Correa v. Bonet

Mr. Chief Justice Hernández

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is .an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment of the District Court of Aguadilla in a divorce case.

Epifanio Correa y Benet brought an action for divorce in that court on May 19, 1919, against his wife, Ramona Bo-net y Bonilla, alleging that on July 4, 1917, plaintiff, and defendant contracted marriage in the town of Aguada, they then having a daughter eleven years old named .Primitiva, and. that ‘ ‘ a few days after their marriage it seems that the defendant became disgusted with the marital life, .notwithstanding the delicate attentions and good behavior of her husband, the plaintiff, and finally abandoned their home about the month of August, 1917, leaving her husband in á final, firm and decided manner and expressing her intention not to return despite the repeated requests of and the steps taken by the plaintiff to have her'come back to their home and there live in peace and happiness.”

The defendant not having appeared to answer the complaint, her default was entered, the case was tried in hey absence and the court entered judgment on June 18, 1919, as follows:

“After examining the complaint, to which there is no' answer *72because tfté' defendant is in default, which was duly entered by the elei'k of the court, and the testimony of the plaintiff, Epifanio Correa y Bene.t, the court hereby dismisses the complaint because it appears from the testimony of the said plaintiff that he has not personally taken any steps to induce the defendant, Ramona Bonet y Bonilla, to return to their home.”

The appellant alleges in support of the appeal that the court erred in dismissing the complaint on the sole ground that the plaintiff had not personally requested his wife to return and live with him, and in. refusing to admit the testimony of other witnesses whom the plaintiff desired to call after he-himself had testified.

From the transcript of the record it appears that in giving his testimony tending to prove the allegations of the complaint the plaintiff stated, among other things, that during the same week in which his wife abandoned him and also thereafter he sent her messages that he did not- wish to separate from her, but did not endeavor to have a personal interview with her, whereupon the judge said to the attorney that the most important testimony in a divorce case is that of the interested party and as the husband admits that he did not go in person to see his wife and only commissioned other persons to talk to her, the case could not be decided in his favor and the plaintiff could not produce any more evidence, as he desired to, because it had been shown by his own testimony that he had not taken all the necessary steps to establish the fact that he was the actual victim of abandonment. The ruling of the court was excepted to.

We said in the cases of Moret v. Vázquez, 5 P. R. R. 233; Girot v. Crispín, 23 P. R. R. 764, and Negroni v. Collazo, 26 P. R. R. 85, that “the firm and decided determination of one of the spouses not to live with the other and comply with the duties imposed by the natural and civil law, persisted in for more than one year, constitutes the abandonment specified by subdivision 5 of section 164 of the Civil Code as a ground for divorce.” And an indispensable element of *73abandonment is tbe' nolition of tbe other sponsé, tbe period of abandonment beginning to run from tbe time when such nolition is manifested. But neither tbe law nor tbe jurisprudence laid down in the cases cited makes it an indispensable element of abandonment that tbe abandoned spouse shall make personal and unsuccessful requests of tbe other, to return to tbe abandoned home. On tbe contrary, in Catinchi v. Catinchi, 27 P. R. R. 386, we held that where an abandonment and intention to abandon appéar, any effort at reconciliation on tbe part of the innocent husband or wife is frequently rendered unnecessary (Landier v. Lanier, 5 Heisk. 62; Patterson v. Patterson, 88 Pac. 196), and that an effort at reconciliation is only necessary when such intention is not certain, as when there was a spirit of acquiescence on the part of tbe innocent person. Hitchoock v. Hitchoock, 15 App. D. C. 93. And it cannot be said positively that the' attempt at reconciliation must be made directly and pérsonally by one spouse to the other, for there may be cases where the intervention of third persons may be sufficient.

The coiirt committed manifest error in refusing to allow the' plaintiff to introduce other evidence besides his own testimony to prove the abandonment pleaded as a ground for the divorce. The weighing of the testimony of the plaintiff alone in order to conclude whether or not there was abandonment was. premature, the plaintiff having offered other evidence which perhaps might establish the abandonment.

The judgment below must be reversed and the ease remanded to the Court of Aguadilla for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

Reversed and remanded.

Justices Wolf, del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.