57 A.2d 804 | Md. | 1948
On February 4, 1942, the appellant here, Frederick W. Foote, filed a bill of complaint in Circuit Court No. 2 *174 of Baltimore City, against his wife, Emma D. Foote, appellee here, for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii on the grounds of desertion for a period of more than eighteen months. An answer was filed by the appellee denying the material allegations thereof. On April 4, 1942, the appellee filed a cross-bill for permanent alimony against the appellant on the grounds of desertion. The appellant answered that cross-bill denying the material allegations thereof. The cause was heard by Judge Joseph N. Ulman on April 15, 1942. At the beginning of the hearing the Judge stated that he understood that the appellant wished to amend his original bill of complaint. An amendment was thereby made by the appellant to the original bill of complaint by adding a paragraph to read: "That the husband and wife herein have voluntarily lived separate and apart, without any cohabitation, for five consecutive years prior to the filing of the Bill of Complaint and such separation is beyond any reasonable expectation of reconciliation." An answer was filed by the appellee to the amended paragraph, in which she neither admitted nor denied the allegations thereof, and put the complainant upon strict proof thereof. On April 18, 1942, Judge Ulman signed a decree "that the said Frederick W. Foote, the above named Complainant, be and he is hereby divorced a vinculo matrimonii from the Defendant, Emma D. Foote. And the said Complainant, Frederick W. Foote, shall be chargeable with the payment of Seventeen Dollars ($17.00) weekly as and for permanent alimony for the support of the Defendant, Emma D. Foote, payable through the Probation Department of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, subject to the further order of the Court."
On April 23, 1946, the appellant, Frederick W. Foote, filed in the same Court a petition alleging the aforesaid decree of April 18, 1942. He alleged that he had paid said sum regularly since the decree but that the payment had now become burdensome due to income taxes, increased cost of living, and his remarriage. He also alleged that the provision of the decree awarding the *175 alimony of $17.00 per week was illegal, invalid, and inequitable and that said decree should be amended by eliminating all provisions for the payment of alimony. A show cause order was passed on that petition and an answer filed by the appellee. After hearing in open Court, Judge Edwin T. Dickerson, on May 23, 1947, passed an order dismissing appellant's petition of April 23, 1946: "expressly without prejudice; with the right to file an amended Petition, a Bill of Review or a Petition for Declaratory Decree."
On June 23, 1947, Judge John T. Tucker in Circuit Court No. 2 passed an order directing that the appellant show cause why he should not be punished for contempt of court in not obeying the order of April 18, 1942, directing the payment of permanent alimony to Emma D. Foote. A demurrer was filed on July 7, 1947, by Frederick W. Foote, to that order and on the same day he filed a motion to rescind the attachment nisi. On July 11, 1947, after hearing in open court, where testimony was taken, Judge W. Conwell Smith ordered and decreed that the motion of July 7, 1947, to rescind, be refused and denied. He also ordered that Frederick W. Foote continue to pay the sum of $17.00 per week as permanent alimony in accordance with the decree of April 18, 1942. He further ordered that Frederick W. Foote pay at once to Emma D. Foote the sum of $119.00 being the amount admitted to be due under the order of April 18, 1942, if the same be valid, and any further arrearages due. He also ordered: "5: That payments by said Frederick W. Foote to said Emma D. Foote in compliance with this Order and said Decree, dated April 18, 1942, shall be final giving the right to said Frederick W. Foote to prosecute an appeal to the Court of Appeals of Maryland from Order of this Court bearing even date herewith and passed prior hereto overruling demurrer filed by said Frederick W. Foote to Order of this Court, dated June 23, 1947 and also appeal by said Frederick W. Foote to said Court of Appeals of Maryland from this Order." The Judge also passed an order on the same *176 day overruling the demurrer to the order dated June 23, 1947. From the two orders of July 11, 1947, the appellant, Frederick W. Foote, appeals to this Court.
