Cashell v. Cashell

137 A. 904, 153 Md. 170, 1927 Md. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 137 A. 904 (Cashell v. Cashell) 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
Cashell v. Cashell, 137 A. 904, 153 Md. 170, 1927 Md. LEXIS 30 (Md. 1927).

Opinion

Pattison, I.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The parties to this appeal, Samuel P. Cashell and Alma C. Cashell, were married on the 17th day of October, 1906, at Rockville, Md. After their marriage they lived together *171 as man and wife upon the husband’s farm in Montgomery County, Maryland, until their separation in 1926, at which time Samuel P. Cashell was forty-one years of age and his wife thirty-nine years.

On the fourth day of June, 1926, Samuel P. Cashell filed his bill in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, in which he charged the defendant, Alma O. Cashell, with having committed the act of adultery with one John Weir, and in which he prayed that he might be divorced a vinculo matrimonii from said defendant because of the commission by her of said offense, and further, that he be awarded the custody of their three children, Hal, a daughter aged fifteen years, Gladys, a daughter aged eleven years, and Samuel Francis, a son, aged ten years.

The defendant in her answer denied the charge of adultery made against her, and testimony was taken in open court upon the issue presented by bill and answer. At its conclusion the court, on August 16th, 1926, passed its decree by which Samuel P. Cashell was divorced a vinculo matrimonii from the defendant, and the custody of the children awarded to him. From that decree this appeal has been taken.

The real and substantial question to be decided in this case is whether the charge of adultery against the wife was established by the evidence offered.

Although adultery is a crime under the laws of this state, it is not, when advanced as a ground of divorce, so treated in the sense that it must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. To justify the finding of adultery in such cases, it is not necessary that the evidence shall be of the probative value required to convict a defendant charged with such crime. The offense need only be proved by a clear preponderance of evidence, but because of the great and lasting injury to the character of the person convicted of such offense, the court is charged with the “duty of examining and weighing with the most scrupulous care, the evidence adduced to support it, and, to establish such a charge, the *172 evidence should he clear, satisfactory and convincing.” Barnett v. Barnett, 144 Md. 189; Steele v. Steele, 170 N. Y. Supp. 454.

It is with these established principles in mind that we will consider and weigh the facts of this case, to determine whether or not the charge of adultery was proved.

In the fall of 1922, the appellee and appellant, with their three children, were living upon the appellee’s farm, and, so far as the record discloses, they were apparently satisfied with their surroundings and were fairly happy in their associations. The husband was engaged in his farming operations and the wife in her household duties, and both interested in the rearing and education of their children. It was while this condition existed that John Weir, aged thirty years, an Esthonian, who had been in this country only a short while, came into the community in which they lived. He was then paying attention to Miss Connell, the sister of the appellant,' who at times was at the Cashell home, while nursing in the Montgomery County Hospital. Weir frequently called at the home of the Cashells and, on- some of his visits there, he would take Miss Connell in his car to Washington and other places, and occasionally the appellant would accompany them. • At times, when he would not find Miss Connell at her sister’s, the appellant, upon his invitation and with the consent of her husband, would go with him to the hospital, while the husband remained at home with the children. As stated by the appellee, he thought she was enjoying herself, and as he trusted her, he was glad to have her go. It was not long before she ceased asking the appellee’s permission to accompany Weir on these trips. After his visits, Weir would write the appellant thanking her for the hospitality shown him while at her home.

Thereafter, Weir ceased his attention to the sister, and became a frequent visitor at the home of the appellant, where he would often spend the week end, and upon these visits he would take the wife and children, or the wife alone, *173 riding in Ms car. His visits became more frequent and of greater length until, in January, 1925, he became a boarder at the Oashell home. While there he worked in Washington, twelve miles away, and when so employed, the appellant would frequently carry Mm to his work in the morning and go for him in the evening.

After becoming a boarder, he was almost constantly with the appellant and took her riding more frequently than before. At times the children would accompany them, though often they would be alone. On some of these trips they would go to Washington and there attend the moving picture shows, returning to the Oashell home late in the night. The evidence of a number of witnesses discloses that on occasions they would be out in the car so late as eleven and twelve o’clock in the night. The appellee testified that “they (Weir and the appellant) would get home early sometimes and sometimes it would be after twelve o’clock when they would come home, and lots of times they would not come in” at once on reaching home. The appellee had the utmost confidence in Ms wife, though at times he spoke to her concerning some of the things she did, which to him appeared indiscreet and imprudent, and on one or two-occasions his suspicions were somewhat aroused, but she was always able to convince him that her conduct was proper, and that she had allowed no improper liberties to-be taken with her by Weir, though she admitted to her husband that the corespondent had kissed her. The appellee, in his testimony, stated that the appellant and Weir wouJd remain downstairs after he had retired, and this fact aroused his suspicions, so on one occasion he determined to watch them and, while in the room above, he looked through the register and saw them in the room below. He saw Weir pull a paper which the appellant was reading out of her hands. She reached out and he took her hand; he then handed the paper back to her, “got up, walked around and put his arm around her and laid his head against her face, and attempted to kiss her. He made several attempts and *174 in the meantime the colored woman called her about the chickens and they both went out to see what was the trouble.” The appellee then went to the window and called the appellant upstairs and told her what he had seen. “She promised me that thereafter she would not be so familiar with Weir and would try to do what was right. I forgave her and told her it was quite a serious affair. I was willing to do anything and make any sacrifice to keep things together.” Later in her association with Weir, she admitted that she loved him and that she would kiss those she loved; that she regarded him as a brother. The appellee further stated that, as their association continued, she became more fond of Weir, and more dissatisfied with the appellee himself; that she had no use for him, and wanted him to let her alone and make a living for the family, which was all that was required of him; that she had lost all affection for him. .

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 904, 153 Md. 170, 1927 Md. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cashell-v-cashell-md-1927.