The genesis of this appeal arises from the strategic decision of Vincent Das (“Husband”) not to attack the suit brought against him by Anuradha Das (“Wife”) frontally but on the flank. His strategy is unsuccessful.
The issues that Husband presents to this Court arise from the denial of his motion to vacate a default judgment of absolute divorce entered against him and in favor of his Wife in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. Husband, who now sojourns in India after spiriting away one of the couple’s minor children, filed a subsequent motion to strike this order and requested a hearing. The court addressed his motion by advising counsel that a hearing would be scheduled “on condition that Mr. Das and the minor child, Radha, are present.” Husband appeals and asks:
1. Did the trial court abuse its discretion in denying Husband’s motion to vacate the order of default?
2. Did the trial court abuse its discretion or deny Husband due process by not granting a continuance of the divorce hearing?
8. Did the trial court err or abuse its discretion in granting Wife an absolute divorce?
We answer “No” to these questions and explain.
Facts
The parties were married on August 13,1978, in New Dehli, India. Two children were bom of the marriage: Radha, on October 7,1983, and Jaya, on October 3,1985.
*7 The parties separated in January 1998, following entry of a domestic violence protective order granted to Wife by the District Court of Montgomery County. The order granted Wife custody of the children, who are minors. Because the order was set to expire on January 10, 1999, the parties entered into an “Interim Agreement,” reached during voluntary mediation and designed to preserve the status quo for custody and living arrangements, on December 14,1998. The agreement provided that Husband would not “resume residence in the family home” for three months from December 10, 1998, and would “deliver the children’s passports to David S. Goldberg, mediator, for safekeeping.”
On January 19, 1999, Wife filed an Emergency Complaint for Custody, which alleged that Husband had undermined her custody of and relationship with Radha in violation of the Interim Agreement and that he had “abused the process to gain possession of his daughter.” 1 The court denied this complaint on January 20, after it conferred with counsel. At this time, the parties agreed through counsel that Wife would retain custody of the children.
Notwithstanding the Interim Agreement and subsequent oral custody agreement, Husband fled the country, taking Radha with him, on or about April 16, and went to Japan, following personal service of the Amended Complaint for Absolute Divorce on March 8. 2 Wife neither knew of nor consented to Husband’s plans to remove the child from Maryland. In response, Wife filed a second Emergency Complaint *8 for Custody. The Emergency Complaint stated that “Defendant [fled] to Japan with the minor child on or about April 16, 1999, where he arid the child remain at this time.” Husband did not oppose this complaint, because, he alleges, neither he nor his attorney were served. The court granted Wife legal and physical custody of the children by an order issued April 30.
Cheryl P. Vural entered an appearance as counsel on Husband’s behalf on March 25 and moved to strike Wife’s divorce complaint. Neither Husband nor his lawyer, however, appeared for the scheduling conference on April 28, despite the court’s notice to husband mailed on March 19. The court denied Husband’s Motion to Strike on June 1. Before the period for filing an Answer began, Vural moved to strike her own appearance on May 12, and the court granted her motion without a hearing on June 3. The court immediately mailed Husband Notice to Employ New Counsel.
Husband’s residential address before he left the country— and the address used by the court for the divorce proceedings—was 5104 White Flint Drive, Kensington, Maryland 20985. Wife alleges in her opposition to the motion on appeal that Husband continued to pay rent for this apartment home at the time of the post-judgment motions. He used this address on the mediation agreement executed on December 4, 1998, and his own attorney certified in her Motion to Strike Appearance that this address was Husband’s “last known mailing address,” but she also explained that her “various efforts” to contact her client had been unsuccessful and she had not heard from him since April 13.
Husband was thus without representation at the June 30 hearing on pendente lite child support, and Wife testified there that Husband was “to the best of [her] knowledge” in India. 3 The master filed a partial transcript as a report and recommendation, which was sent to Husband at the Kensing *9 ton address. Moreover, because Husband did not file an Answer to Wife’s Amended Complaint, Wife requested an Order of Default on June 21, which was entered on June 30. 4 The Clerk mailed Husband a Notice of Default Order at the Kensington address.
Concurrent to the custody and divorce actions, a child in need of assistance (CINA) action for Radha was wending its way through the District Court. On May 25, Nancy Karkowsky, Radha’s court-appointed attorney, filed a Praecipe notifying that court and the circuit court that, after first being taken to Japan, Radha was now “staying with the father and the family of the father’s cousin ... in Chandigarh, India.” On June 2, Karkowsky notified the courts in a Second Praecipe of what she believed to be Radha’s exact address in New Delhi, India. 5 Information in both notices as to the whereabouts of Husband and Radha came from Husband’s father. Copies of these notices were sent to counsel of record for both Husband, i.e., Vural, and Wife.
When the divorce trial began on August 11, Gary Segal, Husband’s attorney for employment matters, attended the hearing. He explained that he was “here for Dr. Das,” but because he received little notice he was ill-prepared to enter an appearance and undertake full representation. Segal ad *10 vised the court that, if he were to enter an appearance, he would petition the court for a continuance; however, at the present time, he “[did] not feel that [he] would be capable of properly defending Dr. Das in this matter.” The court excused Segal, noting that any request for continuance would be denied, which “is pretty typical in our process today. Under the best of circumstances, cases are not continued____”
At trial, Wife testified that she had been subject to repeated acts of physical and mental cruelty during the marriage. Her brother corroborated this testimony. Husband’s father, Badri Das, who had been given power of attorney for Husband’s affairs in the United States, sought to give testimony and present documents to the court. The court allowed him to testify as to Husband’s and Radha’s current locale, which was different from the address Karkowsky provided. 6 The elder Das could not, however, recall their exact address. The court did not allow the father to speak otherwise on behalf of his son, 7 and the testimony of Wife and her brother went untested by cross-examination.
