In this divorce action the Court of Special Appeals dismissed an appeal seeking an increase in a monetary award because the appellant had accepted payments under the award as rendered.
Dietz v. Dietz,
The issue before us is limited, so that the facts may be briefly stated. Nothing in our recital of facts is intended to indicate any view on the merits of the issues to be decided on remand.
The respondent, William Albert Dietz (Mr. Dietz), his father, Fred Dietz, Sr., and one of his brothers, Fred Dietz, Jr., have been lifelong farmers, principally dairy farming. 1 Prior to 1979 they leased farmland or farmed for shares. The combined acreage on which their farming operations were conducted totaled approximately 700 acres.
On January 8, 1977, the petitioner, Andrea Lynn Dietz (Mrs. Dietz), and Mr. Dietz were married. Two children were born of the marriage.
In February 1979 the fee simple title to 289 acres of farmland, known as the Lang Valley Farm (the Farm), was conveyed to Mr. Dietz, his father, and his brother. The purchase price of the Farm was $400,000, of which $100,000 was paid at the time of closing, and the three Dietzes, jointly and severally, secured the balance of the purchase price by *686 executing a take-back purchase money mortgage. The parties to this action lived together in the house on the Farm until 1990.
In 1984, when Fred Dietz, Sr. retired, Mr. Dietz and Fred Dietz, Jr. formed Dietz Brothers, a partnership (the Partnership) in which each brother had a fifty percent interest. The assets of the Partnership were livestock, crops, and equipment.
Marital difficulties between Mr. and Mrs. Dietz led to trial separations and to a final separation in September 1992. Mrs. Dietz filed for divorce in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County in October 1992.
A number of evidentiary hearings were held. Both parties produced experts to value Mr. Dietz’s interest in the Partnership. The parties stipulated that the value of the Farm was $1,200,000 as of the date of separation, but there was a dispute as to what portion, if any, of Mr. Dietz’s interest in the Farm was marital property.
In February 1996 the circuit court rendered an oral opinion, determining that the Partnership was marital property and that the value of Mr. Dietz’s interest in the Partnership was $602,380. Based thereon, a monetary award of 40.7% or $245,169, rounded to $245,000, was granted to Mrs. Dietz. The court, however, denied any monetary award to Mrs. Dietz on her claim that Mr. Dietz’s interest in the Farm was marital property. Final judgment was entered April 1,1996.
The court ordered Mr. Dietz to pay $20,000 within thirty days of the entry of judgment, with the $225,000 balance of the monetary award to be paid in monthly installments of $1,250 over a fifteen-year period.
By check dated April 23, 1996, Mr. Dietz paid Mrs. Dietz the installment of $20,000. Mrs. Dietz deposited the check on or about April 26, 1996. Her appeal to the Court of Special Appeals was noted on May 1, 1996. When the first of the regular monthly installments of $1,250, due May 1, 1996, was not timely paid, Mrs. Dietz petitioned to have Mr. Dietz found *687 in contempt. After the circuit court issued a show cause order and scheduled a hearing, Mr. Dietz paid the May installment, and the hearing was canceled. Insofar as the record in this case reflects, Mr. Dietz subsequently has paid, and Mrs. Dietz has accepted, each monthly installment.
In her brief to the Court of Special Appeals, Mrs. Dietz made two contentions: first, that the trial court erred in rejecting her claim that the monetary award should include an amount based on finding Mr. Dietz’s interest in the Farm to be marital property; and, second, that it was inequitable for the monetary award to be paid over a fifteen-year period. Mr. Dietz moved to dismiss the appeal, arguing that Mrs. Dietz voluntarily had accepted the benefits of the judgment. Mr. Dietz did not cross-appeal. Mrs. Dietz’s right to have a monetary award based on the Partnership, the total amount of that award, and the rate at which that award is to be paid, are not questioned by Mr. Dietz on this appeal.
