Duckett v. Duckett

123 A. 55, 143 Md. 551, 1923 Md. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 A. 55 (Duckett v. Duckett) 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
Duckett v. Duckett, 123 A. 55, 143 Md. 551, 1923 Md. LEXIS 127 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are two appeals in this record. One is from a decree of the lower court dismissing the bill of complaint filed by the appellant against the appellee, in which she alleged cruelty of treatment, asked for alimony pendente lite counsel fees and suit money, and that the defendant be required to deliver to her her furniture and personal effects, and “that she be granted a divorce from the defendant upon final hearing, as provided by statute of this State,” and that he be required to pay her permanent alimony for her maintenance and support. The other appeal is from an order dismissing the petition of the plaintiff in which she asked that the defendant •be required to pay her the costs of this appeal when they accrued in the lower court and this Court, and her counsel fees for prosecuting and representing her on this appeal.

The prayer for divorce quoted above from the bill is. a peculiar one, but as the defendant has made no point about it-we will assume, as both parties seem to, that it is a bill for divorce a mensa et thoro, and, judging from, the allegations in the bill, it is based on the ground of cruelty of treatment and excessively vicious conduct. There are no allegations which, if proven, could justify a divorce a vinculo at the instance of the wife. Both plaintiff and defendant were divorced prior to this marriage from, their respective spouses, but it is, of course, not shown in this ease who was at fault in either of the others, although the defendant was, at the time of the marriage to the plaintiff, and at the time the bill was filed, paying alimony to his former wife, and the plain *554 tiff was apparently receiving from her former husband money for the maintenance and support of her child, according to statements in the record.

The facts alleged in the bill, if proven, were ample to entitle the plaintiff to- a divorce a mensa- for cruelty of treatment, unless prevented by her conduct, but the answer denies every material allegation, and the parties in their evidence have not fallen short of their respective allegations in their pleadings. One or the other is clearly guilty of perjury, as many, yea, most, of their conflicting statements cannot be reconciled, and are of such nature as cannot be excused on the theory of being mistakes. Both of them are shown by their own and other evidence to have been frequent violators of the law in reference to the sale of liquor at the house kept by the defendant, and the plaintiff admits that she had had one abortion performed on her since her marriage to the de>fendant, but denies that she had three, as the defendant testified, and said that the defendant had furnished the money to pay for the one she admits. The question of condonation and recrimination as to that and as to at least some of the charges of cruelty by the plaintiff will be referred to later.

There is no material charge in the bill .which is not denied by the defendant, and many of the witnesses are of the kind spoken of by Chief Judge; Axvev in Hawkins v. Hawkins, 65 Md. 104, 107, where, after stating that the- testimony came largely from the domestic servants employed about the house of the parties during the time of their cohabitation, -he said: “Some of these witnesses manifest a decided bias for the party producing them, while others testify with more apparent fairness, and without showing any decided feeling for the one side or the other. And while the testimony of such witnesses cannot be repudiated altogether, it must be considered with caution, and taken always with due allowance according to the bias displayed for the party in whose behalf the witness testifies. In cases like the present, it is from necessity that the testimony of such witnesses hasi to be *555 resorted, to, for iJl usage, of the kind imputed in this, ease, is of a domestic nature, and does not generally occur in public, or in the open face of day.”

While the plaintiff claimed that much of what she complains was, of frequent occurrence, there were three occasions which seem to have been most relied otn, and are more particularly mentioned in the bill and evidence. They were in October, 1920, July 4th, 1921, and on and after December 18th, 1921 — the latter culminating in the plaintiff’s leaving the defendant on the 17th of February, 1922, since which time she has, not lived with him, although she lias, met him, as will be seen later. As she returned in the latter part of -November*, 1920, and remained with him until the seventeenth of February, 1922, it is not necessary to comment particularly on what occurred prior to her leaving, in October, 1920.

It would be impossible for us to, believe the statement of either plaintiff or defendant as to any material question, if we accepted the opinion of the other, unless corroborated to a sufficient extent to remove the doubt that is, forced upon us by them as to, which is telling tlio truth in reference to any important item. The plaintiff" is apparently corroborated by some of ihe employees at the hotel, but they toll improbable stories, and the1 most of them show bias and feeling against the defendant. Others, called by the defendant, at least partially sustain him. A number of persons of prominence gave a negative character of testimony — that they had not seen either cruel or improper treatment by the defendant of the plaintiff, but of course that does not prove that there was none at times when they were not present. Some employees who lived there for some timo testify that they saw no, evidence of the cruelty alleged by the plaintiff. It is difficult to believe that the plaintiff would have continued their marital relations as long as, she did — up, to the time, she left the defendant in February, 1922 — if he had persistently treated her with the acts, of cruelty she alleged and undertook to prove.

*556 The case presents some very peculiar features. As. we have already said, nothing could 'be accomplished by referring to what transpired before the plaintiff left her husband in the fall of 1920', as after her return there was certainly condonation which would make it useless to consider his alleged treatment prior to that time excepting in so far as his later acts, as alleged by plaintiff, revived the original charges supposed to have been condoned. Although we have very many decisions in this State on the subject of divorce, con-donation and recrimination, the law seems to be well .and concisely stated in 9 R. C. L. 383, as to. the effect of cohabitation after cruelty, and we will quote from it. It is there said (paragraph 116): “Cruelty, as aground for divorce, is generally a course of conduct rather than a single act; and the rule is that sexual cohabitation after acts of cruelty cannot be considered as condonation in the senseo in which it would be after an act of adultery. The effort to. endure unkind treatment as long as possible is commendable; and it is obviously a just rule that the patient endurance by the wife of her’ husband’s continuous ill-treatment should never be allowed to weaken her title to relief.

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Bluebook (online)
123 A. 55, 143 Md. 551, 1923 Md. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duckett-v-duckett-md-1923.