Houlton v. Houlton

3 Balt. C. Rep. 356
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJune 11, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 356 (Houlton v. Houlton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houlton v. Houlton, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 356 (Md. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

AMBLER, J —

The bill of complaint in this case, which was filed by the wife on June 22, 1914, alleges that from the time of the marriage on October 10, 1906, the life of the complainant with the defendant had been unhappy and that on two previous occasions she had instituted proceedings for separation in the equity courts of this city, the first in Circuit Court No. 2 on August 9, 1907, and the second in this Court on June .9, 1910, but each had been discontinued upon a temporary reconciliation ; that shortly after the second reconciliation constant differences again arose from the husband’s failure to make any provision for the support of the family, and in the course of a few months she found it necessary to seek some means of earning a livelihood for herself and their infant child; and to that end, on March 3, 1911, with the knowledge and consent of her husband, she went to the home of her married sister in New York to study designing, taking with her the infant child, then about three years old, her husband promising to contribute five dollars a week for its support, which promise he wholly failed to keep; and that ever since said March 3, 1911, the defendant has abandoned the complainant and such abandonment has been uninterrupted for over three years and is deliberate and final and the separation of the parties beyond any reasonable expectation of reconciliation. The bill prases for an absolute divorce and custody of the child.

At the time of their marriage the complainant was not quite 17 years old and the defendant was in his thirty-fourth year.

The husband’s answer denies all the material allegations of the bill and the wife’s right to any relief, insisting, with great detail, that the desertion was her own act and the separation due entirely to her own fault. Testimony was taken in open Court in December, 1914, and the hearing lasted for more than a week. At its conclusion the complainant filed a petition stating that, owing to her attendance in Court for so many days, she had lost the position which had been paying her twenty-five dollars a week and found it difficult to obtain other employment, and asking “the enforcement of Equity Rule No. 35 as interpreted in this Court for more than ten years,” to the effect that on the defendant’s failure to provide for a stenographer, the Court should decide the case on plaintiff’s testimony. Thereupon, an order was passed on December 23, 1914, awarding temporary custody of the child to the complainant and requiring the defendant, in addition to the alimony pendente lite previously allowed by another Judge, to pay her five dollars a week for its maintenance until the final determination of the cause, which was left to await the transcribing of the stenographer’s notes. This was followed by several interviews with counsel for [357]*357botli parties and by repeated visits to the Court from the defendant himself. Counsel for the complainant represented that, because of the difficulty of finding employment in Baltimore, the complainant, desired to return to New York, where she had for some time earned regularly from twenty to forty dollars a week; but the defendant and his counsel vigorously opposed the child’s removal beyond the jurisdiction of this Court. On January 15, 1915, an order was signed, as follows;

“Whereas, upon the petition of complainant and representation by her counsel of record, it appears that she lost, her position during the. trial of this case, and it is further represented to the Court that she has not been able to obtain employment in Baltimore City, and whereas the Court has suggested that the amount of alimony pendente lite to be paid by the defendant to the complainant, for her support and the support of her minor child be increased to fifteen dollars ($15.00) a week, and whereas the defendant has orally expressed his willingness to pay said sum:

“It is thereupon, this 15th day of January, 1915, by the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, adjudged and ordered that the defendant, pay to the complainant, as alimony pendente lite, and for the support of their minor child, the sum of fifteen dollars ($15.00) per week accounting from the 5th day of January, 1915; and that the order of this Court of December 23rd, 1914, in so far as it affects the question of custody of said child and of access of the defendant thereto, be, and the same is hereby, affirmed; and the plaintiff be, and she is hereby, enjoined and restrained from taking or removing said child beyond the limits of the State of Maryland; but if the defendant fails to make prompt payment of any weekly instalment so ordered before the end of the week for which the same is or shall become due, then and in that event the plaintiff shall have the right, and is hereby permitted, until the further order of this Court, to take the said child to any place within the United States of America where she can, by the exercise of her art, earn a livelihood; provided always, that, whether within or without the State of Maryland, the plaintiff shall at all times keep this Court advised of the whereabouts of her child and shall permit the defendant to have access to the said child at reasonable hours as required by the order passed in this cause on December 23, 1914, and shall produce the said child in this Court within forty-eight hours after notice to her or her solicitor of an order of Court to that effect; and provided further, that until the further order of this Court whenever and so long as the plaintiff shall have the said child outside of the State of Maryland, the defendant shall be, and is hereby relieved of the obligation to pay for alimony or for the support of the said child anything more than the five dollars per week required by the order passed in this cause on November 12, 1914;

“And it is further ordered that the defendant forthwith pay the cost of the stenographic record in this cause, and in case of his failure to make such payment within thirty days from this date, the Court shall and will proceed to determine this cause on the stenographic record of the testimony offered by the plaintiff at the hearing so soon as the plaintiff shall have the same written up, and filed herein by the official stenographer of the Court.”

The defendant complied with this order, not with absolute punctuality, but with tolerable regularity, until the latter part of February, but then the wife, failing, through some mistake or misunderstanding, to receive the weekly instalment at the time when it was expected and doubtless needed, immediately obtained a small loan from a friend, and, with the child, set out for New York in search of employment. From that time the husband paid only five dollars a week until the beginning of May, when there was another attempt at reconciliation. About the 3rd of May she met him in Washington, apparently prepared to accept his proposal that, for the sake of the child, they should go to some unnamed place in the West and there make a fresh start in life amid new surroundings, without acquaintance and without any capital except the small sum that he said he could borrow from his father. According to the husband’s statement, on reflection, this seemed to him a wild and foolish plan, and when he met his wife he so told her, and proi)osed instead that they secure quarlers somewhere in Baltimore; and live; out their lives in this city, where they at least [358]*358have acquaintances and some friends. Under the circumstances, it can hardly be wondered that the wife was discouraged by the sudden change of plans and doubted the bona fides of the offer.

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Related

Houlton v. Houlton
86 A. 514 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houlton-v-houlton-mdcirctctbalt-1915.