The Court of Special Appeals dismissed the appeal. That court began its analysis by stating categorically what it called “the general waiver rule,” which it described as follows:
“It is a well established rale in Maryland that if a party, knowing the facts, voluntarily accepts the benefits accruing to him or her under a judgment, order, or decree, such acceptance operates as a waiver of any errors in the judgment, order, or decree and estops that party from maintaining an appeal therefrom.”
Dietz,
We granted Mrs. Dietz’s petition for certiorari which is limited to whether her appeal was properly dismissed. The Bruce A. Kaufman Center for Family Law filed an amicus curiae brief in support of Mrs. Dietz’s position.
I
Our analysis begins with the principle that a party who is aggrieved by a final judgment may perfect an appeal to obtain review of the judgment. Looking at the same concept from a different perspective in
Baer v. Robbins,
The Court of Special Appeals used “general waiver rule” to refer to a limitation on the right to appeal that part of a judgment of which a party is aggrieved.
Dietz,
This Court’s explanations of the limitation on the right to appeal have not been entirely uniform. For example, earlier cases have spoken of waiver,
see Farmers’ Bank v. Thomas,
Our most recent cases have repeated the description of the limitation on the right to appeal that is found in
Rocks v. Brosius,
In
Rocks,
it was unnecessary to apply the acquiescence rule, but the two later decisions illustrate applications of it.
Osztreicher
involved a judgment entered against the plaintiff after
*690
the plaintiffs attorney declined to produce evidence. The trial court had precluded a witness for the plaintiff from testifying, a ruling with which plaintiffs counsel disagreed. Although a second witness was available to give substantially the same evidence that would have been given by the precluded witness, that would have sufficed to avoid a judgment on motion for the defendant, and that was not barred by the ruling complained of, plaintiffs counsel voluntarily left the record in a posture that required judgment for the defendant, thereby clearly acquiescing in that judgment. In
Franzen
we said that the payment of a judgment by a judgment debtor would not normally be treated as acquiescence in the judgment because the coercive aspects of the judgment usually render the payment involuntary.
Franzen,
The clearest example of acquiescence in a judgment is found in the remittitur cases. There the trial court rules that it will grant a new trial unless the plaintiff consents to a specified reduction in the verdict. If the reduction is accepted it results in a judgment for the plaintiff in the lesser amount. In these cases the plaintiff chooses to have the verdict and judgment reduced rather than retry the case. Because of this acquiescence, an appeal from the judgment by the plaintiff ordinarily must be dismissed.
See Kneas v. Hecht Co.,
A frequently cited acquiescence case is
Bowers v. Soper,
Requiring special attention are certain early decisions of this Court, dealing with equity’s administration of a fund generated by the judicial sale of property, because they can be read as presenting perhaps the strictest applications of the acquiescence rule in our reports. In these cases a creditor who claims a lien on assets of the estate challenges the court’s dealing with the assets as if there were no lien, but the creditor also files a claim for a distributive share.
See Gottschalk v. Smith,
The acquiescence rule was applied where an appellant sought to reverse an order while previously or concurrently relying on the order as being correct.
Stewart v. McCaddin,
In another class of cases in which appeals have been dismissed, the trial court has exercised its discretion in fashioning relief to combine, so as to be interdependent or nonseverable, the feature complained of by the appellant, and the feature acceptable to the appellant. For example, where the feuding husband and son of a disabled woman each sought appointment as her guardian, the court appointed both, as co-guardians, and each qualified under the order by posting bond. Their appeals, each seeking to have the other removed as co-guardian, were dismissed.
Kicherer v. Kicherer,
In the instant matter Mrs. Dietz did not expressly give up her claim for a monetary award derived from her husband’s interest in the Farm. Nor did the circuit court reject her claim as the result of, or because it was interrelated with, the grant of a monetary award derived from the Partnership. Rather, our decisions in the workers’ compensation, spousal support, *693 and condemnation contexts are the most analogous to the instant matter.