On August 19, the court granted Wife an absolute divorce on the grounds of cruelty and excessively vicious conduct, legal and residential custody of the parties’ minor children, child support, use and possession of the family home and family-use personalty, a monetary award, and attorney’s fees.
*11 Husband quickly retained new counsel; however, on October 19, the court denied his Motion to Vacate Order of Default, Stay Entry of Judgment, Permit Filing of Responsive Pleadings, Grant a New Trial and/or Reconsider Award of Custody, and Certain Other Relief. Husband then, on October 26, filed a pleading styled Defendant’s Unopposed Motion to Strike Order Dated October 19, 1999, and Set Hearing in Open Court, to which Wife filed opposition. By letter dated November 16,1999, the court addressed this motion by advising counsel: “I do not believe that there is any requirement that I schedule a hearing on Defendant’s Motion to Vacate Order---- However, I will agree to schedule a hearing on the condition that Mr. Das and the minor child, Radha, aré present.” Husband noted a timely appeal on November 24.
Discussion
I
Standard of Review
The question of whether this appeal is ripe for our review has troubled us, and we flirted with dismissing it entirely. Husband appeals a judgment that appears not to be final, yet the trial court’s response to his most recent motion and ministerial failure to deny this motion leave the parties in a deadlock.
Husband’s Motion to Vacate Order of Default was filed eleven days after the Judgment of Absolute Divorce was docketed. Husband’s motion was thus a request to revise a final judgment, filed pursuant to the limitations of Maryland Rule 2-535, 8 rather than a motion to alter or amend a non-final judgment filed under the more generous standard of *12 Maryland Rule 2-534. 9 The instant appeal, at least as framed by the parties, is from the trial court’s denial of that motion.
The problem lies with Husband’s Unopposed [sic ] Motion to Strike Order Dated October 19, 1999, and Set Hearing in Open Court, filed but a single day after the docketing of the court’s order denying Husband’s Motion to Vacate Order of Default. Under Rule 2-534, Husband’s diligence in filing this motion within 10 days of judgment stayed the entry of the court’s order and this appeal.
Unnamed Atty. v. Attorney Grievance Comm’n,
I have reviewed Defendant’s Motion to Strike Order of Court____ I do not believe that there is any requirement that I schedule a hearing on Defendant’s Motion to Vacate Order of Default, Stay Entry of Judgment---- However, I will agree to schedule a hearing on the condition that Mr. Das and the minor child, Radha, are present.
*13 In reply, counsel wrote the chancellor, declining to present Husband and his daughter in court because “[t]he issues raised in the motion can be considered in large part on the record =.. and involve primarily legal grounds on which Vincent and his daughter are not necessarily witnesses,” travel from India “is an expensive proposition,” and “Radha is in school, so a trip here could be very disruptive to her education.” He also stated:
Your order dated October 19, 1999, and filed October 26, 1999, denied our motion without a hearing. Unless that order is rescinded, and a hearing on the original motion set, our client must appeal the judgment in this case immediately-
Husband’s counsel asked the court below to docket this correspondence and proceeded with this appeal, informing us at oral argument that he considered the Motion to Strike to have been denied. The docket, however, shows Husband’s motion as open.
Although Wife does not challenge our jurisdiction, we nevertheless address this point.
Popham,
Considerations of judicial efficiency also constrain us to entertain this appeal. Between counsel’s attempt to cow the trial court into restoring to Husband that which he forfeited and the court’s reply, this matter is frozen in time. Husband is unlikely to return to Maryland, for he reasonably believes that he would incur significant liability.
Cf. Popham,
*15
That the court below failed in its ministerial duties under Maryland Rule 2-601 (requiring entry, recording, and indexing of judgment) is troubling, but need not be fatal in the circumstances of this case.
Cf. Davis,
Husband’s appeal is from the denial of his Motion to Vacate Order of Default, filed under Maryland Rule 2-535, not from the underlying Judgment of Divorce itself.
In Re: Adoption/Guardianship No. 93321055/CAD,
“where no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the [trial] court,” or when the court acts “without reference to any guiding rules or principles.” It has also been said to exist when the ruling under consideration “appears to have been made on untenable grounds,” when the ruling is “clearly against the logic and effect of facts and inferences before the court,” when the ruling is “clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying a just result,” when the ruling is ‘Violative of fact and logic,” or when it constitutes an “untenable judicial act that defies reason and works an injustice.”
*16
North v. North, 102
Md.App. 1, 13-14,
II
Motion to Vacate Order of Default
We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Husband’s motion. Marching behind the banner of Maryland Rule 2-535(b) (“On motion of any party filed at any time, the court may exercise revisory power and control over the judgment in case of fraud, mistake, or irregularity.”), Husband attacks the trial court’s exercise of discretion on three fronts. First, he argues that the judgment should be vacated because Wife’s counsel engaged in extrinsic fraud when she requested an Order of Default Judgment using Husband’s Kensington address. Second, he claims that the court acted with irregularity when it granted Vural’s Motion to Strike Appearance without allowing adequate time for response, as required by Maryland Rule 2-311(b).
