37 A.2d 898 | Md. | 1944
On September 28, 1943, Harry D. Kruse, the appellant, filed a bill of complaint in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, praying for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii from Mary A. Kruse, the appellee. The bill alleges that on December 13, 1940, Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City entered a decree granting him a divorce a mensa et thoro from the defendant; that on appeal the Court of Appeals of Maryland affirmed the said decree by an opinion reported in
In her answer the defendant denies that the plaintiff is entitled to a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, which he previously sought in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City on the same ground which he alleges in the present bill and which was denied by the Court in its decree of December 13, 1940, and alleges that he is now estopped from seeking a divorce a vinculo matrimonii by reason of said decree.
The allegations of the bill were satisfactorily proved by the testimony taken before the Chancellor, but the Chancellor concluded, as stated in his opinion, that the plaintiff "exhausted his remedy when he suffered a decree a mensa, instead of a decree a vinculo, to be entered in his favor on December 13, 1940, without having the correctness of the decision of the Circuit Court No. 2 tested by an appeal, and that the matter is res adjudicata and that that decree is a bar to the relief now prayed". From his decree of December 30, 1943, dismissing the bill of complaint filed on September 28, 1943, the present appeal is taken by the plaintiff.
In reaching his conclusion, the Chancellor relied upon Section 44 of Article 16, Code 1939, as said section, then Section 41 of Article 16, Code 1924, was construed by this Court in the case ofMiller v. Miller,
Section 44 of Article 16, Code 1939, provides as follows: "When a bill prays for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii, the fact that the parties have been divorced a mensa et thoro shall not be taken to interfere with the jurisdiction of the court over the subject, and a party who has obtained a divorce a mensa etthoro on the ground of abandonment, which at the time of obtaining said divorce was not of the character and duration specified in Section 40 of this article, shall not be estopped thereby from subsequently obtaining a divorce a vinculomatrimonii on the ground of abandonment proved to be of the character and duration specified in said Section 40." Section 40, as amended by Chapter 90, Acts of 1941, enumerates the causes for which the Court may decree a divorce a vinculo matrimonii and sets forth one of said causes as follows: "fourthly, when the court shall be satisfied by competent testimony that the party complained against has abandoned the party complaining, and that such abandonment has continued uninterruptedly for at least eighteen months, and is deliberate and final, and the separation of the parties beyond any reasonable expectation of reconciliation". The only change made by Chapter 90, Acts 1941, was to reduce the period of the abandonment from three years to eighteen months.
In Miller v. Miller, supra, the Court, after referring to and quoting from the cases of Brown v. Brown,
There was offered in evidence in the present case the record in the former case of Kruse v. Kruse, Nos. 10 and 11, October Term, 1941. This record discloses that the husband, in his cross-bill, prayed for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii on the ground of abandonment, alleging constructive desertion for the statutory period and of the statutory character. The Chancellor, however, awarded only a divorce a mensa et thoro. The wife appealed from the decree which dismissed her bill of complaint and awarded the husband a divorce a mensa et thoro, while the husband appealed only from that portion of the decree which required him to pay alimony pending the appeal. Upon an appeal in equity the whole case is open and the Court will examine the whole record. 3 Am. Jur., Appeal and Error, Sec. 814, page 356;France v. Safe Deposit Trust Co.,
Even if there had been no appeal in the former case we feel that the decree of December 13, 1940, would have been conclusive upon the parties. A judgment or decree of a court having jurisdiction of the subject and the parties cannot be re-examined by the same parties in another suit. It is conclusive upon them of all questions put in issue by the pleadings. Whitehurst v.Rogers,
Instead of estopping the plaintiff from maintaining the present suit, we feel that under the plain and unmistakable language of Section 44 of Article 16, Code 1939, the plaintiff is now entitled to a divorce a vinculo matrimonii from the defendant. He is not estopped by the statute. Nor is he estopped by his own conduct. Equitable estoppel is the effect of the voluntary conduct of a party whereby he is absolutely precluded both at law and in equity from asserting rights, of property, contract, or remedy, which might perhaps have otherwise existed, as against another person who has in good faith relied upon such conduct and has been led thereby to change his position for the worse and who, on his part, acquires some corresponding rights, of property, of contract or of remedy. Pomeroy, EquityJurisprudence, 4th Ed., Vol. 2, Sec. 804; Brenner v. Plitt,
It follows that the decree of the Chancellor dismissing the bill of complaint must be reversed.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded for the passage of adecree in conformity with this opinion, costs to be paid byappellant. *377