Opinion by
The above parties were married February 26, 1884,
These issues were tried June 22, 1900, in Common Pleas No. 1, when each action was dismissed for want of adequate proof.
About ten months later, the husband made overtures to his wife for a renewal of the marital relation, and after considerable correspondence between the parties, and between their respective attorneys no reconciliation was effected. This action by the husband was then begun November 22, 1913, in which the wife is charged with desertion, and culminated in a trial before a jury with a verdict on November 4, 1915, in favor of the husband.
The first assignment of error relates to the exclusion, under objection, of parts of letters written in 1901 by counsel of the wife, to the counsel of the husband, and these were properly excluded for the reason that they related wholly to incidents preceding the earlier divorce proceedings, at which trial it was decided by a jury that the offense they suggested did not exist, hence these facts could have no bearing on the issue being heard. The principal contentions of the wife were that the husband was bound “to provide a home in which he should live with his wife and child by themselves, and without other inmates of the home, except such as were a part of their family” (fifth assgt.); “That the attempts to effect a reconciliation, were not made in good faith, and with a sincere desire, upon the part of the libellant at the time they were made, that they should be accepted by the respondent” (tenth assgt.).
These propositions were well disposed of by the court in saying to the jury, “From the evidence which you have, you must decide whether that offer was or was not a bona fide offer, whether it was made in good faith, and
It appears, that the offer was made to “again take Mrs. Sharp back, together with their daughter and furnish them with a home thoroughly suitable to their condition in life and his means of subsistence.”
The libellant was a medical practitioner, and while he was seeking to establish a practice, he leased for the term of three years, a three story brick house, which had been occupied by a physician who had recently died. His family would have exclusive possession of the first and second floors of this building. The wife objected to the neighborhood, and though repeated requests were made by the husband for her return, she declined and persisted in remaining apart from him for more than twelve years before this suit was brought. Her insistence on having a separate building for their sole occupancy was not reasonable under the present congested conditions controlling home life in a city, and but few persons can hope for, much less maintain, such an establishment. The question of his good faith could only be determined by the jury in the light of all the circumstances, and no case has yet fixed the gauge of good faith in such an offer to be “a sincere desire that his offer be accepted.”
Good faith or the want of it, is not a visible, tangible
The trial was fairly conducted, and the verdict was clearly warranted by the testimony. We find no error in this record to justify a reversal of the judgment. .
The assignments are overruled and the judgment is affirmed,.