Fletcher v. Fletcher

619 A.2d 561, 95 Md. App. 114, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 2, 1993
Docket1081, September Term, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 619 A.2d 561 (Fletcher v. Fletcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fletcher v. Fletcher, 619 A.2d 561, 95 Md. App. 114, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 41 (Md. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

WILNER, Chief Judge.

That Louis and Charlotte Fletcher each wish to end their marriage is apparent. The question, as this case has unfolded, seems to be whether, in the end, it will be Maryland or Virginia that will perform the coup de grace. Louis filed suit in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City in September, 1991; Charlotte filed suit in the Circuit Court for Fairfax County two months later. Each has moved to dismiss the other’s action, each has moved to enjoin the other from proceeding with the action, and, regrettably, both Virginia and Maryland have issued such injunctions.

The case is before us because the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, on motion and without taking any evidence, dismissed Louis’s action, with prejudice, on the ground that Maryland had no jurisdiction in the matter. Louis appealed, and, upon his assertion that the Virginia court would likely honor an injunction restraining Charlotte from proceeding in that State pending this appeal and it appearing to us from what was alleged in the motion and response that the Baltimore City court had erred in its conclusion that it had no jurisdiction, we issued such an injunction. Louis was overly optimistic with respect to Virginia’s reaction. Charlotte ignored the injunction, and so did the Virginia court, which has not only proceeded apace but, as noted, issued its own injunction restraining Louis from proceeding in Maryland, an injunction that Louis, with equal defiance, has ignored. The only issue now before us is whether, indeed, the court below erred in dismissing the action on jurisdictional grounds. We think it did, and so we shall reverse its judgment.

The action was filed in Baltimore City on September 27, 1991. In the complaint, which was based entirely on Char *117 lotte’s alleged adultery, Louis averred that the parties were married in Maryland in 1967, that he was currently a resident of Maryland, that the adultery occurred in Maryland, that the parties had jointly owned property in Virginia, and that appellee had property in her own name in Maryland. Louis sought an absolute divorce, alimony, a monetary award based on marital property, and other relief.

Charlotte responded with a motion to dismiss the complaint on two grounds: (1) insufficiency of process, and (2) lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The former was based on the assertion that she never received a copy of the summons. The latter defense was grounded on the averment that Louis had not been a resident of Maryland for more than one year prior to the filing of the complaint, “as required by the Annotated Code of Maryland, Family Law Article, 7-101(a).” In response to this motion, Louis produced affidavits from a secretary in his attorney’s law firm and a private process server. The secretary swore that she had stapled together a copy of the summons, the complaint, and Louis’s financial statement and given the package to the process server. The process server attested that he had received the package from the secretary and served it, including the summons, on Charlotte at her home in Ocean City, Maryland.

The court, which was prepared to grant Charlotte’s motion without a hearing, reluctantly conducted a non-evidentiary hearing on April 24, 1992. Through counsel, Charlotte argued principally the first ground of her motion — that she had not been served with a copy of the summons and that the court therefore had not acquired in personam jurisdiction over her. Alternatively, she pressed the second argument, contending that Louis had moved into Maryland for the sole purpose of taking advantage of this State’s more favorable divorce law, from his point of view. She claimed (1) that the parties had lived in Virginia for most of their marriage, (2) that Louis had deserted her in Virginia on October 6, 1990, (3) that on November 4, 1990, she purchased a lottery ticket in Maryland and, on November 10, *118 learned that she had won $7,000,000, and (4) that, after learning about his wife’s good fortune and the fact that, in Maryland, marital property is determined as of the time of divorce rather than as of the time of separation, as is the case in Virginia, Louis moved to Maryland for the sole purpose of seeking a monetary award based on her lottery prize.

In response, Louis contended that he was in the construction industry, which was in a state of depression, and that he moved to Maryland to obtain employment. He said that he was currently employed in a large construction project in Baltimore, that he had obtained a Maryland driver’s license, and that he had registered to vote in Maryland. He stated that he and Charlotte had not separated on October. 6, as she contended, and that he had documentary proof of their living together thereafter. He asserted that it was after he learned that Charlotte had commenced an adulterous affair in Maryland and had purchased a condominium in Ocean City, where the adultery occurred, that he brought suit in Maryland. As was the case with Charlotte’s assertions, this information was conveyed mostly by counsel, with Louis himself providing a few unsworn statements.

Notwithstanding that none of this was through admissible evidence, the court made clear its belief that Louis had moved to Maryland not because of any occupational opportunity but solely because of Charlotte’s lottery winning. In comments from the bench and later in a written memorandum, it declared that Louis did not have a “bona fide residence” in Maryland and had not been a Maryland resident for more than one year prior to filing the complaint. The court made no finding as to whether Charlotte was served with a copy of the summons or what the effect would be if she had not been so served. It dismissed the complaint solely because of its conclusion that Louis was not a “bona fide” resident of Maryland.

Before turning to the main issue in the appeal, we shall consider briefly Charlotte’s contention that the dis *119 missal was proper because she never received a copy of the summons. We consider the issue but cannot resolve it. The fact is that there was conflicting “evidence” before the court on that question — Charlotte’s affidavit that the summons was not with the material served on her and the two affidavits supplied on behalf of Louis attesting that the summons was served on her. The circuit court did not resolve that conflict, and it is beyond our ability to resolve it. We cannot, therefore, affirm the dismissal on that ground.

It does not appear that there is currently any general Maryland statute specifically requiring that either a plaintiff or a defendant in a divorce action be a Maryland resident. Md.Code Cts. & Jud.Proc. art., §§ 6-102 and 6-103 set forth the conditions under which a court may exercise jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant, but they do not speak to any required residence on the part of the plaintiff. Sections 6-201(a) and 6-202(1) of that article specify which county an action may be brought in, but, as we shall see, they are in the nature of venue provisions, not residence requirements. Md.Code Fam.Law art., § 7-101(a) does deal with that subject, and specifically with respect to divorce cases, but unfortunately, it deals with the matter only in part. It provides:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
619 A.2d 561, 95 Md. App. 114, 1993 Md. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-fletcher-mdctspecapp-1993.