Appellant contends that the alimony decreed in this case on April 18, 1942, by Judge Ulman is not really alimony, the non-payment of which would make the appellant subject to attachment for contempt of court.
As pointed out in the case of Emerson v. Emerson,
In fixing the amount of alimony the court may accept the agreement of the parties as to the amount to be allowed and incorporate that amount in the decree, if the agreement is fairly made, and untainted by collusion in the procurement of the divorce. The court, of course, is not required to accept the agreement of the parties. Whether the agreement is or is not accepted by the court and incorporated in the decree, the provisions of the decree and not those of the agreement conclusively established the nature of the allowance. If the allowance in the decree falls within the definition of alimony, even though it is founded on an agreement of the parties, the court has the same power to enforce it which it would have had had there been no agreement. Knabe v. Knabe,
In the instant case it was admitted by the appellee that the amount of $17.00 per week in the original decree of April 18, 1942, was agreed upon by the parties, with the court's concurrence, as a fit and proper amount to be paid by the appellant to the appellee as alimony and incorporated in the decree. The question therefore before us is whether the allowance in the decree of April *178 18, 1942, founded on an agreement, was such an allowance as it would have been possible for the Chancellor to have allowed as permanent alimony in this case.
The Chancellor, in the original decree of April 18, 1942, states that the award is for "permanent alimony." In the absence of any explanation to the contrary we must accept the Chancellor's designation of his award. As stated in Emerson v.Emerson,
In Dougherty v. Dougherty,
In Maryland equity has jurisdiction to decree the payment of alimony to a wife although she does not ask for a decree of divorce. Stewart v. Stewart,
In interpreting voluntary separation, as now used in Acts of 1941, Chapter 90, Section 40, Article 16, § 40, 16, § 5th sub-section, Code 1943 Supplement, this Court has said many times that in order for the separation of husband and wife to be regarded as voluntary within the meaning of the statute there must be an agreement of the parties to live separate and apart with a common intent not to resume marital relations. The word "voluntary" signifies willingness. Campbell v. Campbell,
It is true that this Court has said as late as the case ofStaub v. Staub,
However, at the time the decree in the instant case was passed, Chapter 558, Acts of 1939, Code 1939, Article 16, § 40, 16, § 5th sub-section, provided that a divorce a vinculo matrimonii could be decreed "when the husband and wife shall have voluntarily lived separate and apart, without any cohabitation, for five consecutive years prior to the filing of the bill of complaint, and such separation is beyond any reasonable expectation of reconciliation." At the time the Legislature adopted five year voluntary separation as an additional ground for a divorce avinculo matrimonii it was provided, and is now provided by Code 1939, Article 16, § 15, that: "In cases where a divorce is decreed, alimony may be awarded." In the enactment of Acts of 1939, Chapter 558, supra, there was no exception therein made from the provisions of Article 16, § 15, supra. Therefore, under the natural and literal statutory interpretation of Code 1939, Article 16, § 40, 16, § 5th sub-section, with Code 1939, Article 16, § 15, it was possible for the Chancellor to allow permanent alimony to the wife in the case at bar. We see no reason to depart from the ordinary and literal construction of these two statutory provisions.
The practice in this State has been practically uniform to allow permanent alimony where the wife is granted a divorce amensa or a vinculo, and she is without means of support, and the husband is able to support her. Clarke v. Clarke,
We have been referred to cases in Kentucky and Arkansas such asLacey v. Lacey,
In Wisconsin where proof of "voluntary separation" is required, that Court, in Salinko v. Salinko,
If an exception as to the power of the courts to award alimony was to be applied in cases of voluntary separation, that exception should have been made by the Legislature and cannot be made by the courts. Construing Code 1939, Article 16, § 40, 16, § 5th sub-section, in conjunction with Article 16, § 15, we must affirm the orders of the Chancellor.
Orders affirmed, with costs. *182