Bushman v. Bushman

145 A. 488, 157 Md. 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1929
Docket[No. 43, January Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 145 A. 488 (Bushman v. Bushman) 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
Bushman v. Bushman, 145 A. 488, 157 Md. 166 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Parke, J-.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On July 26th, 1918, Josephine F. Bushman, plaintiff, obtained an absolute divorce from Francis X. Bushman, defendant, in the 'Circuit- Court for Baltimore County, sitting as a court of equity. Before the cause was submitted for decree, the parties agreed that it should not be necessary to take testimony in reference to counsel fees, alimony and the custody of their five infant children, but that it would be proper and reasonable for a decree for absolute divorce to provide:

*168 1. That the defendant pay to the plaintiff the sum of $40,000 as alimony, in four equal installments, the first, upon the passage of the decree, the second, within eight months, the third, within fourteen months, and the fourth, within twenty months thereafter; and all of the deferred payments to bear interest at the rate of five per centum per annum from the date of the decree, 'and to be secured to the satisfaction of the solicitors for the plaintiff; and that the payments when made are to' be in full satisfaction and discharge for all claim for alimony and of any other claim of the plaintiff against the defendant; and that, after the signing of the decree, the plaintiff should have no> further right, interest, or title in any property now, then, or thereafter belonging to the defendant.

2. That custody of the five infant children be awarded the plaintiff, with the right of the defendant to have a special period of custody every yeatr and to have children visit him at other times during the year, provided the aggregate length of these 'visits shall not exceed two> weeks in any one year.

3. That the defendant would furnish and equip for housekeeping purposes not more than eight rooms of a house to be selected and rented by the plaintiff as a home for herself and children; and that the title fir this furniture and equipment should be in the plaintiff.

4. That the defendant would pay the plaintiff the sum of $4,000 yearly for the maintenance and support of the children, and that he would, alsoj pay the tuition and expenses of the children at school, together with all bills for doctors, surgeons, medicines, or dentists; and that he should provide suitable clothing for said children during their minority or until they should respectively marry. The annual payment was payable in monthly installments, subject to an abatement of $700- whenever any of said children should attain the age of twenty-five years, marry, or cease to live with the plaintiff, and when all of said children shall have become twenty-five years of age, or shall have married, or shall have ceased to live with the plaintiff, then the whole *169 annual payment of $4,000 to- the- plaintiff shall cease, subject, however, to the provision that the court retain jurisdiction for the purpose of entertaining and acting upon any petition which might thereafter be filed by the defendant asking for a diminution o-f the amount of payment herein provide-d for in the event of a change of circumstances, whereby he would no- longer be- reasonably able to make payments to the extent provided for the children.

5. That the defendant pay the plaintiff’s solicitors the sum of $3,000 as counsel fees upon the passage of the decree, and all the costs.

This agreement was signed by both the plaintiff and the defendant on February 15th, 1918, and was filed in the cause on July 20th, 1918, the day the decree awarding an absolute divorce was passed and filed. The decree incorporated all the terms of the agreement with meticulous adherence to- its language, except in these particulars: (1) the decree provided that the interest should run oil the $40,000 from the date of the decree and should he paid in equal monthly installments, which would he abated, from time to time, to the extent of the payments made; (2) the decree omitted the provisioLLS that the deferred payments were to bo secured to the satisfaction of the solicitors for the- plaintiff and that the defendant furnish eight rooms of a house for the benefit of the plaintiff; and (3) the decree provided that the $4,000 for the support and maintenance of the children should be paid in monthly installments at the beginning of every month. Emerson v. Emerson, 120 Md. 584, 586-587.

The record discloses that the defendant partly performed the decree; hut, on October 16th, 1928, the plaintiff filed a petition íll the canse charging that the defendant had “wilfully failed, refiLsed and neglected to pay the said alimony, and to pay the moneys necessary to support his children, and is liow in arrears through the said decree in a sum of approximately $60,000,” and asked that a writ of attachment for contempt he issued agahist the said Francis X. Bushman requiring him to he and appear in court to show cause why he should not he punished for contempt. The court directed *170 the writ to issue, and, upon being attached, the defendant demurred to the petition, but the court overruled the demurrer, and this appeal was then taken.

The demurrer raised the question whether the court had jurisdiction to enforce payment of the sums awarded by the decree by an order committing the defendant to prison for for contempt of court. The answer depends upon whether the decree is for alimony, because alimony does not constitute a debt within the meaning of that term in the constitutional prohibition of imprisonment for debt. Constitution of Maryland, art. 3, sec. 38; Dickey v. Dickey, 151 Md. 675, 681.

The original bill of complaint was for a divorce a mensa et thoro on the ground of cruelty, and the agreement mentioned was subject to the condition precedent that the plaintiff should amend the bill to one praying for an absolute divorce. This was done on February 25th, 1918, and is a suspicious circumstance; but, in the absence of any other testimony, and in view of the length of time since the passage of the decree, and its complete acceptance by the parties, the court could not now find, on this single equivocal fact, that the decree was induced by the collusion of the parties, and should regard it as having been made in an effort to secure proper provisions for the maintenance of the wife, who was the innocent party, and for the support of the children because of the inevitable and imminent dissolution of the marital relation on account of an existing statutory basis for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii.

The decree makes separate and distinct provisions for the wife and for the children. The obligation of the father to support the infant offspring may be a factor in determining the amount of alimony which should properly be awarded the wife where she has been awarded their custody, but the father’s primary liability to support the children is governed by different principles; and, although provisions for the support of the children and the maintenance of the wife are commonly embraced in the same decree, those for the support of the children are not alimony. There is no confusion of the husband’s two liabilities in the present decree, since the *171 support for the children and the maintenance for the wife are specifically and separately provided for in distinct paragraphs of the decree. Code, art. 16, sec. 39; Hood v. Hood,

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 488, 157 Md. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bushman-v-bushman-md-1929.