Carter v. Carter

144 A. 490, 156 Md. 500, 1929 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 31, 1929
Docket[Nos. 94, 95, October Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 144 A. 490 (Carter v. Carter) 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
Carter v. Carter, 144 A. 490, 156 Md. 500, 1929 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are two appeals on this record. The first involves the custody of a minor child of the parties; and the second appeal presents the propriety of allowing to a former wife a counsel fee for legal services rendered in connection with the determination of the future custody of a minor child, after .a decree of divorce a vinculo matrimonii had ended the marital relation between the parents of the infant and had .awarded the custody of their child.

The original bill of complaint was filed on February 1st. 1926, in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, by Paral O. Carter against Marie S. Carter, and sought an absolute divorce and the guardianship and custody of John Paul Carter, their infant son, who was then in his fifth year. The ground alleged was an abandonment for the statutory period. The master reported that the testimony established the facts entitling the plaintiff to a decree; and the parties filed an agreement relative to alimony and the custody and support of the •child. The chancellor then passed a decree which absolutely divorced the plaintiff and defendant; which awarded the agreed specific sum in lieu of all temporary or permanent alimony; and which, conformably to their agreement, gave the guardianship of the child to the plaintiff; and awarded his custody so that it be equally divided in time between the parents; and imposed upon the father the obligation of paying the mother the sum of forty dollars a week for the maintenance and education of the child while in the custody of the mother.

On October 5th, 1926, the defendant filed a petition praying that the decree be revoked and annulled on the ground that it was collusively and fraudulently obtained; thait the defendant be given an opportunity to' appear and answer and *503 to submit her defense to the allegations of the bill of complaint; and that the defendant be'awarded alimony and the guardianship and custody of the infant. The plaintiff answered, denying the material charges of the petition; and later the parties again agreed, subject to the approval of the chancellor, that the matter be submitted on the petition and answer; and that the decree be modified so- as to allow the defendant a further sum of $1,500, and to make a different provision with respect to the rights of the- parents in reference to the custody of the child. By its decree of April 26th, 1927, the court dismissed defendant’s petition; awarded her $1,500 as agreed; and gave the guardianship and custody of the child to the father, with the right of the mother to see the child at his father’s residence and to have the child in her custody from the first of June in each year, or from the close of the child’s school term, if it should extend beyond the first day of June, until the first day of September; and, also, for one week during the Christmas holidays, and for another week during the Easter holidays, o-f each year, with the right of the father to see the child at the mother’s residence. The father was to pay the expenses of transportation from his home to' the mother’s home in New York or elsewhere, provided they be not in excess of the cost of transportation between ’Washington and New York; and the sum of ten dollars a week to the mother while the child was with her under the provisions of the decree. The chancellor made all the provisions, with respect to the custody and support of the child effective until the further order of the court, and expressly retained jurisdiction for that- purpose. McSherry v. McSherry, 113 Md. 395, 400-403.

The question of the custody of the child was again presented to. the chancellor by the petition of the plaintiff filed on December 6th, 1927. In this, petition the father recited his compliance with the modified decree, and the mother’s refusal, rendering it necessary for the father to institute habeas corpus proceedings in New York. While these proceedings were pending, the petition alleged that the mother had secretly removed the child from New York for the pur *504 pose of taking hint to Canada, but that, discovering her plan, the father had employed a detective, who had found the child, on September 20th, 1927, at Bridgeport, Connecticut, and who had there secured possession of the child and returned him to the father, who had him in his custody at the' time of the filing of his petition.

The object of the father’s action was to obtain the exclusive guardianship and custody of the child. In addition to the defendant’s noncompliance with the decree, the plaintiff averred that his wife’s conduct since the decree of April 26th, 1927, made her unfit to have the minor, and that the plaintiff should have the sole custody of the child. The answer of the mother was a denial of all the accusations brought against her; an assertion of her rights under the decree, and a denial that it ought to be modified.

Voluminous testimony was taken by the parties; and the chancellor passed a decree on June 25th, 1928, in which he modified the decree of April 26th, 1927, so (a) that the custody and guardianship of the child be awarded to Marie S. Carter from June 26th, 1928, to October 1st, 1928; and, also, one week during Christmas holidays of 1928, and one week during Easter holidays of 1929, with the right of the father to visit the child while in the custody of the mother; (b) that the father pay the mother the sum of $25 for the week of June 26th, 1928, and thereafter at the rate of $100 a month from July 1st, 1928, for the support, education, and maintenance of the minor during the period or periods that the child is in the custody of the mother; (c) that the custody and guardianship of the infant shall be committed to the father from October 1st, 1928, to- June 25th, 1929, with the exceptions of the periods of the Christmas and Easter holidays, allowing the mother the right to see the infant while in the custody of the father; (d) that the father should pay the cost of transportation between Washington and Mew York for the first two periods of the mother’s custody and that the mother pay for the third trip-, and (e) that the court retain jurisdiction of the infant “and that the provisions herein *505 after (hereinbefore) shall remain in force until the further order of this court.”

It will be observed that a part of the decree applies to a period which has passed and, at the present time, the decree is effective to the extent that it gives the guardianship and custody of the infant to the father, subject to an interval of one week during the Easter holidays in 1929, until June 25th, 1929, but the general declaration at the end of the decree that the specific provisions are to remain in force until the further order of the court would continue them indefinitely, and thus would give the “guardianship, and custody” of the minor to his mother for slightly more than three months in the summer, a week at Christmas and a week at Easter, with the father paying the mother at the rate of $100 a month during those periods., and having the “guardianship and custody” during the remainder of the year.

It is the ride of the common law that parents have the natural right to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 A. 490, 156 Md. 500, 1929 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-carter-md-1929.