Annarina v. Boland

111 A. 84, 136 Md. 365, 1920 Md. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 23, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 111 A. 84 (Annarina v. Boland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Annarina v. Boland, 111 A. 84, 136 Md. 365, 1920 Md. LEXIS 78 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

*369 Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Baltimore City Court entered November 8th, 1919, on the; verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff in an action on the case by Margaret A. Boland against Meta Annarina, for alienating the affection of John IT. Boland, the plaintiff’s; husband.

In the declaration the plaintiff states that she is the wife of John H. Boland, and that the; defendant knowing that, “did heretofore” by divers and devious means,, alienate the affections of the said John IT Boland, and “did theaeb) obtain” from him sundry sums of money and a house, so that as a result, the; plaintiff’s home was; broken up,, she was separated from, her husband, and he and the defendant lived together in adultery in the home once occupied by the plaintiff. To this declaration the defendant pleaded the general issue, upon which issue was joined.

The facts disclosed by the record briefly stated are these: John'EL Boland and Margaret A. Boland were married in Baltimore a number1 of years ago-, and lived there together until July 29th, 1909, when they separated. They have one child, a son tw'enty-two or three years of age. Dp to the time of their separation, Mrs. Boland said, their relations had been pleasant and they lived happily together1, but her husband on the; other hand in describing their relations said that they had not lived happily together for ten years, and that he did not eat over three meals in his; home in a year.

After the separation Mrs. Boland continued to live at their former home;, 310 East Twenty-fifth Street, while Boland went to Rowland’s Turkish Baths, where he lived for two years, when, he reoccupied the Twenty-fifth Street house after his, wife had vacated it, and she then went to live at 822 E. Fayette Street.

Oddly enough Mrs. Boland has given no particular account of the separation between her and her husband or of th causes which led to it, except that, in a general way, she attributed it to the appellant’s influence. Boland, however, *370 was mora specific. He said that he had obtained from a man named Sapp» an affidavit to the effect that he had had improper relations with Mrs. Boland, and with this he (Boland) confronted her. She denied the charge but Boland left the home and on the next day filed a suit against the appellee for divorce on the ground of adultery. In this proceeding Mrs. Boland filed a cross bill in which she also asked for an absolute divorce on the -ground that, while she1 was gluiltless, her husband had been guilty of adultery.

The charge made in that suit by the husband that his wife had committed adultery with the person named in the bill of complaint before its institution does not appear to have been sustained, for the Court dismissed the original bill and upon the cross-bill granted Mrs. Boland an absolute divorce from her- husband on the ground of adultery. Before that decree was filed Mrs. Boland, in 'September, 1909, is said to have taken a trip» to New York with another woman and two male co»mp»anions, and to» have occupied the same ro»om with one of the men in a hotel for several days. After the decree was signed but before it became enrolled Mrs. Boland filed a petition to have it reformed in respect to» the allowance for alimony. In considering this petition the Co»urt, its attention having been called to the New York trip», decided that the decree had been obtained by a fraud upon the Court, struck it out, and dismissed both the original and cross-bills.

On February 1st, 1912, Mr. and Mrs. Boland executed a deed of separation in which the parties», after reciting that “great and irreconcilable differences had arisen between them” and that it had become impossible for them to live together as man and wife, agreed to live apart, and that neither would endeavor to exercise any marital control or rights over the other or to» have any marital relations with the other. Under this deed Mrs. Boland received $1,200’ for the release and relinquishment of her marital rights in her husband’s property and of any claim she might have to support from him. ,

*371 After thet, execution of thisi deed Mrs. Boland moved to 822 E. Fayette Street, and her husband, after’ having some repairs made to it, moved back to his former home on Twenty-fifth Street.

iShortly after that he installed the defendant Fleta Annarina in his home ostensibly as housekeeper, in which position she has since remained. Her duties, at least in the beginning, appear to have been light, and her treatment kind. "With the assistance of a housemaid she kept the six room house in order and looked after the needs of her employer. Later Mr. Boland’s mother, a paralytic, came to live with them and then the appellant was also required to and did nurse and care for her.

Just when Boland first met this woman is not at all clear from the testimony. He testified he first met her in 1911 and the appellant also places their meeting in the spring of 1911, but Mrs. Boland testified that she first knew of Boland’s misconduct with the appellant when the appellee and Boland were still living together; that before they had had any trouble at all she saw him. and the appellant coming from ,a house of ill fame; that while at that time she did not know who the woman with her husband, was she later reeogpized the appellant as the woman; that while her divorce case was pending she saw her husband and the same woman come from a hotel and enter an automobile, and that at about the time of their separation she saw the appellant and Boland come out of Boland’s office at night.

From the time the appellant entered Boland’s home in 1911, their relations appear to have been exceedingly intimate. They are said by the appellee’s witnesses to have oe^ cupied the same room, and the same bed, and to have conducted themselves as though they were man and wife, rather than master and servant; He referred to her as “Freda Boland,” he gave her money and property, carried bis own bank account in her name in trust for them both, paid her bills and loaned her jewelry, all in addition to paying her her regular wages.

*372 Notwithstanding, the separation, Mrs. Boland retained a keen interest in her husband and his affairs, which manifested itself in various ways. She had him, arrested and prosecuted on a charge of adultery and also testified against him on a charge of receiving stolen goods knowing them to be stolen. He also blamed her for procuring an unprovoked assault on him by two men as a result of which he was severely injured, and he said she had herself threatened to shoot him a dozen times, and on one accasion came to his home in his absence and so conducted herself that he swore out a peace warrant against her.

Notwithstanding all this the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that after the deed of separation her husband continued to visit her, often staying all night at her home, and had on numerous occasions, the latest of which was in 1919, had marital intercourse with her.

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Bluebook (online)
111 A. 84, 136 Md. 365, 1920 Md. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/annarina-v-boland-md-1920.