10
Third, Husband asserts that he acted with due diligence and good faith in moving to set aside the court’s judgment. “A court ... will only exercise its revisory powers if, in addition to a finding of fraud, mistake, or irregularity, the party moving to set aside the enrolled judgment has acted with ordinary
*17
diligence, in good faith, and has a meritorious defense or cause of action.”
Tandra S. v. Tyrone
W.,
A
Extrinsic Fraud
Husband argues that the default judgment was procured by extrinsic fraud because Wife’s attorney filed both her first and second Requests for Order of Default supplying the court with Husband’s Kensington address as his “last known address.” In doing so, he argues, she perpetrated fraud on the court, because she had actual knowledge of Husband’s address in India, and she thus perpetrated a fraud on the court and prevented Husband from presenting his own favorable evidence. 11 Fraud, however, must be proven by clear and convincing evidence, and, under the instant facts, Husband has not done so. Furthermore, Husband’s own actions to evade the reach of the court and eloign his minor child in another land—including his failure to apprise the court of his change of address once this action began—were, in our view, the predominant causes of his inability to put on his case.
The trial court can disturb an enrolled judgment after the thirty-day revisory period only upon a showing of fraud, mistake, irregularity, or the failure of the court to perform a duty required by statute or rule. Md.Code (1974, 1998 Repl. Vol.), § 6-408 of the Courts
&
Judicial Proceedings Article;
see also
Md. Rule 2-535(b). This rule exists to ensure the finality of judgments,
see Tandra S.,
Maryland courts may vacate an enrolled judgment for extrinsic, but not for intrinsic, fraud. In
Hresko v. Hresko,
Intrinsic fraud is defined as “[t]hat “which pertains to issues involved in the original action or where acts constituting fraud were, or could have been, litigated therein.” Extrinsic fraud, on the other hand, is “[f]raud which is collateral to the issues tried in the case where the judgment is rendered.”
Fraud is extrinsic when it actually prevents an adversarial trial. In determining whether or not extrinsic fraud exists, the question is not whether the fraud operated to cause the trier of fact to reach an unjust conclusion, but whether the fraud prevented the actual dispute from being submitted to the fact finder at all.
Id.
at 232,
Intrinsic fraud occurs within the ease itself when, for example, a witness perjures himself or a party offers a forged instrument into evidence.
Tandra S.,
“a false promise of a compromise; or where the defendant never had knowledge of the suit, being kept in ignorance by the acts of the plaintiff; or where an attorney fraudulently or without authority assumes to represent a party and connives at his defeat; or where the attorney regularly employed corruptly sells out his client’s interest to the other side,—these, and similar cases which show that there has never been a real contest in the trial or hearing of the case, are reasons for which a new suit may be sustained to set aside and annul the former judgment or decree, and open the case for a new and a fair hearing.”
Id.,
Here, Husband fails to establish extrinsic fraud by clear and convincing evidence; instead, the evidence shows that Husband’s own failure to keep the court enlightened of his address and his actions to evade the custody orders of the court below caused his misfortunes. To be sure, Wife’s attorney had at least some notice, from the Second Praecipe filed by Karkowsky on June 2, of Husband’s most recent address before he filed the second Request for Order of Default on June 21. Whether by continuing to use Husband’s old address Wife’s counsel “set forth that type of intentionally deceptive artifice” calculated to keep him away fi*om court, made a mere record-keeping error, or acted with the understanding that Husband had access to mail sent to his Kensington address is rather nebulous from the facts presented.
See Schwartz,
What is patent, however, is that Husband withdrew from the country—in an apparent attempt to remove a minor child from the jurisdiction of Maryland courts—during ongoing litigation. Our rules on a litigant’s duties in the midst of litigation are clear. First, a litigant has a duty to keep himself informed as to the progress of a pending case.
See Penn
*20
Cent. Co. v. Buffalo Spring & Equip. Co.,
It was thus no abuse of discretion for the trial court to find that Husband’s wounds were self-inflicted, rather than caused by Wife’s alleged artifice. His assertions to the contrary, Husband was well aware that the case was at issue.
12
He was served in Arlington, Virginia, with the Amended Complaint for Absolute Divorce on March 8.
13
He also was notified on March 19 of the Scheduling Conference that he and his attorney later missed. In response to the Amended Complaint, Husband filed a preliminary Motion to Strike under Maryland Rule 2-322(e), because Wife had failed to attach a financial statement to her pleadings. He filed this motion on March 25, within the 60-day period for timely filing his answer or other responsive pleading.
See
Md. Rule 2-321(b)(l) (“A defendant who is served with an original pleading outside of the State but within the United States shall file an answer within 60 days after being served.”);
see also
Md. Rule 2-322(e). Husband left the country on or about April 15. Because “[a] civil action is commenced by filing a complaint with a court,” Md. Rule 2-101(a), Husband clearly removed himself from the jurisdiction of the court during an ongoing action of which he was duty-bound to stay apprised. Furthermore, he breached his duty to inform the court of his new address, even though he was warned by the court at least once to do so.
14
Unlike the defendant in
Grass,
which Husband cites with approval, no pleading or paper filed by Husband gives any address other
*21
than the one in Kensington.
