96 A. 860 | Md. | 1916
Lead Opinion
The appellant filed a bill against her husband asking for alimony, permanent and pendente lite, and counsel fees, but subsequently amended the bill by adding a prayer for a divorce amensa et thoro.
The bill alleged as the grounds for relief, that the appellee had been guilty of audultery with one Pearl S. Mitchell in January, 1905, and before the filing of the bill, and that the appellant had not cohabited with him since the discovery; and that the appellee abandoned and deserted her without just cause or excuse. After hearing testimony in support of the bill and answer the lower Court passed a decree dismissing the bill, and from that decree this appeal was taken.
It is presumed the allegation charging adultery was inserted for whatever effect it might have upon the question of alimony, the relief sought before the amendment; for that charge, if proved, could not be the basis for a decree of divorce a mensaet thoro but only for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii. Stewart
v. Stewart,
We do not intend to reproduce a detailed account of the testimony, for no good purpose would be subserved by so doing, but to give, in the main, the conclusions we have arrived at from a careful reading of the same. The parties were married in 1891, and have lived in Baltimore continuously *619
since, where the appellee has been engaged in the business of oyster packing. In 1903 he took into his employment as bookkeeper, Pearl S. Mitchell, a young woman whose home was in Harford County. The oyster packing business was carried on in each year, from about the first of August until the first of the following May, when the business would be closed and Pearl Mitchell would return to her home, returning to work the following August. During the first few years of her employment Miss Mitchell visited a great deal at the home of the appellee, and was apparently upon terms of intimacy with the appellant. It was during one of these visits in 1906 that the only adulterous act is attempted to be proved and it is remarkable that the only testimony offered to prove it was that of the only child of the parties, a boy of about fourteen years of age at the time of the alleged occurrence. Notwithstanding the fact that the son testified that the appellant was present and saw just what he did yet not one word of testimony did she give upon the subject. The explanation of the occurrence given by Miss Mitchell, when called as a witness by the appellant, was convincing. The testimony of the only other two witnesses as to this charge was trivial and what they each observed once, occurred years ago. It was admitted by the appellant that she had as late as the year 1910 visited for several days at different times Miss Mitchell at her home in Harford County. If we were considering this testimony with a view to determining whether the charge was legally established so as to be the basis of a decree a vinculo we would not have to dismiss it because it did not measure up to the strict rule of proof required in cases of this character, as determined by a long line of a cases in this State ending with Thiess v.Thiess,
The parties continued to live together as man and wife continuously until December, 1913, when the appellant left the home of herself and husband and filed a few days later a bill, making the same charges as in the present one. By *620 agreement the appellee paid her ten dollars a week and a counsel fee to her solicitor. Before a hearing was had on that bill the parties had become reconciled, wholly through the efforts of the appellee, and he took up his abode in an apartment rented and occupied by her until they could get possession of one leased by him after the reconciliation. The reconciliation only lasted for ten days when he left her apartment and the present bill was thereafter filed.
Therefore, the question to be determined is, whether such a case has been made out as entitles the appellant to relief on the ground of the desertion of her by the appellee.
So often has this question been before this Court, and so consistent have been the decisions defining what is legal abandonment and desertion as to form a basis for a decree of divorce, that that must be regarded as finally settled. Taking one of the very latest, that of Muller v. Muller,
"Separation and intention to abandon must concur in order *621 to constitute cause of divorce on ground of abandonment; but they need not be identical in their commencement."
With the separation admitted, let us examine the testimony for the purpose of determining whether the facts show on abandonment "with intent that the marriage relation should no longer exist." And this intent, it has been said, being an intangible thing is sometimes difficult to solve.
