Crane v. Crane

97 A. 535, 128 Md. 214, 1916 Md. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 97 A. 535 (Crane v. Crane) 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
Crane v. Crane, 97 A. 535, 128 Md. 214, 1916 Md. LEXIS 63 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

*215 Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

J. Edward Crane, the appellee, on the 30th day of January, 1915, filed a bill in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, in equity, against Ruth Alma Crane, his wife, the appellant, for a divorce a vinculo mairimonü, on the ground of adultery, and for the care and custody of the two infant children.

By the third, fourth and fifth paragraphs of the bill it- is averred:

3rd: That ever since the marriage the plaintiff has always been a kind, faithful and affectionate husband, and bis conduct above reproach.

1th: That Ruth Alma Crane, his. wife, the defendant, has . at divers times, between January the 1st, 1914, and the filing of this bill, committed adultery with one Edgar H. Paxson, Jr., and with divers other men whose names are to the plaintiff unknown; and

5th: That the plaintiff has not lived or cohabited with his wife since he has discovered the adulteries.

On the 8th of Eebruary, 1915, the defendant answered the bill, denying the material allegations set out therein and charging that the averments in paragraph four of the bill were false and untrue, because her conduct towards her husband had always been kind, chaste and above reproach.

The case was heard Upon bill, answer and proof, and from a decree dated the 9th of June, 1915, granting an absolute divorce to the husband, and the custody of the minor children, the wife has appealed.

Subsequently, on the 29th of October, 1915, the husband, J. Edward Crane, entered an appeal from the order of Court, dated October 1st, 1915, directing the payment of certain counsel fees, by the husband, and the cost of the preparation of the record, on the wife’s appeal, to this Court, and alimony to the wife during the continuance of this, litigation.

The controlling question on the first appeal, is whether the testimony, as disclosed by the record, sustains, and sup *216 ports, the charge of adultery, as alleged in the plaintiff’s bill.

The rules of law to be apjDlied in determining cases of this character have been repeatedly announced by the decisions of this Court and can admit of no controversy. They will be found clearly stated and adopted in a number of well considered cases; see Kremelberg v. Kremelberg, 52 Md. 553; Shufeldt v. Shufeldt, 86 Md. 529; Rasch v. Rasch, 105 Md. 504; Robins v. Robins, 121 Md. 695; Marshall v. Marshall, 122 Md. 694, and Thiess v. Thiess, 124 Md. 296.

The proof in the case at bar is voluminous and as usual in such cases, a large part of it is conflicting and contradictory, but we are compelled to hold, after a careful and deliberate consideration of all the testimony in the record before us, that the charge of adultery against the wife has been satisfactorily and conclusively established, and the husband is entitled to the relief sought by the bill.

It appears, that the parties to the controversy were married on December 19th, 1909, in Wilmington, Delaware, and lived together as husband and wife, until on or about the 19th of December, 1914. The issue of the marriage, are two children, Francis Earl, age three years, and Joseph Edward, age four years, both of whom are now living.

The bill charges adulterous intercourse between the defendant and the co-respondent, Edgar H. Paxson, Jr., between the first day of January, 1914, and the time of the filing of the bill.

The basis of the charge and the guilt of the defendant, rests upon the established fact, that she left Baltimore on December 10th, 1914, in company with the co-respondent Edgar H. Paxson, Jr., on the steamer Middlesex, running from Baltimore to Fredericksburg, Virginia, occupying the same state-room Ho. 2, known as the “bridal chamber,” from Thursday until Saturday when they left the boat, and registered at the Princess Ann Hotel, as E: H. Hamilton and wife, Leesburg, Virginia, as appears from the hotel register of Saturday, December 12th, 1914. They were assigned to *217 'the same bed-room, in the hotel, and passed as man and wife, both on the steamer and while at the hotel. .

If the testimony presented upon the part of the appellee -supports the facts, as thus stated, it is impossible to reconcile it with the innocence of the defendant, and there can be no question as to the correctness of the conclusion reached :by the Court below as to her guilt.

It will he seen, that the identification of the wife and Paxson, as the persons who occupied the state-room on the. steamer for two days and nights under the names of E. II. Hamilton and wife, is positive and certain.

The stewardess and the waiter, Bundy, employed on the ■steamer, identified Airs. Crane, at her house, and in the ■Court room, during the trial, as the woman who occupied the state-room with the man, who was registered on the boat, ;as E. H. Hamilton and wife.

Air. Reamy, the manager of the hotel, in Fredericksburg, is positive and certain that the picture of Airs. Crane, is the ■picture of the woman, who on December 12th, registered at the hotel as the wife of E. H. Hamilton, and they were assigned to room Ho. 307, of the hotel.

The witness Ashby, the clerk at the hotel testified that he is absolutely certain that the pictures of Mrs. Crane and Paxson,'are the pictures of the persons who registered at the "hotel on December 12th, 1914, as E. H. Hamilton and wife and they went to their room, as soon as he registered. He talked with Hamilton and they were supposed to he a bridal ■couple.

The signature of Paxson to a lease offered in evidence is not disputed and the handwriting thereon is the same as that on the registry of the steamboat company and the hotel ■register, at Fredericksburg.

The identification of the defendant and Paxson, as the persons who were on the steamer and at the hotel, in F'red'©rieksburg, Va., on the occasions named, is not only conclusively established by the testimony of disinterested witnesses, *218 who testified in the case, but by other facts and circumstances contained in the record. ,

Besides this, the testimony of the husband, is strongly corroborated by that of the witness Bettberg, and by the testimony of his brother Francis J. Crane, who was present, at certain interviews between the husband and wife. The absence of the wife from home, on Thursday and returning on Saturday, was shown by the two domestics, Bessie Warfield and Stella Johnson, and by other evidence in the case.

The defense on the part of the wife, was an attempt to show, that she remained at home, upon the dates named, and the household consisted of her mother, the children, her mother’s brother and herself. She testified that her husband was not at home and the servants were also absent from the house on the days she is alleged to have been on the steamer and at Fredericksburg, in company with Paxson, the corespondent.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A. 535, 128 Md. 214, 1916 Md. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-crane-md-1916.