It was reasonable, moreover, for Wife and her attorney to rely on the fact that Husband’s Kensington address was the correct one. At the time of service, his address of record was that address. Husband’s preliminary Motion to Strike used that address. The letter from Vural to Husband, advising him of her intention to withdraw, and her subsequent Motion to Strike Appearance used that address. Despite Karkowsky’s Second Praecipe, docketed on June 2, which inferred that Husband had settled in a family-owned house in New Delhi, the court itself mailed Husband’s Notice to Employ New Counsel to that address. Husband might argue with scant credibility that the Clerk’s Office should have changed the address of record based on Karkowsky’s praecipe, but we think that receiving such third-hand notice did not obligate the court to change a local address of record, where the litigant seemed to be receiving mail, to a rumored address in a remote land. The facts, moreover, in no way support Husband’s assertion that, by continuing to use the Kensington address, Wife and her attorney deliberately deceived the court and denied Husband the opportunity to present his case. If Husband could not keep his own father, who held power of attorney, informed of his exact address, how can he reasonably expect his estranged wife to have knowledge of the same?
Neither did the court err when it entered the Order of Default. On June 1, the court denied Husband’s Motion to Strike. Under Maryland Rule 2-321(c),
15
Husband’s Answer to the Amended Complaint was thus due on June 16, although the court allowed him until June 19. When no Answer was forthcoming, Wife filed a Request for Order of Default on June 21, giving as Husband’s “last known address” the Kensington location.
See
Md. Rule 2-613(b). The time for plead
*22
ing having expired, and upon written request of the plaintiff, the court entered its Order of Default as Rule 2-613(b) requires.
16
See Carter v. Harris,
The court below, moreover, properly denied Husband’s motion to stay that judgment,
19
even though his motion was filed on August 30, within thirty days after its entry.
See
Md. Rule 2-535(a) (“On motion of any party filed within 30 days after entry of judgment, the court may exercise revisory power and control over the judgment and, if the action was tried before the court, may take any action that it could have taken under Rule 2-534.”). Rule 2-613(g) expressly provides that default judgments are not subject to the broad revisory powers of Rules 2-534 and 2-535(a) except as to the relief granted. The judge’s powers are thus constrained, even during the first thirty days, and the court below did not'abuse its discretion by refusing to stay the judgment or revise the relief granted.
See also Banegura v. Taylor,
B
Motion to Strike Appearance
Husband’s second claim is that the court acted with irregularity when it granted the Motion to Strike Appearance filed by Vural. Husband argues that the court failed to allow adequate time for response, as required by Maryland Rule 2-311(b). 20 Because the court file contained information indicating that he was out of the country, Husband contends, and no Answer had been filed, the court should have held a hearing prior to granting Vural’s Motion to Strike Appearance, presumably so that he would not have been left without counsel as the deadline for filing the Answer approached. Just as Husband cannot prove extrinsic fraud, he cannot prove irregularity.
Irregularity, like fraud, provides very narrow grounds for revising a final judgment under Rule 2-535(b).
Tandra S.,
*24 Irregularity, as used in Rule 2—535(b), has been defined as “the doing or not doing of that, in the conduct of a suit at law, which, conformable to the practice of the court, ought or ought not to be done.” ...
“[I]rregularity, in the contemplation of the Rule, usually means irregularity of process or procedure ... and not an error, which in legal parlance, generally connotes a departure from truth or accuracy of which a defendant had notice and could have challenged.”
Id.
(quoting
Weitz v. MacKenzie,
Here, we find no error in the process and procedure of the instant case when the court decided to accept counsel’s Motion to Strike Appearance. Maryland Rule 2-132(b) requires that motions for withdrawal that are not made in open court
be accompanied by the client’s written consent to the withdrawal or the moving attorney’s certificate that notice has been mailed to the client at least five days prior to the filing of the motion, informing the client of the attorney’s intention to move for withdrawal and advising the client to have another attorney enter an appearance or to notify the clerk in writing of the client’s intention to proceed in proper person. Unless the motion is granted in open court, the court may not order the appearance stricken before the expiration of the time prescribed by Rule 2-311 for responding. The court may deny the motion if withdrawal of the appearance would cause undue delay, prejudice, or injustice.
Under Maryland Rule 2-311(b), the litigant who is served with such a motion “shall file a response within 15 days after being served ... or within the time allowed for a party’s original pleading pursuant to Rule 2-321(a), whichever is later.” As required by Rule 2-132(b), Vural sent notice to Husband of her impending withdrawal by letter on April 28, advising him to “immediately obtain alternative counsel and have them enter their appearance on your behalf.” After waiting consid *25 erably more than five days thereafter, and hearing nothing from Husband, Vural moved the court on May 12, attaching a copy of this letter to her papers to support her statement certifying she had notified him of her withdrawal. The court granted her motion on June 3, more than 18 days after its filing and service.
Husband cites with approval
Ritter v. Danbury,
For the same reason, Husband was not entitled to a hearing on counsel’s attempts to locate him before the court allowed her to withdraw. Rule 2-132 imposes no hearing requirement for motions made by petition.
*26 Moreover, Husband’s present contention that he lacked the notice he needed to retain new counsel strains credibility. In the very motion on appeal, Husband claimed to have dismissed Vural:
During this same time period, Defendant became dissatisfied with the services of Ms. Vural, and sought new counsel. Defendant paid a retainer to Edouard Bouquet, Esquire, and signed pleadings, including ¿n answer to the amended complaint, but was faxing these pleadings from overseas, and did not know why they were never filed.
If his allegations are true, Vural’s withdrawal and the court’s subsequent Notice to Employ New Counsel were no surprise. In his own words, he “did expect to be represented by new counsel in this case.”
