German v. German

112 A. 789, 137 Md. 424, 1921 Md. LEXIS 12
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 112 A. 789 (German v. German) 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
German v. German, 112 A. 789, 137 Md. 424, 1921 Md. LEXIS 12 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Adkins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties to this suit were married in April, 1912. Beginning with their bridal trip and extending, through six years down to the time of their separation in July, 1918, their quarrels were of frequent occurrence, mostly about matters of small importance and due to temperamental defects of both, to financial troubles requiring frequent moves, and to innumerable little things, which in themselves were of small importance.

*425 The final break up came as tbe result of a breakfast table quarrel about what appears from the record to have been a trivial matter, ending in the use of language by the husband which the wife regarded as an insult, and in the throwing by her of a cup of coffee in his face. As the coffee was not hot, no physical harm was done but it seems to have been the last straw. Ido then and there announced “I am going to leave you now, I am never coming' back again, the worm am turned.” This was in July, 1918. He left her, never returned and never invited her to return to him; although there were subsequent interviews between them. He testified at the trial below that he meant the words above quoted when they were uttered, and “I mean them now,” and that he did not intend to invite her to return.

The bill for divorce a mensa was filed by appellant August 8th, 1919, on the ground of abandonment and desertion. The defendant, on August 27th, 1919, answered denying the allegations of the bill. On September 5th the court passed an order for the payment of $20 per week as alimony pendente lite. A few days after the passing of this order, detectives were employed by the defendant,' and on October 1st, 1919, a cross-bill was filed charging that the appellant “on divers flays and times since the said marriage, to wit, on the seventeenth day of September, in the year 1919, and on the twenty-second day of September, in-the year 1919, and at various other times has committed the crime of adultery with one E. Turner Duvall, and with divers other men whose names are to your orator unknown”; and praying for a divorce a vinculo.

On February 3rd, 1920, the answer to the cross.-bill was filed denying the charge of adultery. Over three hundred pages of testimony were taken on the original bill, the greater part of which is unimportant, and nearly two hundred and fifty pages under the cross-bill.

Before taking up for consideration the testimony taken under the cross-bill, it may be well to say that we agree with *426 the conclusión of the trial judge that there was not such provocation as to justify the appellee in abandoning his wife; and that unless the. charge of adultery has been proven against hex’, she is entitled to a decree in her favor under the original bill. And at the threshhold of the investigation of the facts sought to be proved by appellee, it should be said that nothing appears in the reeoi’d tending to prove the charge of adultery except in connection with the alleged occurrences on the steamer “Florida” on the nights of September 11th, 17th and 21st.

As so much depends upon a careful weighing of all the evidence in cases of this character; the testimony in regard to these occurrences will be set out quite fully.

The important witnesses in this connection are the two detectives, Mrs. German, DUvall, and Mx*s. German’s niece, Elizabeth Whitehurst. The testimony of John T. Lyons, the manager of the detective agency, and of Frank O'. Singer, as to statements alleged to have been made by Duvall, and the testimony of Mts. Addie Young as to certain alleged statements by appellant will also be inferred to.

Frederick -Schilling testified that on September 11th, 1919,. Mrs. German was in pui’sei’’s office, about 6 o’clock, went to No. 97 about. 7.30; stayed there until 8, when pui’ser entei’ed and remained about 15 minutes; then they both came out and went down stairs into the dining room; stayed there till 9.25 or 9.30; then both went upstairs and both went into the room and the purser stayed there 15 or 20- minutes. He then went to the purser's office. After that the engineer1 made several short visits to the room. Then about 12.15 the purser entei’ed the room again. Witness in the meantime had not seen Mrs. German come out of stateroom. Witness remained outside until 3 or 3.30 in the morning and did not see him any more. Witness then retired. Witness was sitting on the main floor of the boat, and could observe the room plainly and could see the doorway, and could see the people walk in and out. At about- 6.45 on the morning of *427 the 12th. saw purser in his office. He proceeded to room 97, rapped on the door, held about 5 minutes conversation, did not enter, and returned to his office. Saw Mrs. German and the purser leave the boat in a taxi cab, about 9 o’clock; there were three people in the taxi; witness followed them in a taxi, but in the traffic in Granby street they got away. Next saw Mrs. Gorman and the purser at 10 o’clock at the corner of Granby and Main Streets when they got oh of a ear together; they went into a shoe shining place, and visited five or six stores, one was a confectionery store, and another place they got ice cream or something. They proceeded around town until four or five o’clock in the afternoon, when the purser put Mrs. German on a car at the comer of Main and Granby Streets and left her.

On the 17th Mrs. German came back to Baltimore on the Florida. Mr. Wallace, another investigator from Smith, West & Lyons, was on board with Schilling. Mrs. German arrived on the boat at 5.30. She occupied Room 97. She went from there, to thei dining room with the purser and purser went in No. 97 at 11.35. Mrs. German was in the room. Wallace and Schilling; watched until 4 or 4.15 when purser came out and went to his office. He had been in No. 97 continuously. Did not see Mrs. German come out.

Schilling and Wallace went to Norfolk again on September 20th, saw Mrs. German and Duvall (the purser) at Ocean View on the 21st. They came there together; they proceeded to rear of the bath houses, and sat down on the lawn; sat on the grass for about 1% hours and then went to the ear line and went to town. Next saw Mrs. German on the night of the 21st on the pier and on the Florida. A little, girl was with her. They had rooms 95 and 97. The porter opened up both rooms. Both of them went in No. 97. Later on the child went in No. 95. Mrs. German retired around 9 or 10 o’clock. “She went into No. 97 and the child, I think, went into No. 95, I think.” The purser “went in there around twelve, twelve fifteen to twelve twenty.” He came out “about *428 four o’clock in the morning, something between four and four thirty.” About 6.30, before the boat landed, the purser went to No. 97 and rapped at the door again. The lights went on in No. 97 at aboqt 4 o’clock. Before that they were out. Witness could see the light through a sort of grating above the door. While Mrs. German was in the purser’s office several other people were there coming and going. The door was open.

Robert W. Wallace testified that he was an investigator for 'Smith, West & Lyons; went to Norfolk September 14th; saw Mrs. German come on the Florida on September 17th; Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A. 789, 137 Md. 424, 1921 Md. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-v-german-md-1921.