Gold v. Gold

62 A.2d 540, 191 Md. 533, 1948 Md. LEXIS 395
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 8, 1948
Docket[No. 23, October Term, 1948.]
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 62 A.2d 540 (Gold v. Gold) 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
Gold v. Gold, 62 A.2d 540, 191 Md. 533, 1948 Md. LEXIS 395 (Md. 1948).

Opinion

Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for permanent alimony brought in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City by Rose Gold, a resident of Washington, against her husband, Reuben Gold, a resident of Baltimore.

Mrs. Gold alleged in her bill of complaint that she lived with her husband from the time of their marriage in 1907 until October, 1922, when she was compelled to leave him because he abused and ill treated her without cause or reason. She alleged that her husband owns and operates a restaurant and soda fountain at 201 West Saratoga Street, and earns between $200 and $300 per week, while she is destitute. The chancellor ordered defendant to pay her $35 per week as permanent alimony and $100 as counsel fee for her solicitor. Defendant appealed from that decree.

*536 The first question that confronts us on this appeal is whether complainant is barred from relief by laches. She filed the suit in August, 1947, about 25 years after she left her husband. In England, where there was no statute of limitations barring divorce proceedings, the court refused at times to grant a divorce on account of long delay in instituting suit. This policy was ultimately embodied in the English Divorce Act, which went into effect in 1858, and referred the question to the sound legal discretion of the court. Lord Stowell commented on the practice in England as follows: “The first thing which the court looks to when a charge of adultery is preferred is the date of the charge relatively to the date of the criminal fact charged and known by the party; because if the interval be very long between the date and the knowledge of the facts and the exhibition of them to this court, it will be indisposed to relieve a party who appears to have slumbered in sufficient comfort over them; and it will be inclined to infer either an insincerity in the complaint, or an acquiescence in the injury, whether real or supposed, or a condonation of it. It therefore demands a full and satisfactory explanation of the delay, in order to take it out of the reach of such interpretations.” Mortimer v. Mortimer, 2 Hagg. Consist. 310, 313, 4 Eng. Ec. 543, 545.

In America it has been held in some States that the general statute of limitations is broad enough to include divorce proceedings. In other States the Legislature has enacted statutes specifically providing for limitations in suits for divorce. In New York, prior to the enactment of its divorce limitation statute, the English rule was followed. In a case wherein a husband had filed his bill for divorce after a delay of 23 years, Chancellor Kent said: “The lapse of time will also, and on the soundest principles of justice and policy, form another exception to the right of prosecution for a divorce. An acquiescence of five years without any existing disability was, by the civil law, * * * a bar to a prosecution for adultery. * * * The injured party is presumed to have pardoned or re *537 mitted the offense. * * * Long acquiescence will, under our law, bar a prosecution for any other civil injury; and why not for this?” Williamson v. Williamson, 1 Johns. Ch., N. Y., 488, 492, 493. This doctrine has likewise been followed in New Jersey. In Bartow v. Bartow, N. J. Eq., 122 A. 888, the Court said that a petition for divorce on the ground of desertion filed after a delay of 25 years could not be maintained in the absence of satisfactory explanation for the delay. Later, in Tarbell v. Tarbell, 123 N. J. Eq. 581, 199 A. 57, the Court held that a husband was not entitled to a divorce on the ground of adultery, which he alleged occurred 17 years before the petition was filed, because he was not diligent in pressing his charges. In the circumstances of a particular case of delay, there may be, and where the delay is ■very long there usually is, an inference of what will constitute a bar, such as insincerity, condonation, a probability of the existence of some now unknown latent defense, or of proofs too defective or liable to mislead to be prudently acted upon in behalf of one whose best excuse is that he has been indifferent to his own rights. Hence, in the absence of any statute of limitations applicable to divorce, delay in bringing suit is not alone a bar, but the court ordinarily requires it to be accounted for, withholding the relief when the explanation is not satisfactory. 2 Bishop, Marriage, Divorce and Separation, secs. 413, 639.

Ever since 1842, when the Legislature of Maryland conferred jurisdiction in all applications for divorce upon the courts of equity of this State, Laws of 1841, ch. 262, Code 1939, art. 16, sec. 38, this Court has recognized the essential difference between a divorce suit and the ordinary equity case. In divorce proceedings the court sits, not in the exercise of its ordinary equity jurisdiction, but as a divorce court and is governed by the rules and principles established in the ecclesiastical courts in England so far as they are consistent with the provisions of the Maryland Code. Dougherty v. Dougherty, 187 Md. 21, 29, 48 A. 2d 451, 456; Lickle v. Boone, 187 Md. 579, 51 *538 A. 2d 162, 170 A. L. R. 156. Divorce proceedings not being strictly equitable proceedings, laches cannot be set up as a defense in such proceedings, unless it amounts to acquiescence in the nature of implied consent, from which the court can consider that it should not invoke its enforcement powers because there has been too much lack of diligence to warrant judicial action.

There is no reason why the English rule applicable to divorce suits entered after long delay should not also apply to suits applying only for alimony. Long before the courts of equity in Maryland were given jurisdiction in divorce proceedings, the Legislature directed the chancellor to hear and determine all causes for alimony is as full and ample manner as such cases could be heard and determined by the laws of England in the ecclesiastical courts there. Laws of 1777, ch. 12; Code 1939, art.' 16, sec. 14. So, where a wife delays for many years before entering a suit for alimony, the court will be inclined to treat her delay as a waiver. In other words, the problem is not, strictly speaking, whether there is laches in the ordinary sense of enforcement of equitable rights, but whether the chancellor, in the exercise of his judicial discretion in a case of this nature, should grant relief. 2 Nelson, Divorce and Annulment, 2d Ed., sec. 16.28. Laches, even in its ordinary sense, is a relative defense dependent not only upon the passage of time, but also upon reasons that justify the complainant in allowing such time to run without taking action. For example, this Court in Marshall v. Marshall, 164 Md. 107, 114, 163 A. 874, held that laches did not bar a wife from enforcement of an alimony agreement incorporated in a decree, where long delay in the enforcement was due to the husband’s absence from the State and his financial inability to make the payments. In the instant case complainant was asked why she had waited 25 years before commencing suit, and she replied that as soon as her health improved in Washington she found a job and was employed for 22 years, and during the three years before institution of suit she kept house for her children, now 39 and 36 years

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Bluebook (online)
62 A.2d 540, 191 Md. 533, 1948 Md. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-v-gold-md-1948.