Whether or not Vural’s withdrawal was expected, however, the duty to stay informed and file pleadings in timely fashion ultimately lay with Husband, and not with his attorney, incumbent or newly retained. In
Banegura,
[t]he irregularity suggested by Banegura was the discrepancy that existed between his version of why Burke did not file an answer or timely motion, and the version given by Burke. This is clearly not the type of irregularity contemplated by Rule 2-535(b)----
Id.
at 621,
*27 c
Diligence and Good Faith
Husband next asserts that he acted with ordinary diligence and good faith in moving to set aside the court’s judgment, the second element that he would have proved had the court exercised its revisory power under Rule 2-535(b). 21 We find no fault with Husband’s exercise of diligence. Husband filed his initial Motion to Vacate within two weeks after the final judgment, an impressive feat for a litigant half a world away.
On the side of the equation pertaining to good faith, however, we offer no praise. “The power to set aside a judgment upon motion has been variously described as a power ‘incident to all courts of record,’ as a power based on ‘equitable grounds’ and as the exercise of a
‘quasi
equitable power.’”
Tasea,
Ill
The Continuance
Husband’s next two issues on appeal pertain to the Judgment of Absolute Divorce, and not to the post-trial motions. Husband first argues that the trial court abused its discretion and denied him due process by not granting him a continuance at the divorce hearing. Citing
Rutherford v. Rutherford,
First, the proceeding in question was a divorce action and nothing more. Had collateral civil contempt proceedings arisen—and the docket shows that they did not—the court would have had opportunity to appoint counsel for Husband if he could not provide his own. To date, however, the threat of incarceration dwells only in Husband’s imagination. The right to counsel does not apply to a simple action for divorce.
Second, as for the court’s alleged refusal to recognize counsel’s appearance, our examination of the transcript shows that it simply did not occur. The transcript does not show that the court tried to prevent attorney Segal from entering an appearance in this matter. It does not show that the court “assumed and concluded” anything beyond that which Segal actually said. Neither does it show that the court summarily denied a continuance; in fact, none was requested.
Instead, Segal—who acknowledged freely that he had been retained primarily for employment matters—voluntarily declined to enter an appearance. He did so because he had been unable to prepare for trial, after he learned that the court would likely deny any continuance he might request. The transcript reveals that Segal was unable to prepare because Husband did not communicate his requirements for representation in a timely fashion:
SEGAL: I am here in a rather strange position in that Dr. Das ... had hired me to handle some other matters pertaining to employment. That was back in March.
We did talk about the fact that there were marital difficulties, but he had indicated to me at that time that things had proceeded smoothly, and nothing was needed of me at that time____
*30 I did not hear from Dr. Das for another month. At that time it was again with regard solely to employment matters. I then heard sometime later that Dr. Das was in Japan. And yesterday afternoon I received a fax—in the mid-afternoon I received a fax ostensibly from, Dr. Das in India asking that I represent him as—to review the file____
I attempted to contact other attorneys who were listed on the fax, and each one advised me that or the one that I had spoken to said that he had had contact with Dr. Das, but that he had not entered his appearance in this matter____
I am reluctant ... to formally enter my appearance because, as I mentioned to Judge Turner earlier today, in for a dime, in for a dollar, and unfortunately, I do not feel that I would be capable of properly defending Dr. Das in this matter.
I have not seen the file. ... [T]he file was in Judge Turner’s chambers, which was locked---- [Y]esterday afternoon I found out a default was entered, and then speaking with plaintiffs counsel, I found out a few more facts, but I really do not have everything at hand.
And again, Your Honor, if I enter my appearance, it would be to ask this Court to continue the matter. I realize that puts me in an awkward position and perhaps it puts the Court in an awkward position, but I did want to make it know [sic] that I am here for Dr. Das, but have not yet entered my appearance.
THE COURT: Okay, sir. Thank you. Mr. Segal, based on what you have represented on the record, it would appear to me that you have fulfilled any obligation you had to Dr. Das.
And you certainly have fulfilled your obligation professionally to the system and to the Court.
And if you were to enter your appearance and to request a continuance, the request for continuance would be denied, and that is pretty typical in our process today. Under the best of circumstances, cases are not continued, but in this case a default was entered against the plaintiff, Dr. Das, by *31 this Court on June 30,1999, because he had not participated in or answered an amended complaint.
And certainly your dealings with him as you have represented indicate clearly that he did not keep you informed and did not give you all the information you, as a professional, would need to know to represent a client. So you are excused, and I appreciate what you have represented on the record.
As for a request for continuance from Husband’s father, the transcript shows that none was made. Instead, the court denied the elder Das the right to represent his son because he was not an attorney. The father served only as a witness who addressed Husband’s whereabouts.
Even if Segal or Badri Das had requested a continuance, and the court had summarily denied it, such denial would have been proper. “[W]hether to grant a continuance is in the sound discretion of the trial court, and unless [the court] acts arbitrarily in the exercise of that discretion, his action will not be reviewed on appeal.”
Thanos v. Mitchell,
The case
sub judice
is not one of those exceptional instances. Husband was already in default. He had not taken timely steps to vacate the Order of Default. As the court indicated, Segal’s attendance and remarks gave the court no basis sufficient for staying the course of events already proceeding in orderly fashion. Indeed, Segal’s personal account of Husband’s case management brought to light again the extent of Husband’s nonfeasance, providing additional justification for the Order of Default. Our reading of
Abrams v. Gay Investment Co.,
IV
The Divorce
Finally, Husband asks if the trial court erred or abused its discretion in granting Wife an absolute divorce. He argues that the facts alleged by Wife at the August 11 hearing do not support grounds for divorce based on either cruelty or excessively vicious conduct because they lack sufficient specificity and fail to reach the level of egregiousness described in some of our older cases. He also claims that Wife’s testimony was uncorroborated. We disagree.