It is admitted by both parties that the domestic difficulty is caused by the continued employment of Pearl Mitchell by the husband. The wife insisting upon her dismissal, the husband refusing. The record shows there has been more or less quarreling though not of such a character as to warrant a divorce upon the ground of cruelty of treatment, if that had been one of the allegations of the bill, the quarrels consistently being about this cause. And although the appellant admits that the reason she left her husband's home in December, 1913, was because of a quarrel over the girl, she yet gives no facts or circumstances upon which she bases her charge or suspicion. When he left her apartment in April, 1914, she again admits it was the result of a quarrel over the girl, and again she testifies to no facts or circumstances nor produces any testimony, other than that we have adverted to above and that occurring eight or nine years ago, in support of her allegation that the appellee is guilty of adultery. According to her testimony she told the appellee he would have to discharge the girl as he had promised to do when she agreed that he should come to her apartment to resume their married life, and upon his refusal told him she "would not be second choice." One of the witnesses for the appellant, present at the quarrel, testified that the appellant told the appellee: "Under those conditions (retaining the girl) we can not live under the same roof." The appellee testified the appellant said to him "I positively will not live with you, you take your clothes and get out." Whichever one was correct in quoting just what was said the night of the separation becomes immaterial, for the appellant on the witness stand said she was willing to have the appellee resume the marital state, provided he dismissed the girl. *622
Like after the first separation, the appellee has been en deavoring to have the appellant relent and take him back, but she refuses only with the same condition and he refuses to comply with that condition.
Applying the law, as we find it, to these facts, we are not able to say that the appellant has made out such a case, by the proof, that shows that the appellee's intention when he left her apartment, or since, was that the marriage relation should no longer exist. In fact his actions since the first separation show to the contrary that he wished it to continue. The facts justify the inference that he is ready at any time to return to his wife the moment she withdraws her condition based upon, as we must hold from the testimony, mere unsupported suspicion. In fact we hold that the condition she imposed was unjustified, and that the separation was brought about and continued through her will and practically her consent. It does seen strange that one could have such an apparent strong conviction on the question of her husband's marital dereliction, so strong indeed as to compel her to leave his home, unless he consented to give up the object of his supposed infatuation, and yet at the same time be unable to give any facts upon which that conviction was based, when it is alleged the improper conduct has covered a period of about ten years.
We are of the opinion, therefore, that there has not been shown an intention to abandon and desert and will affirm the ruling of the lower Court.
Decree affirmed, with costs to the appellant.
Dissenting Opinion
As we understand the testimony in this case, it shows that the appellee's conduct was directly responsible for the separation which is the ground of his wife's suit for alimony. It is proven that he deliberately left the appellant because he was unwilling to comply with the condition she imposed that he dismiss from his service the bookkeeper, Miss Mitchell, *623 whose association with him had been the long-existing cause of the marital infelicity which the record discloses. While we concur in the view, expressed in the Court's opinion, that the charge of adultery was not sustained by the evidence, yet we think the proof reveals a degree of familiarity in the relations between the appellee and Miss Mitchell which might well excite the wife's distrust. On a previous occasion, in December, 1913, the appellant left her husband and filed a bill for divorce on the ground of his alleged adultery with the person just named. In the following April the parties became reconciled and reunited upon the distinct and positive promise by the appellee that he would within a few weeks permanently dismiss from his employment the woman whose retention had caused his wife so much unhappiness. When the reunion had continued about a week, the appellee informed his wife that he intended to employ Miss Mitchell as his bookkeeper for another year. According to the testimony of a disinterested witness, who was present at the interview, the appellee, in reply to his wife's protest against the violation of his agreement not to keep Miss Mitchell in his service, said, in substance, that he had only come back to live with the appellant for a time in order to destroy her case under the bill she had filed against him, adding, with an oath, that now she would not get a cent, and stating that he would take his clothes and go to his mother's. This was followed by the separation which is the occasion of the present suit. The appellant has testified to her willingness to have her husband return to her at any time if he will sever his relations with Miss Mitchell, but with that condition he absolutely refuses to comply. The very persistency with which he continues such an association, in preference to the marital reunion to which it is the only obstacle, tends strongly to confirm his wife's suspicions and to justify her attitude. In our judgment she is entitled to alimony under the circumstances of the case as developed by the testimony, and we have, therefore, been unable to concur in the decision to the contrary. *624