Galloway v. Galloway

94 A. 97, 125 Md. 511, 1915 Md. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 7, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 A. 97 (Galloway v. Galloway) 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
Galloway v. Galloway, 94 A. 97, 125 Md. 511, 1915 Md. LEXIS 232 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case the appellee, on the 28th day of July, 1914, filed her petition against the appellant asking that a decree divorcing her from him, granted on the 10th day of March, 1914, be annulled and set aside and that she be permitted to further answer and take testimony on her behalf upon the issues joined. A demurrer to the petition was filed which was overruled. It is from the order of Court overruling the demurrer that this appeal is taken, and therefore it will be necessary for us to state fully the facts alleged fin the petition.

The petition alleges that the appellant filed his bill for said divorce on the 24th day of January, 1914. The appellant at such time was living separate and apart from the appellee, because, as he had stated, “their living together was not conducive to his happiness and he felt hampered in his movements.” The separation, which occurred October Ith, 1912, left the appellee without any means of support, and it was through the intercession of her counsel, William A. Wheatley, Esq., an attorney of the Baltimore Bar, that she received from the appellant the sum of seventy-five dol *513 lars a month, 'which was paid to- her to the first day of March, 1914, when such payments ceased.

That the appellant, who was an employee of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company at a salary in excess of five thousand dollars a year, on several occasions prior to the filing of his bill, invited the appellee to his office in the company’s building on the comer of Charles and Baltimore streets-, requesting her to come alone, and when she asked permission to bring her sister with her, it was refused. On the first of these occasions he said to her “I want to be a free man now that we are not living together” and that he wished a divorce; that he would never live with her again and charged her with wrongdoing with a neighbor’s boy by the name of Morris Hay, who was- a frequent visitor at their home and a constant companion of her husband on his launch; that she replied, saying “Jack, you know you don’t believe that in your heart,” to which he made no reply, and she gave it little thought, and had it not been for the seriousness- of the charge she would have treated it as a joke.

That on the next visit to his office, shortly before the date of the filing of his bill, he again spoke of divorce proceedings, and his purpose and object appeared to be to- secure a promise that she'would not resist him in obtaining it. He said “I don’t want you to fight against it,” and if she did he would resign his position, leave town and throw her upon her own resources* 'well knowing her helpless condition; that she at such time was without property or means of support; that at the time of her marriage she held a half interest in a farm in Anne Arundel County, but this w;as sacrificed in the sale of it at and for the sum of five hundred dollars, which was loaned to him and for which he gave to her his note, which has never been paid.

The petition further alleges that he, in one of these interviews with her, said he could obtain a “divorce in privacy” if his course was followed; that he would, in lieu of alimony, pay her the “lump sum” of three thousand five hundred dollars, and to this end he drew up a paper, the wording of *514 which she cannot recall, and persuaded her to sign it, she at the time being completely unnerved and being absolutely under his influence and control. He also signed it and, after placing it in an envelope, gave it to Mr. Jones, a clerk, who was called from an adjoining room. Mr. Jones was told to keep the same until it would be called for1 by the appellant, and something was said by the latter to Mr. Jones about a divorce, but in her nervous condition she did not understand what it was. That she was told in this interview that under no circumstances should she seek the aid or advice of an attorney, and with some feeling he especially forbade her to see Mr. Wheatley, who had previously aided her in obtaining the monthly payments of seventy-five dollars hereinbefore mentioned, and told her that he would select an attorney for her who would properly look after her interest and upon whom she could rely and would see that justice was done her. At this stage of the interview the appellant, sitting at his desk in his office, wrote a letter which he gave to Mr. Bowers, who had been called from an adjoining room, and directed Bowers to typewrite it and return it to him; this he did and the appellant persuaded her to sign it. After it was signed she requested that she be permitted to take the letter with her, saying she would mail it, to which he replied, “No, I will mail it myself.” That she did not read the letter, it was read to her, or at least a part of it, she was not able to say that the whole of it was read to her; that the person to whom it was addressed was to represent her in the proceedings. That she did not see this letter again until it was produced by William N. McFaul, Esq., the attorney to whom it was addressed, in the office of her attorney, Mr. Broening. Mr. McFaul, whom she had never met, had come to Mr. Broening’s office in response to an inquiry from him as to why he had not appeared for and on behalf of the petitioner at the taking of the testimony in the case. Mr. McFaul produced the letter to explain why he had not done so ; the reason, as disclosed by the letter, being that he was directed to “file an answer, as he had done, and nothing more.” The fact that *515 Hr. McFaul was restricted in the duties that he was to perform was, as she expressed it in her petition, news to her.

The petition further alleges that she was never called upon as a witness, nor was she present at the taking of any of the testimony, and “her absolute ignorance of the law made her an easy dupe of the nefarious scheme of her husband. That had she known that the price of the severance of the marital ties * * * was the bartering away of her virtue she certainly would have been present, in person or by counsel, to protect herself from the stigma heaped upon her and to which, as the proceedings now stand, she seemingly was a willing party.”

The petition further alleges that in March, after the passage of the decree, the petitioner, in response to a 'phone call from the appellant, went to his office, and on which occasion Hr. Jones, the party in whose custody the aforesaid paper signed by both the appellant and appellee had been entrusted and by which he was to pay the petitioner, in lieu of alimony, thirty-five hundred dollars, was requested to produce such paper, and when it was delivered to the appellant he placed it in a drawer of his desk and then turned to the petitioner and said, “I am not going to give you any money, I have now got my divorce.” She then left the office and, after conferring with friends, employed her present attorney, Henry J. Broening, Esq., who, upon examination of the divorce proceedings, discovered from them and disclosed to her that the ground upon which the divorce had been granted was that of adultery, which disclosure, as it is alleged, was a surprise to the petitioner.

The grounds of the demurrer*, as disclosed by the record, are: 1. A want of jurisdiction in the Court to grant the relief asked for in the petition; 2. That the petition alleges no facts from which surprise or mistake may be inferred as a result of the passage of the decree; 3.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 97, 125 Md. 511, 1915 Md. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galloway-v-galloway-md-1915.