Whether the events that bring a divorce complainant to court constitute cruelty or excessively vicious conduct has never been the stuff of which bright line rules are made, and even now our standards are shifting. Only recently, in 1998, did the legislature make cruelty and excessively vicious conduct grounds for absolute divorce in Maryland.
See
Md.Code (1984, 1999 Repl.Vol.), § 7-103(a)(7) & (8) of the Family Law Article (codifying 1998 Md. Laws 349 & 350). Before that time, cruelty of treatment gave grounds for limited divorce only, a rule that originated in English ecclesiastical courts. Because divorce itself was disfavored by the church, the rule existed only to protect the victim-party from further and more serious physical harm. “The cruelty which entitles the injured
*33
party to a divorce ... consists in that sort of conduct which endangers the life or health of the complainant, and renders cohabitation unsafe.”
Harris v. Harris,
161 Eng. Rep. 697 (1813). Maryland adopted this English rule, as the Court of Appeals explained in
Scheinin v. Scheinin,
Ordinarily a single act of violence slight in character does not constitute cruelty of treatment as a cause for divorce. But it is now accepted in Maryland, as well as generally throughout the country, that a single act may be sufficient to constitute the basis for a divorce on the ground of cruelty, if it indicates an intention to do serious bodily harm or is of such a character as to threaten serious danger in the future.
Id.
at 288-89,
The Court in Scheinin, however, went on to point out that the original definition of “cruelty” had grown more broad, to encompass mental as well as physical abuse:
It is now accepted that cruelty as a cause for divorce includes any conduct on the part of the husband or wife which is calculated to seriously impair the health or permanently destroy the happiness of the other. Thus any misconduct of a husband that endangers, or creates a reasonable apprehension that it will endanger, the wife’s safety or health to a degree rendering it physically or mentally impracticable for her to properly discharge the marital duties constitutes cruelty within the meaning of the divorce statute.
Id.
at 289-90,
In reviewing these oft-cited eases on cruelty and excessively vicious conduct, we note that most are quite old and give victims little relief from their aggressive partners by modem standards. In part, we believe, the courts’ reluctance to grant relief stems from the fact that cruelty and excessively vicious conduct were grounds for limited and not for absolute divorce, and Maryland courts have historically disfavored divorce from bed and board.
See, e.g., Bonwit,
In more recent years, however, a greater awareness and intolerance of domestic violence has shifted our public policy toward allowing the dissolution of marriages with a violence *36 element. 23 In the courts, we have responded to this trend by permitting absolute divorce on grounds of constructive desertion, a doctrine far friendlier to victims of violence in terms of the quality of proof required to grant freedom from the shackles of an abusive spouse. 24 Likewise, the General Assembly responded in 1980 by enacting the domestic violence statute, Md.Code (1984, 1999 Repl-Vol., 1999 Cum.Supp.), §§ 4-501 through 4-516 of the Family Law Article, which grants Maryland courts the power to issue civil protective orders and offers various forms of relief to victims. In 1998, as part of its continuing modernization of our family law, the legislature acknowledged that persons subject to domestic abuse should be entitled to seek absolute divorce immediately without a waiting period prior to the filing of a complaint. It thus expanded the grounds for absolute divorce to include cruelty and excessively vicious conduct. John F. Fader II & Richard J. Gilbert, Maryland Family Law § 3-2(a) (2d ed. 1999 Cum.Supp.).
*37 In the courts, we are now left holding a stack of cases—all “good law”—dating from the 1920’s that no longer square with our modem understanding of appropriate family interaction. Verbal and physical abuse may have been tolerated in another era, and our predecessors at bar may have placed the continuity of the marital bond above the well-being of individual participants, but our values are different today. Indeed, in the 1999 supplement to their classic treatise on Maryland Family Law, authors John F. Fader II and Richard J. Gilbert correctly opine that we “are probably going to have a difficult time reconciling the statutory mandate to give relief to the abused individual with some of the case decisions of the past.” See Fader & Gilbert, supra § 3-2(a).
Against this background, we turn to the instant case. Husband claims that his conduct toward Wife never “endangered her life, person, or health, or would have otherwise caused her to feel apprehension of bodily suffering,” and, to be sure, during her brief time on the witness stand on August 11, Wife did not account for the particulars of specific violent incidents. Nevertheless, from Wife’s direct testimony and in the pleadings, the court below learned that the history of violence between Husband and Wife justified entry of a one-year protective order in January 1998, after a particularly violent incident that was “one in several cases of domestic violence.”
25
Wife went on to testify that the parties’ marriage
*38
was an arranged marriage, which “in our culture ... the way it is conducted is basically subservience.” She spoke of ongoing cruelty, including “making me stay up all night in order to listen to him, isolating me from my friends and from my family, and not allowing contact as much as possible____ [H]itting, pinching, pulling hair, etc.” Wife testified in some detail how husband’s controlling behavior harmed her previously close relationship with her family.
