delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from an order sustaining a demurrer to an amended bill of complaint filed by a wife, praying that she
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be awarded sole custody and guardianship of a minor child of the parties and maintenance and support for herself and the child, that she be awarded a divorce
a vinculo
on the grounds of abandonment, desertion, and cruelty of treatment, that she be awarded a counsel fee, and for other and further relief. The appellee moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order was not a final one. It should be noted that the demurrer was to “the whole amended complaint”, and that it did not comply with the provisions of Rule 373 b of the Maryland Rules, incorporating by reference the requirement of Rule 345 b, that it shall “state in detail the question of law or insufficiency of substance upon which the demurrer is founded.” The order appealed from did not grant leave to amend. There can be no question that the order was appealable.
Riviere v.
Quinlan,
The original bill of complaint was filed on December 7, 1955. It prayed a divorce a mensa, and alleged that the parties had not cohabited since July, 1954. It did not allege that this was the fault of the husband, nor did it in terms charge abandonment or desertion. It alleged various acts or omissions of the husband that were a “source of mental anguish and embarrassment to the- Plaintiff”, but it did not in terms charge cruelty. The amended bill, filed on August 28, 1956, prayed a divorce a vinculo on the grounds of abandonment, desertion and cruelty of treatment, and alleged that the. defendant ceased to cohabit with the plaintiff in July, 1954, “wrongfully and without justification” and “with the intention offending the marital relationship”. It alleged that “On numerous occasions between the months of July, 1954, and November of 1955, when the Plaintiff ceased to sleep with the Defendant, the latter did kick the Plaintiff and order her to remove herself from his side of the bed, indicating no desire whatsoever to resume his marital duties, and there has been no cohabitation between the parties up to the *145 present time”. It further alleged that “there is no reasonable hope or expectation of a reconciliation of the parties.” It detailed certain acts and omissions on the husband’s part, including allegations of failure to provide the necessities of food, clothing and fuel for her and the child, which were alleged to constitute “mental cruelty to the Plaintiff, which has adversely affected her physical condition”.
It is well settled that a demurrer to an entire pleading must fail if, eliminating any part thereof that may be defective, enough remains to present a sufficient ground for relief.
Ruhl v. Wagner,
Since the case must be remanded, and questions may arise in the trial of the case as to the extent of the relief that may be granted under the pleadings, we think it proper to discuss other points raised by the appellee. It is well settled that a bill for divorce need not set out the facts and circumstances that constitute the evidence of the causes of divorce alleged,
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and that a bill is sufficient if it charges the statutory grounds in the language of the statute.
Etheridge v. Etheridge,
The appellee contends, however, that the bill is demurrable, insofar as it prays a divorce
a vinculo,
because it appears that at the time of the filing of the original bill, on December 7, 1955, the abandonment alleged to have occurred in July, 1954, had not continued for a period of eighteen months. He argues that the amendment of the prayer of the original bill, which prayed a divorce
a mensa,
was improper, because it sought to bring in by amendment a cause of action occurring, or ripening into a statutory offense of a higher' order, after thé filing of the original bill. It is clear that the objection would not prevent the court from decreeing a divorce
a mensa,
under the prayer for divorce
a vinculo.
Code (1957), Art. 16, sec. 25;
Downs v. Downs,
The question of the right to amend under the circumstances alleged, has not been passed upon in previous Maryland decisions. See
Note, 9 Md. E. Rev., supra,
p. 189. It is the general rule that matters which have occurred since the filing of an original bill cannot. be added by amendment.
Miller, Equity Procedure,
sec. 187. They may, however, be brought in by supplemental bill. See Maryland Rule 379. But in
Schwab v. Schwab,
It seems clear from these cases that an act constituting a new cause of action, although it may be made the basis of a new bill, cannot be brought in by way of amendment or supplemental bill. The question is whether the additional facts brought in by amendment in the instant case, as to the character and duration of the abandonment specified in Code (1957), Art. 16, sec. 24, constitute a new cause of action within the meaning of the rule. If a divorce
a mensa
had been obtained under the original bill, it would not have been a bar
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to a subsequent bill for divorce
a vinculo
under the express provisions of Code (1957), Art. 16, sec. 31. See
Kruse v. Kruse,
We are constrained to hold that unless the appellant brings a new bill based on the constructive desertion, she cannot obtain a divorce
a vinculo
based on this ground. Of course, the amendment was not improper so far as the charge of cruelty is concerned, nor would she be precluded from obtaining a divorce
a mensa
on the ground of constructive desertion, although the charge may be difficult to prove or to corroborate. But we think the amendment, so far as the constructive desertion is concerned, did introduce a new cause of action, based on a different statutory ground. Cf.
Stewart v. Stewart,
Counsel for the appellant asks that we award him a counsel fee for prosecuting this appeal in the same amount prayed in the original and in the amended bill. The Chancellor did not pass on the question in sustaining the general demurrer, and we shall not do so at this time. There is no doubt that the wife is a favored suitor and entitled to counsel fees, but the amount, if any, is somewhat dependent upon the relative re
*149
sources of the parties. See
Frank v. Frank, 207
Md. 124, 130, and
Bennett v. Bennett,
The Chancellor can consider the matter upon remand.
Order reversed, and case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed, costs to be paid by the appellee.
Notes
. It may be noted that the Rules Committee has proposed that the rule laid down in these cases be changed. (Rule 1190-3, not yet adopted.)
