Boggs v. Boggs

114 A. 474, 138 Md. 422, 1921 Md. LEXIS 102
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 4, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 114 A. 474 (Boggs v. Boggs) 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
Boggs v. Boggs, 114 A. 474, 138 Md. 422, 1921 Md. LEXIS 102 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

. Viola O. Boggs in November, 1914:, filed in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, in New York County, a bill of complaint against William D. Boggs, her husband, for an absolute divorce on the ground of adultery. In addition to asking for a dissolution of the marriagei, the complainant in that suit also asked for the custody of Thomas Brandon Boggs, an infant, the only child of said marriage, who was born April 18th, 1905, and that provision be made out of the property and income of the defendant for the support of the plaintiff and the said child, and for counsel fee and expenses. At the time that suit was instituted both parties were residents of the State of New York, and in due course the defendant was summoned to answer the complaint, but failing to answer or appear, an interlocutory judgment by default was entered against him on January 25th, 1915, and on May 21st, 1915, a “final judgment on default” was entered against him, after testimony had been taken in support of the bill. In that judgment or decree, after reciting that the “defendant being fully in fault and a decision and interlocutory decree of divorce in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant having been made on the 25th day of January, 1915,” and duly filed, and no subsequent order affecting it having been passed, the court dissolved the marriage and divorced the plaintiff from the defendant, allowing the plaintiff the privilege of remarriage but denying that privilege to the defendant without the court’s permission, and it further decreed that the plaintiff have the custody of the infant child Thomas Brandon Boggs, but allowed the 'father the privilege.of access to the child at stated periods.

*425 During the pendency of this divorce proceeding and before tbe final decree, the parties to it entered into; an agreement “for the purpose of settling out of court the questions of alimony, counsel fees and the custody of said child.” This agreement provided that, in the event the provisions thereof were faithfully performed, the plaintiff’s motion for counsel fees and alimony should be withdrawn. The provisions referred to were in substance as follows: (a) that the defendant would convey for the benefit of the wife and son property in Bergen County, New Jersey, valued at $900, and (b) his interest in a certain agreement valued at $625, and (c) that he would pay for the benefit, of his wife $825, and (d) would return to her a diamond ring, her property, or a pawn ticket therefor and $200, or $400, the value of the ring.

In consideration of these; provisions the complainant in the divorce suit agreed “to accept the same and to maintain and support herself and one child of said marriage until he is able to support bimself, and tbe said second party agrees not to make any further claim on tbe party of the first part for the support of herself or their said child, without, however, waiving the benefit of the provisions of Sections 1759 and 1771 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or any other law in such case made and provided.” In addition to what has boon set forth, the agreement also contained other provisions;, which need not for the purposes of this case he referred to further than to say that they related to the custody of the child, the separation of the parties, the enforcement of the terms of the agreement, and that it looked to, hut was not necessarily dependent upon, a dissolution of the marriage. It also provided that the complainant should have certain furniture, and that the defendant would indemnify the complainant against the payment of liens and charges owed by him on the properties conveyed to her, and that it was to be construed according to the law of the State of New York.

Some time after the entry of the final decree in the divorce case, the defendant William D. Boggs removed to *426 Maryland, where he appears to have remarried and, at the time of the institution of this suit, owned and operated a farm valued at some twelve or fifteen thousand dollars near Orumpton in Queen Anne’s County, which he appears to have paid for in part with money • received by him from his father’s estate after the divorce had been granted.

Viola C. Boggs, the plaintiff in this case, continued to live-in Kew York, after she had been divorced from her husband, and for the purpose of supporting herself and her child she took employment as a clerk. The property she received under the agreement referred to- did not yield the amount at which it was appraised in the agreement, so that she actually received from the proceeds of a sale of it and in cash paid by her husband but $1,625 for tbe support of herself and her son. She had no productive property of her own and, her earnings being insufficient to support herself and child, she-applied the money received under the agreement to their support, and when that was expended she pawned her1 jewelry for the same purpose. From time to time during this period. Mrs. Boggs made demand upon the defendant for financial assistance in the maintenance and education of their son and,, upon his refusal to- contribute anything for that purpose, she-sued him in the Circuit Court for Kent County for various-sums aggregating $1,738.78, which she claimed to have expended for the support and education of their infant son between May 23rd, 1915, and April 5th, 1919, in which case-the verdict and judgment were in favor of the defendant.

Subsequently, on January 6th, 1920, she brought this action against the defendant for necessary expenditures made-by her for the maintenance and education of their infant son from April 6th, 1919, to January 6th, 1920. The declaration as amended is in assumpsit and contains the common counts in the usual form, and in connection with it there was filed a bill of particulars setting out in detail the items comprising the cause of action. A demurrer to the war. as amended was interposed' and overruled, and the defendant *427 then filed three pleas in bar of the action. The first plea set up' the divorce proceeding to which we have referred; the seeond set up- the divorce proceeding together with the agreement to which reference has also been made, while the third plea set up the action and judgment in Kent County between the same parties in the following language.

“That in and by a suit brought in the Circuit Court for Kent County, Maryland, Ko. 27 Trials, Apr. Term, 1919, in which Yiola C. Boggs, plaintiff, sued William D. Boggs, defendant, for the sum of $1,728.78 dollars for the maintenance and support of their infant from May 22, 1915, to April 5, 1919, a verdict was rendered for said defendant, and a judgment for said defendant entered thereon. And that said judgment was rendered on the same cause of action mentioned in the declaration, and still is a subsisting judgment.”

The court sustained a demurrer to the first and third pleas and overruled a demurrer to the second plea. The plaintiff replied to the second plea (1) that the agreement was invalid in so far as it related to the support of the child, (2) that it was not kept by the defendant, and (3) that the plaintiff had expended in the support and maintenance of the child all the monies received under it and that, since April 6th, 1919, she had been without means or money to furnish necessaries for his support, maintenance and education.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 474, 138 Md. 422, 1921 Md. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boggs-v-boggs-md-1921.