Applegarth v. Applegarth

210 A.2d 362, 239 Md. 92, 1965 Md. LEXIS 524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 27, 1965
Docket[No. 258, September Term, 1964.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 210 A.2d 362 (Applegarth v. Applegarth) 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
Applegarth v. Applegarth, 210 A.2d 362, 239 Md. 92, 1965 Md. LEXIS 524 (Md. 1965).

Opinion

*94 SybERT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Chancellor granted Harriet S. Applegarth an absolute divorce on the ground of abandonment, and her husband, Harold G. Applegarth, appeals, claiming that the evidence did not establish abandonment; that there was a lack of corroboration .of the wife’s testimony; and that the evidence shows a bona fide effort on his part to reconcile.

The parties were married in 1949 and the record reveals no real marital difficulties until 1961. They purchased and moved into a house on Bolton Street in Baltimore in 1957. Having no children of their own, they adopted a boy and a girl, now ten and five years of age, respectively. They apparently lived in comfortable circumstances, and Mrs. Applegarth had a housemaid. Mr. Applegarth, an attorney, was connected with two savings and loan associations which encountered financial difficulties in 1961 and were placed in receivership in January 1962. In July 1962, Mr. Applegarth was convicted by a federal court of mail fraud in connection with the associations, was sentenced to a federal prison in November 1962, and was released on parole in September 1963.

The marital discord between the parties appears to have commenced when the difficulties of the building associations began. At that time most of the husband’s income ceased, and, according to him, he borrowed several thousands of dollars from his father to resist the receivership actions and to defend the criminal charges against him. The evidence indicates that both parties were upset and “edgy” as a result of the situation.

Mrs. Applegarth testified that sometime around Christmas, 1961, she and her husband had an argument during which she upbraided him “at soma length” and “perhaps excitedly” about his dishonest friends in the savings and loan business and which ended with his throwing her to the floor and kicking her; that she ran out of the house, breaking the glass door with her hands, but returned at once. Her husband went across the street to a neighbor’s house to get assistance for her cut hands. The neighbor, Mrs. Ward, then came over to the Applegarth home to render aid. The wife stated that earlier in the evening another neighbor, Mr. Greenhood, had been with her but that he *95 was not present at the time of the argument since he had left when her husband came home, though he returned when Mrs. Ward came over.

The husband’s version of the occurrence differed in important respects from that of his wife. According to him, he came home from work at 11:00 P.M., tired and nervous, to find several neighbors visiting his wife, and they all had some drinks. The visitors soon left, except Mr. Greenhood, whom, the husband stated, he found in his home too frequently. When the wife began an argument about his connection with the savings association business, the husband said he ordered Greenhood out of the house and his wife upstairs. Greenhood left, but the wife continued the “tirade” and became hysterical, whereupon he slapped her several times to bring her out of it. She fell to the floor and resisted his efforts to help her up, he said, but then she suddenly jumped up and ran out the door, pushing her hands through the glass and cutting them. She then came back in and ran upstairs, after wdiich he went across the street and brought Mrs. Ward over to aid his wife. Greenhood also came back in the house. The husband denied that he had thrown his wife to the floor or kicked her.

Mrs. Applegarth made no claim that her husband had been physically violent toward her, other than the episode mentioned.

The desertion of her by her husband occurred, Mrs. Applegarth testified, on February 11, 1962, when he packed some suitcases and left the house after merely telling her that he was going to Florida without stating any reason. She said the only reason she could give as to why he left was because of her poor health. She testified that she was suffering from a skin disorder and a nervous condition which she thought was caused by worry over her husband’s honesty and that she had seen a dermatologist and a psychiatrist. She stated that Mr. Applegarth left her little money and that her mother had to buy food for her within a few days of his departure. According to the wife, the parties never lived together as husband and wife after February 1962, though she stated that on one occasion he returned to Bolton Street, broke into the house, and slept in their son’s room. She admitted that she had changed the lock on the *96 door, but could not remember whether it was before or after this occurrence. At first she testified that she didn’t know where in Florida her husband had gone, but later she admitted that she had received several phone calls from him from Florida and that their son had visited him for several days there. And when the husband introduced in evidence certain letters which he claimed she had sent to him in Florida she admitted the letters were from her. She further testified that because her husband left her so little money she could not continue to keep the Bolton Street house and therefore had moved on June 1, 1962, to her parents’ home in Easton, Maryland, though the record shows she retained the maid until she moved, and she admitted she had three tenants in the house until she left. The house was eventually sold under a mortgage though the record does not show when. She admitted that in September 1962 she wrote to her attorney asking him to get a court order so that her husband would stop “annoying” her. Her reason for doing this was, according to her testimony, because she was afraid of him and because “he drives me mentally out of my mind”.

Mrs. Applegarth stated that she never received any money from her husband after he left (except $15 for the expense of traveling from Easton to Baltimore to see a psychiatrist) and that he never asked her to come to live with him. She did testify, however, that she visited a psychiatrist at her husband’s request after he was released from prison and that once both she and her husband visited the psychiatrist together, but she said this was not because her husband wanted a reconciliation but because he wanted to annoy her. She couldn’t remember whether or not he told the psychiatrist that he wanted her to come back and live with him. She said that she and her husband could never live together any longer; that life with him ruined her health and that her skin problem had disappeared since his absence.

The only witness called by the wife was the neighbor, Mrs. Ward, who corroborated Mrs. Applegarth’s testimony in regard to the altercation around Christmas 1961 insofar as she had knowledge thereof after she arrived on the scene to calm the wife and clean her cut hands. She did testify that after February 1962 she “did not think” she saw Mr. Applegarth *97 around his home, though she was a frequent visitor, but did not know definitely whether he was ever there. She further stated that Mrs. Applegarth told her that her husband was in Florida. The other significant fact she testified to was that in June 1962 Mrs. Applegarth moved out.

The husband testified that he had no intention of ending the marriage when he left in February 1962, but that he went to Florida on a business trip and that he so told his wife when he left.

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Bluebook (online)
210 A.2d 362, 239 Md. 92, 1965 Md. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/applegarth-v-applegarth-md-1965.