Hillwood v. Hillwood

150 A. 286, 159 Md. 167, 1930 Md. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 15, 1930
Docket[No. 6, April Term, 1930.]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 150 A. 286 (Hillwood v. Hillwood) 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
Hillwood v. Hillwood, 150 A. 286, 159 Md. 167, 1930 Md. LEXIS 100 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff, Katherine B. Hillwood, was a widow with a daughter, when she was married to Philip M. Hillwood, defendant, on June 24th, 1921. Ho children were born of this' union, and on March 6th, 1929, the plaintiff began a suit to obtain a divorce a mensa et thoro from the defendant with alimony, and to have certain conveyances to the husband of her property annulled, and an accounting had from him of all rents and profits received from the property so *169 conveyed and of all moneys of the plaintiff which had come in any way into the hands of the defendant. The grounds alleged for the divorce were cruel and vicious conduct, and the conveyances were assailed for fraud and coercion. The parties took testimony before an examiner, and the chancellor passed a decree granting the wife a partial divorce and annulling the conveyances attacked, and awarding the wife an accounting and restitution of all her property which the husband is charged with having taken into his possession.

The plaintiff, who is fifty-seven years old, left the home of her husband during the first week of January, 1929. She supported her charge of cruelty by her testimony that her husband has struck her in the face on two occasions. The first was in the fall of 1921, and the second time was a year later. This testimony is denied by the husband and is not corroborated, but, if true, the acts were not followed by a cessation of the marital relation, which continued too long after their occurrence not to have been condoned. The wife further testified that, with the spring of 1922, the defendant began to threaten to kill her, but there is nothing in her testimony that tends to establish the threats created any real apprehension of physical danger, or wore accompanied or followed by personal violence, until the spring of 1928, when she swears that her husband put poison in her food. The other serious accusation in justification of her leaving hei husband is that her health had been impaired by his maltreatment.

Taking up these questions in their inverse order, but without indulging in a statement and discussion of the testimony on the record, the alleged misconduct of the husband that affected the wife’s health was a course of angry words and abusive language and unjustified complaints.

Marriage imposes upon husband and wife the duty to bear and forbear. Marital neglect, indifference, sallies of passion, harshness and the use of vulgar and abusive language and occasional acts of violence of no serious nature have been repeatedly declared insufficient to justify an abandonment. Hastings v. Hastings, 147 Md. 182; Polley v. Polley, 128 *170 Md. 66. The testimony of the wife as to the husband’s language is general and indefinite, is uncorroborated, and is denied by the defendant, and so cannot be held sufficiently proved within the requirements of law. Mor is there any corroboration of her statement that her mental and physical condition when she left her home was caused by her husband’s alleged conduct. She did not consult a physician until October 26th, 1928, when, upon the advice of her solicitor and as preparatory to her proceedings for a divorce, she saw one to see if she had not been poisoned. The doctor testified that, although in a nervous condition, the plaintiff seemed, physically and organically, to be in good health at the time of her two visits to his office. Meither this nor the evidence of her activity in interviewing prospective witnesses is consistent with the plaintiff’s testimony that she was so sick and nervous when she left home that she could hardly stand on her feet. So, the whole testimony leaves the court unconvinced that the husband’s demeanor and language had impaired the health of the plaintiff.

If, as the plaintiff testified, the defendant had put poison in the food of. the plaintiff, this act would have been cruelty within the meaning of the law. 1 Bishop on Marriage and Divorce (2nd Ed.), sec. 1557. The plaintiff bases her accusation on the fact that during and after the spring of 1928 she would become sick subsequent to eating. She further stated that food, which was left after a meal and put away, when fed to the dog, would affect the dog so that in two weeks he could barely stand on his feet, and that she saw the white crystals glittering on her plate and individual dishes and drinking cup. She swore that the poison was bitter, but was tasteless until it started down the throat, and that her mouth, tongue, and lips were sore all the time he was making her violently ill by administering the poison. Although the conditions and symptoms continued until her complexion became as dark as a mulatto’ and she could hardly walk by reason of her weakness, the plaintiff made no complaint to her husband, but continued to live with him and exposed herself to the perils of a poisoner’s art without consulting a doctor *171 or setting on foot an investigation until October 26th, 1928, when she went to see a doctor at the suggestion of her solicitor, whom, she had employed to obtain a divorce.

A week after this first visit she paid a second and final one, and brought with her food 'to be examined, 'because she said her husband had put in it some poison which she thought was silver salt. Although not a chemist, the doctor did not send her or the food to an expert, but put a portion of the food in a tube and tested it but found no poison. She complained to the doctor that her skin was dark because of a poison which she said her husband had been putting in her food, but the doctor’s evidence is that this darkening of the complexion could have been produced by a number of natural causes, and he could not say it was attributable to poisoning. This evidence did not support the plaintiff’s theory, but tended to- refute her charge that her husband had poisoned the food.

The plaintiff did the cooking and prepared the meals for the table and had charge of the household affairs. Although she never saw her husband put anything in the food, she is willing to swear that on one occasion in he-r presence- and in that of a neighbor he put something, in a dish which made her side and vomit after she had eaten the food. The neighbor testified to the plaintiff’s sickness, but did not .say she had seen the defendant p-ut anything in the dish. This episode affords no- justifiable inference of guilt. The deduction of the- wife is incredible. Even the hardiest and skilfullest poisoner will not be assumed to have sprinkled his poison in the presence of his victim and her friend.

The husband testified to his complete innocence, and the wife stands alone- with no- material corroboration. Furthermore, her testimony is conflicting and contradicted in material matters b-y disinterested witnesses. Her -testimony, also, disclosed an animus against the defendant and a desperate determination to- secure the return of her property and a divorce from her husband which gravely affect the weight of any statement by her which would make for the success of her objectives. How far she will go- to secure favorable testi *172

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150 A. 286, 159 Md. 167, 1930 Md. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillwood-v-hillwood-md-1930.