to do so. That question, however, is not for final determination at this time.
The wife's petition for alimony pendente lite is wholly silent touching any specific matters which may have transpired since that date; no averment is made by her showing any change of attitude on her part toward her husband, or on his part toward her, since that time.
In these circumstances, I am clearly unable to award her alimony pendente lite in the present suit.
In the wife's answer to the petition for divorce, she denies continuous desertion for two years since August, 1915. That denial alone, aside from her cross-petition, involvesan investigation of the relations of the parties since that time and entitles the wife to an allowance to enable her to defend.
I will, accordingly, allow her a counsel fee of $25.