26
She told the court how she has continuing health problems, including cardiac arrhythmia brought on by the “stress of the marriage and the tensions at home.” Wife also spoke with fear of Husband’s taunting questions about what she might do when the protective order expired. Although Wife’s testimony did not track Husband’s mistreatment of her in minute detail, it is clear from that testimony and the very existence of a protective order that Husband’s conduct far exceeded mere “sallies of passion, harshness, [and] rudeness,”
Short,
Husband also claims that Wife’s testimony was largely uncorroborated. If true, Husband’s assertion would be fatal to the final judgment, for “[a] court may not enter a decree of divorce on the uncorroborated testimony of the party who is seeking the divorce.” Md.Code (1984, 1999 RepLVol.), § 7-101(b) of the Family Law Article;
see also Dicus v. Dicus,
“need not be testimony given by another or other witnesses to all of the same identical facts to the minutest particulars, but only their giving such facts in evidence as already testified to by petitioner, or such circumstances tending to establish them, as renders petitioner’s testimony so much more probable as to be legally acceptable, and which serves to empower the judge to accept the truth of the petitioner’s whole story.”
Appel v. Appel,
*40 Here, despite the quality of proof needed to prove cruelty and excessively vicious behavior, Wife needed only slight corroboration for her testimony, for there was almost no likelihood of collusion. The problems between the parties had long been known to the courts. Domestic violence proceedings had taken place the prior year, culminating in the entry of a one-year protective order. CINA proceedings against Husband were ongoing, because he had allowed Radha to skip school. Husband had fled the jurisdiction of the court, taking Radha with him.
Wife’s brother, Arjun Duggal, corroborated her testimony and, in our view, his testimony was sufficient to establish Wife’s entitlement to an absolute divorce. Duggal told the court that Wife had sought refuge in his home in January 1998 after Husband assaulted her. He further testified that he had “observed a pattern of stress, tension in her life since 1986,” when he first immigrated to the United States. He also addressed Husband’s efforts to isolate Wife from her family, 27 corroborating his sister’s testimony in that regard. Duggal’s testimony tracked with all major tenets of Wife’s testimony, empowering the trial judge to find that Wife told the truth. It thus met the legal standard for corroboration, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment of absolute divorce.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
. The complaint alleged that Husband
has refused to return the child from visitation, telling the Plaintiff that the child didn’t want to come. He has encouraged the child to remain with him in violation of an existing custody agreement between the parties. He has told the Plaintiff at various times that he will bring the child back, but has not done so.
The complaint then described specific incidents when Husband refused to return Radha to Wife’s care at the end of visitation and when he turned Radha against her mother.
. On January 20, Wife filed her original Complaint for Absolute Divorce, which was never served.
. The court found that Husband owed child support from the time of the complaint in the amount of $7,146.73.
. Wife had also requested an Order of Default on May 5, which was denied on June 2. The court gave Husband eighteen days in which to file his Answer, dating from June 1. According to the docket, a copy of this order was mailed to Husband, presumably at the Kensington address, on June 3. When no timely Answer was forthcoming, Wife filed a second Request for Order of Default, giving the court Husband’s address in Kensington.
. Karkowsky wrote:
[Radha’s grandfather] informed Ms. Karkowsky that Dr. Das had taken Rahda [sic] to New Delhi and that he had asked a former tenant to turn over a key to a home at B-92 East of Kailash, New Delhi, India, to Dr. Das. Ms. Karkowsky inferred that Dr. Das has taken Rahda [sic ] to that address. The grandfather did not have a telephone number for that address. He assured me that he sent two cables to his son notifying him that it is vital that Rahda [sic ] meet with her attorney, Ms. Karkowsky, in person before a neglect hearing set for June 2, 1999.
. The elder Das testified that his son was living in Tendegal in Panchaula, but he could not provide the exact address.
. The transcript shows that the elder Das believed that power of attorney conferred upon him the right to speak for his son:
MR. DAS: My name is Badri Das. I’m the defendant’s father, but he sent me power of attorney, and he sent me some papers to submit to the Court.
THE COURT: Yes. I cannot receive anything from you, sir. Notwithstanding the fact you are his father, you are not his lawyer. He does not have a lawyer. He did not participate in this litigation, so what we call a default has been taken against him—
MR. DAS: Uh-huh.
THE COURT:—and we will proceed today. But I cannot take any papers from you, and you may not represent him in this courtroom.
. Maryland Rule 2-535 outlines the trial court’s general revisory powers and those for fraud, mistake, irregularity, newly-discovered evidence, or clerical errors. The rule allows revisions for newly discovered evidence and those allowed under Maryland Rule 2-534 to be made within 30 days of the entry of judgment. Revisions for fraud, irregularity or mistake, or to correct clerical errors may be made at any time.
. Maryland Rule 2-534 gives the trial court broad discretion for reopening and changing judgments within the first ten days after entry. This rule states:
In an action decided by the court, on motion of any party filed within ten days after entry of judgment, the court may open the judgment to receive additional evidence, may amend its findings or its statement of reasons for the decision, may set forth additional findings or reasons, may enter new findings or new reasons, may amend the judgment, or may enter a new judgment. A motion to alter or amend a judgment may be joined with a motion for new trial.
. Rule 2-311(b) states in relevant part:
Except as otherwise provided in this section, a party against whom a motion is directed shall file a response within 15 days after being served with the motion, or within the time allowed for a party’s original pleading pursuant to Rule 2-321(a), whichever is later----
Maryland Rule 2-321(b)(5), which lists exceptions to Rule 2-321(a), states that "[a] defendant who is served with an original pleading outside of the United States shall file an answer within 90 days after being served.”
