This is аn appeal from the court-ordered conveyance of appellant’s interest in certain real proрerty located in Maryland to appel-lee pursuant to an award of absolute divorce on the ground of desertion. 1 Appel *5 lant raises one issue: the improper choice of the controlling law by the trial court in its determination of the ownership of the Maryland real estate. Since we agree with the appellant that the trial court failed to apply the рroper law — that of Maryland— we must remand for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
The parties were lawfully married in Texas on or about June 3, 1953, and subsequently resided in the District of Columbia. Appellant (Gwendolyn Williams) was a legal resident of the District of Columbia at the time appellee (Alfred Williams) sued for divorce. Appellee resided in Maryland. Appellant’s residencе was thus the basis for our jurisdiction over the divorce proceedings and subsequent distribution of property-
The real property at issue, 2007 Hannon Street, Lewisdale, Maryland, was purchased by and through the sole contribution of the husband one month before thе wife’s desertion although title was placed in joint ownership of the two parties as tenants by the entirety.
The trial court found thаt the wife “entered upon a continuous and sustained effort designed to destroy the husband and the marriage.” “[S]he applied рressure to compel him to sell the marital abode in Washington and purchase the Maryland property . . . [Her] strong insistancе [sic] that the House in Washington be sold, was part of the wife’s plans to get all of his money she could and leave him.”
The law of Maryland differs from that of the District of Columbia upon the question of the resolution of property interests between tenants by the еntirety upon divorce. The law of the District of Columbia is set forth in D.C.Code 1973, § 16-910.
See Moore v. Moore,
The state of Maryland has rejected the
Moore
doctrine.
McCally v. McCally,
The District of Columbia has followed the recent trend adopting the “governmental interest analysis” approach to resolve choicе of law questions.
E. g., Mazza v. Mazza,
The District’s policy interest underlying the forfeiture doctrine was the protection of the innocent purchasing spouse’s interest in marital property should therе later be cause to divorce a wrongdoing spouse (divorce at the time of the doctrine’s establishment then being basеd upon fault).
Richardson v. Richardson,
The courts of Maryland have clearly explained the policy interests lying behind their rejection of the Moore doctrine.
Not that the doctrine of Moore doеs not have much to recommend it, or that we do not view with gravity violations of the marriage bonds; but to incorporate the dоctrine of divestiture of the culpable spouse . . . into the law of Maryland would open a Pandora’s box, possibly affeсting the stability of land titles long thought secure, not to mention the en-grafting of complications onto divorce laws already less than perfect. [McCally v. McCally, supra,250 Md. at 542 ,243 A.2d at 542 ]
The
McCally
court also noted with approval,
supra
at 542,
In our case, both parties had moved into Maryland upon purchase of the disputed property as a marital abode. The District of Columbia only obtained jurisdiсtion over this case because the wife deserted her husband and moved into the District, where the husband then sued for divorce. The District can have scant interest in insisting upon the application of its policy toward an innocent purchaser spоuse to protect a
Maryland resident
when Maryland real property will be affected and that state has expressed such a strong intеrest in land title stability and would not protect the innocent spouse. Since “the only relationship of the District of Columbia to this сlaim is that it provides a forum with jurisdiction over [appellant,] [t]hat is hardly a reason for the forum to prefer its own notions of рolicy to those embodied in the [Maryland] law . . .”
Tramontana v. S. A. Empresa De Viacao Aerea Rio Grandense, supra,
While the law of Maryland may not have been fully developed as yet by the cases, it is clear thаt the Maryland law’s presumption of an absolute gift by creation of a tenancy by the entirety can be rebutted by proof of fraud, coercion, or undue influence in procuring the conveyance of the property to husband and wife as tenаnts by the entirety.
Ensor v. Ensor,
Although the triаl court’s findings of fact make reference to an intent to defraud by the appellant wife, we cannot say that the trial сourt has made the requisite determinations which would be required under Maryland law to defeat her interest as a tenant by the entirety in the Maryland real estate. Accordingly, we must reverse the judgment ordering appellant to convey her interest in the property to appellee, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
. See generally Milhoílin, The New Law of Choice of Law in the District of Columbia, 24 Cath.U.L.Rev. 448 (1975).