In the earliest of the workers’ compensation cases involving a claimed acquiescence, the claimant had been awarded fifty percent permanent partial disability by the Commission, based on loss of use of a leg.
Bethlehem Steel Co. v. Mayo,
Subsequent workers’ compensation cases have not treated Mayo’s holding as peculiar to,
or
based only upon, the public policy underlying that statute.
Petillo v. Stein,
Mayo
was again applied in
Smith v. Revere Copper & Brass,
In its opinion in the instant matter the Court of Special Appeals relied heavily on
Lewis v. Lewis,
After repeating Petillo’s statement that the acquiescence doctrine “is a severe one and should not be extended,” we made the following holding:
“[I]f applicable at all in a divorce case, the bar cannot be raised where the benefits accruing to the wife, by reason of the award, provide necessary support until the final adjudication of the ease.”
Lewis,
The holding in
Lewis
should not be read to mean that the acquiescence rule applies in divorce cases unless the order under which benefits have been taken and which has been appealed is an order for support, as the Court of Special Appeals seems to have done.
Dietz,
Shapiro v. Maryland-Nat'l Capital Park & Planning Comm’n,
Courts in other jurisdictions have declined to dismiss in cases very similar to the case at bar.
In re Marriage of Abild,
“When an appellant accepts only that which the appellee concedes, or is bound to concede, to be due him under the judgment or decree, he is not barred from prosecution of an appeal which involves only his right to a further recovery. Acceptance of part of the award in such circumstances is not inconsistent with the appellant’s claim that the award should have been larger. This principle is applicable when an appellant in a [case involving marital property,] where there is no cross-appeal[,] accepts part of an award of cash ... while claiming entitlement to a larger award on appeal.”
Id.
at 543.
See also Bailey v. Bailey,
In the instant matter Mr. Dietz does not contest the monetary award that was made. There is nothing inconsistent *697 between Mrs. Dietz’s acceptance of the monetary award that was made because of Mr. Dietz’s Partnership interest and her request for an increase in the monetary award because of Mr. Dietz’s interest in different property. Under these circumstances there has been no acquiescence in the judgment, and it is immaterial that a monetary award is not alimony.
II
The same result flows if, as Mrs. Dietz urges, the Court of Special Appeals concludes that it was error for the trial court to spread payment of the monetary award derived from the Partnership over a period as long as fifteen years. If Mrs. Dietz is successful in this aspect of her appeal, the case would be remanded to the trial court for shortening the payment schedule. In that event, Mrs. Dietz’s monthly installments could only increase. Her acceptance of the lesser amount in the past installments, therefore, was not inconsistent with her claim that she is entitled to more money in each installment.
Accordingly, we reverse and remand for the Court of Special Appeals to consider on the merits the issues raised by Mrs. Dietz’s appeal.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION. COSTS IN THIS COURT TO BE PAID BY THE RESPONDENT, WILLIAM ALBERT DIETZ.
Notes
. Although the captions on the pleadings and papers filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County name the respondent simply as William Albert Dietz, his name was converted to William Albert Dietz, Jr. on the briefs in the Court of Special Appeals. We shall revert to the name used in the circuit court.
.
Farmers’ Bank
describes
Lanahan
as holding "that a creditor who participates in a proceeding in equity for the distribution of the proceeds of property sold under a deed of trust, so far makes himself a party as to waive his right afterward to object to the validity of the deed.”
Farmers’ Bank,
. At the referenced portion of the opinion in Lanahan, this Court stated that the appellant
"may certainly be required to elect how he will proceed: for he cannot insist upon the efficacy of his liens at law, in opposition to the deed as fraudulent, and in equity, claim to participate in the funds, without the concession that they are rightfully there for distribution among the creditors of the grantor.”
Id. at 272-73.
.
Silverberg
said that an appeal designed to obtain an increase in counsel fees awarded in a divorce case involved "the twofold error of at once splitting the decree and attempting both to accept and reject its terms.”
Id.
at 689,
