Carpenter v. Carpenter

262 A.2d 564, 257 Md. 218, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1299
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1970
Docket[No. 255, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 262 A.2d 564 (Carpenter v. Carpenter) 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
Carpenter v. Carpenter, 262 A.2d 564, 257 Md. 218, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1299 (Md. 1970).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On June 3, 1969, the Circuit Court for Montgomery County (Pugh, J.), after a hearing in open court, signed a final decree divorcing the appellee, Alice Carpenter, who was the plaintiff below, a vinculo matrimonii from the appellant, James W. Carpenter, on the ground of constructive desertion. The lower court granted custody of the two minor children to Alice and awarded $600 a month for alimony and child support. The appellant, James, contends in this appeal that there was not sufficient evidence adduced in the lower court to justify a finding of constructive desertion. There is no challenge to the award of custody or to the amount of alimony and child support. In our opinion, the lower court was not clearly in error in its finding of constructive desertion on the part of James, and we shall affirm the final decree of June 3, 1969.

The parties were married on June 4, 1949, the day following James’ graduation from the United States Naval Academy. Two children were born as a result of the marriage — James, Jr. aged 17 and Alice Fenimore Carpenter aged 12 at the time of the hearing in the divorce suit.

*220 The parties lived together from the time of their marriage in 1949 until June 26, 1966, except for brief periods when James was at sea or on other naval duty and for a six-week period in 1961 when James was hospitalized in Naval Hospitals in Boston and Philadelphia.

James has three degrees: his B.S. degree from the United States Naval Academy, a degree in Naval Engineering, and a degree of Master of Science in Nuclear Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. At the time of trial, he was a Lieutenant Commander in the United States Navy.

There had been incidents of marital discord highlighted by a beating of Alice by James around Christmas, 1960. James admitted that he had struck his wife “many times” and that “back in 1952 or 1953 we used to have fights all of the time that would end up by her not talking, and then gloating for the next couple of days.” James described beating his wife around Christmas, 1960 as follows:

“* * * I took her over my knee and I spanked her, and I spanked her as hard and as long as I could. The only reason I stopped was because my arm got so tired I couldn’t lift it off the floor.”

In 1961, James voluntarily went to the Naval Hospital in Boston for psychiatric observation. He was later transferred to the Philadelphia Naval Station where he was also under psychiatric observation. He testified that they gave him “a clean bill of health and returned me to duty.”

In a letter to Alice dated March 6, 1961, James suggested that she have sexual relations with some of the important people so that he could get a promotion. He also suggested that Alice engage with him in certain repulsive'and deviant sexual practices.

In a letter of May 19, 1961, to Alice, James wrote her, “I guess part of my compulsive aggressiveness is revealed by my desire to discuss my sexual fantasies with you.”

*221 In May 1966 James’ mother-in-law was staying at the house of the parties in Bethesda. She was recovering from .a heart attack in April 1986 and was sleeping in the den in order to remain on one floor. For no apparent reason, James flew into a wild rage and told his mother-in-law that she could no longer sleep in the den or sit in his chair. His mother-in-law was much alarmed and fearful that she would have another heart attack. She called her son in Centreville to come and get her, which he did the same day. The mother-in-law testified that James “came down screaming and yelling at me” and “* * * came in the door like a wild man.”

Alice testified that her husband’s attitude, beginning in January and February 1966 became more abusive and intolerable. He asked her to be a prostitute. He was asking her to sleep with other men. He called her a slut and a pig. He asked her to watch him masturbate. She further testified:

“He was accusing my father of committing suicide. He was screaming at us. The cherry tree fell over in the wind, and he told me he thought it was my fault. He was screaming and yelling at the children. He would say I was trying to poison him.”

' We now come to the final episode and the parting of the ways. James testified that he desired to have sexual relations with his wife much more than she wished to have relations. He told her in June 1966 that “* * * if I catch you in the house by yourself I am going to rape you.” He said that to her for about one week.

Alice testified:

“I left him because he beat me up, the 25th of June. I went up to try to get him out of bed at 12:30 that morning, because it was getting to the point where he was just sleeping all the time, and yelling at me the rest of the time, and when I went up to get him, he leaped out of the *222 bed and shouted all sorts of obscene things at me.
“He knocked me across the room, knocked my little girl out of the room, and he ripped all my clothes off of me, and I had just had a foot operation and he was trying to rip my clothes off of me, and he was going to break my foot, and then Alice ran down to try to call for help, and she got all upset on the phone and she came up.
“By that time he was knocking everything around and I tried to get through that. The next day I had to get my son to camp. He was still going on that night. Alice [the 12 year old daughter] was afraid to go to bed.”
* * *
“I realized that night that Alice was afraid even to go up to bed. She stayed down in the den, and Jim was running up and down the steps all night long, shouting obscene things at me, and my son.
“I left. I got Jimmy off to camp and Alice was terrified because Jim was doing all sorts of crazy things, so it went back to what happened to me when he was put in the hospital before that.”

As a result of that episode, Alice received three bruises, all approximately one inch in size, one on her neck and two on her arm.

James describes the episode as follows:

“I held her right arm, her right upper forearm, in my left arm. I used my right hand to unsnap the buckle of her shorts, which took me a considerable length of time, about a minute, when I finally got them unbuckled.
“I grabbed both her pants and her undershorts and removed them in one motion. They came off very easily. It was as I was removing them when she said, ‘Watch out for my toe.’
“Q. Was she struggling with you while you were *223 doing this? A. She may have been, but let’s face it, I weigh twice as much as she does.”

Mrs. Rhea L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 A.2d 564, 257 Md. 218, 1970 Md. LEXIS 1299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-carpenter-md-1970.