. Wife contends that Husband did not allege fraud or irregularity in either of his post-trial motions and that we are under no obligation to entertain this issue. See Md. Rule 8-131(a) ("Ordinarily, the appellate court will not decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court....”). Although the words “fraud” and "irregularity” do not appear in Husband’s motions, the facts presented there might have allowed the court to infer, albeit after some creative thought, allegations of fraud and irregularity. We thus choose to address these issues.
. In the motion on appeal. Husband claims that he "left the United States on or about April 15, 1999, before this case was at issue."
. Husband was served at his mother’s residence.
. The Notice to Employ New Counsel advised Husband that he "must inform the Clerk of any change of ... address."
. Rule 2-321(c) states in relevant part: "When a motion is filed pursuant to Rule 2-322, the time for filing an answer is extended without special order to 15 days after entry of the court’s order on the motion....”
. Rule 2-613(b) states:
If the time for pleading has expired and a defendant has failed to plead as provided by these rules, the court, on written request of the plaintiff, shall enter an order of default. The request shall state the last known address of the defendant.
. Rule 2-613(d) states in relevant part: "[T]he defendant may move to vacate the order within 30 days after its entry.”
. Rule 9-204 states: "Where a defendant is in default in proceedings for divorce, annulment, or alimony an order of default may be entered pursuant to Rule 2-613. A judgment may be entered pursuant to Rule 2-613(e) only upon testimony."
. Seemingly, pursuant to Rule 2-535(a).
. Rule 2-311(b) states in relevant part:
Except as otherwise provided in this section, a party against whom a motion is directed shall file a response within 15 days after being served with the motion, or within the time allowed for a party’s original pleading pursuant to Rule 2-321(a), whichever is later____ If a party fails to file a response required by this section, the court may proceed to rule on the motion.
. Because he appeals from the denial of a motion to vacate an order of default, and not from the underlying judgment, we assume that Husband intends the argument in section III, that the court abused its discretion in granting Wife an absolute divorce, to serve as the third and final leg of his argument for revision under Rule 2—535(b), a meritorious defense.
. Husband also argues that Article 24 requires that one have counsel when "disseized of his freehold ... or in any manner ... deprived of ... property," which, he argues, occurs during the division of marital property.
. The problem of domestic abuse ... remained largely ignored by our society until the last two decades, when national efforts toward legal and social reform began to surface. Since then, domestic abuse has gained widespread public attention. Social service agencies developed battered women's shelters and hotlines, and state legislatures recognized that domestic violence needed to be adequately addressed.
Coburn
v.
Coburn,
. Even when behavior does not rise to the level of cruelty or excessively vicious conduct, our courts have long ended violent marriages on grounds of constructive desertion. "It is accepted that any conduct of a husband that renders the marital relation intolerable and compels the wife to leave him may justify a divorce on the ground of constructive desertion, even though the conduct may not justify a divorce on the ground of cruelty.”
Scheinin,
. Wife testified that she filed for the order
because my husband assaulted me on the night of January the 5 th, and as a result, the police came to the house. And at that point, the officer taking the report advised me as to how I could proceed because he could see that the situation was not good, and I had been hit, and he advised me how to go to District Court or Circuit Court in order to get an ex parte order which was then subsequently followed by a protective order for one year.
We note that Husband is highly critical of Wife’s account of this event, because Wife "never testified [he] actually struck her.... [Wife’s] testimony about what the officer saw is hearsay ... [and t]he record gives absolutely no indication of where said incident allegedly occurred .... where on her body she was allegedly struck ... [and] whether [Husband] allegedly used a hand, foot, or anything else.” Husband’s contentions defy reason. For the District Court to have granted a one- *38 year protective order—which, we note, is the máximum duration for an initial order, see Md.Code (1984, 1999 Repl.Vol., 1999 Cum.Supp.), § 4—506(b)(2)(iii) of the Family Law Article—it must have found by clear and convincing evidence that abuse occurred or Husband must have consented to its entry, § 5-506(c)(l)(ii), as he did here. By giving such consent, Husband as much as admitted that marital violence occurred.
. Wife testified:
And my parents also took care of my children for several years while my husband went to school and I worked full-time. And at that time my relationship with my family got strained. Because of the stresses in the marriage, I could not relate to them properly.
I would drop the children off there in the morning, and then all I had to do was pick them up in the afternoon and come right back because I was not allowed to stay, and I was fearful of staying.
Q: Why were you afraid to stay?
A: Because I was made to account for my time, and there was a point where I was made to account for my time for a whole week in half-an-hour increments. And that became very difficult because when you have two small toddlers and you’re working, it becomes very hard to account for time like that.
And basically it becomes a form of cruelty, a form of bullying, a form of intimidation.
Q: Did you tell your family about this?
A: I did not tell them anything for several years, but I think it was quite evident to them that I was under a lot of stress and tension....
. Duggal testified:
On the occasions that we did have to meet my sister, she was always very tense when she came to pick up the kids. I was in the house also, and she was always in a hurry to get back just based on the fact that he would question her on every second that she spent. He tried to keep her away from her family.
He also had—I’ve overheard telephone conversations that he had with her in which they argued and—
Q: Did he make threats in those conversations?
A: He made threats of divorce and then turned around and called my mom and told her that my sister was asking for the divorce.
Q: And in your culture, what does a threat of a divorce mean from a man?
A: It is a very serious, very serious matter, and it’s not to be taken lightly.
