Hite v. Hite

124 A.2d 581, 210 Md. 576, 1956 Md. LEXIS 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 13, 1956
Docket[No. 231, October Term, 1955.]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 124 A.2d 581 (Hite v. Hite) 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
Hite v. Hite, 124 A.2d 581, 210 Md. 576, 1956 Md. LEXIS 490 (Md. 1956).

Opinion

Delaplaine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

James L. Hite, a resident of Cumberland, brought this suit in the Circuit Court for Allegany County to obtain a divorce a vinculo matrimonii from his wife, Audrey M. Hite, a resident of Martinsburg, West Virginia.

The parties were married in Frederick in June, 1931. For nearly 18 years they lived together in an apartment in Martins-burg. During that time complainant was employed as a conductor on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad between Brunswick and Cumberland. In 1948 defendant heard that her husband had been intimate with a woman named Charlotte Worgan. Defendant testified that in 1949 she found in her husband’s pocket a photograph of Miss Worgan. She further testified: “I asked him why he had this picture in his pocket, and he told me that he had taken it from another married man, *579 * * * and that he was going home and he didn’t want his wife to see this picture, and he had given it to him to carry in his pocket until the man came back from his home. * * * He told me if I would go and get that picture that he would promise that he would treat me just the same as he used to treat me. * * * And before I could even hand it to him, he grabbed it and tore it up.”

On March 17, 1949, complainant abandoned his wife and has never lived with her since. This is the third divorce suit he has filed against his wife.

The first suit was filed in August, 1949, in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, West Virginia. In that case complainant charged his wife with cruel and inhuman treatment. His wife filed an answer denying the charges and a cross-bill charging that he had committed adultery with Miss Worgan and praying for separate maintenance. At the trial of that case taxicab drivers testified that they had driven complainant from Keyser, West Virginia, the end of his run, to Miss Worgan’s home at Euke, Maryland. On May 27, 1950, Judge Decatur H. Rodgers, of the Twenty-third Judicial Circuit of West Virginia, who heard the case, held (1) that the evidence was insufficient to prove complainant’s charge that his wife was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment, and (2) that complainant had deserted his wife without just cause. In West Virginia a court of equity may, independently of a suit for divorce, decree separate maintenance for a wife who has been deserted by her husband. Lang v. Lang, 70 W. Va. 205, 73 S. E. 716. The Court ordered complainant to pay to his wife the sum of $100 per month for her maintenance. The award was subsequently reduced to $75 per month.

The second suit was filed on April 28, 1951, in the Circuit Court for Frederick County, Maryland, complainant having moved from Martinsburg to Brunswick in October, 1950. In that case he asked only for a divorce a mensa el thoro. He moved from Brunswick to Cumberland in January, 1954. On June 20, 1955, the Court, acting on his petition, dismissed the bill.

The present suit was filed on July 19, 1955. In this bill complainant alleged: (1) that defendant had refused his *580 offer of reconciliation, and therefore she was guilty of desertion, and her desertion had continued uninterruptedly for more than 18 months; and (2) that he and his wife had been voluntarily living separate and apart for more than three years, and the separation was beyond any reasonable expectation of reconciliation.

At the trial of the case it appeared that in October, 1950, complainant asked Judge Rodgers for his advice. The judge advised him “to recourt his wife and make a reconciliation.” On November 2, 1950, defendant found that someone had been in her apartment during her absence, and she suspected it was her husband, as he still had a key to the apartment. She stayed with a neighbor for the next three nights until she had a padlock put on her door. On the morning of November 6, 1950, complainant came to the apartment, but the door was padlocked, and no one answered the doorbell. Later that day, when he arrived again and rang the bell, his wife telephoned for the police. When a policeman arrived, she ordered him to take her husband away. The policeman took him to Judge Rodgers’ office in the courthouse. Complainant asked the judge, “What am I to do now?” The judge advised him, “If she will not become reconciled with you, there is nothing you can do.”

On November 29, 1950, complainant sent his wife a registered letter informing her that he had rented a house in Brunswick and he wanted her to come there to live with him. She replied that she would be willing to discuss the matter with him, but she wanted someone else with her at the conference. Finally, after other letters, complainant, accompanied by a friend, met defendant in Martinsburg on January 18, 1951. Complainant asserted that if defendant wanted to come to live with him in Brunswick, it would be all right. Defendant testified that she asked him if he would be willing to quit seeing Charlotte Worgan, and he refused to discuss that subject with her and refused to apologize for his past conduct. She further testified that he never made any further effort toward reconciliation.

The chancellor found that complainant was not repentant and had not made a sincere effort to effect a reconciliation. He *581 was of the opinion that complainant made his offer, not with an earnest hope that it would be accepted, but to improve his legal position so that he might avoid paying for his wife’s support. “In view of his studied coldness,” the chancellor said, “I cannot find that the husband’s course of conduct was such as to hold out any hope of success, or to place upon his wife a legal obligation to accept the offer. His policy seems to have involved no effort to conciliate and reassure his wife by an expression of regret for his past misconduct, which has been judicially determined, and by assurances that he would treat her properly in the future.”

For those reasons the chancellor passed an order dismissing the bill of complaint. It was from that order that complainant appealed to this Court.

It is an established rule in Maryland that where one spouse, after deserting the other without justification, repents and proposes to renew cohabitation, and the other refuses, the one refusing thereupon becomes guilty of desertion, provided that the offer to return is made in good faith and is free from unreasonable qualifications and conditions, and is sincerely intended to be carried out in accordance with the proper performance of the duties and obligations of matrimonial cohabitation. The law encourages estranged spouses to reconcile their differences and to resume marital relations, and so it is a general rule that before desertion has ripened by the passage of the statutory period of time into a cause for an absolute divorce, the duty rests upon each spouse to accept any offer made in good faith by the other to resume suspended cohabitation, if it appears with reasonable certainty that such offer may be accepted without any reasonable sacrifice of self-respect, health, safety, or comfort. Wise v. Wise, 159 Md. 596, 152 A. 230; Simmont v. Simmont, 160 Md. 422, 432, 153 A. 665; McClees v. McClees, 162 Md. 70, 74, 75, 158 A. 349; Kirkwood v. Kirkwood, 165 Md. 547, 551, 552, 170 A. 180; Pitts v. Pitts, 181 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
124 A.2d 581, 210 Md. 576, 1956 Md. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hite-v-hite-md-1956.