Hubbard v. Hubbard

96 A. 860, 127 Md. 617, 1916 Md. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 21, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 96 A. 860 (Hubbard v. Hubbard) 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
Hubbard v. Hubbard, 96 A. 860, 127 Md. 617, 1916 Md. LEXIS 37 (Md. 1916).

Opinions

Constable, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant filed a bill against her husband asking for alimony, permanent and pendente lite, and counsel fees, but subsequently amended the bill by adding a prayer for a divorce a mensa et thoro.

The bill alleged as the grounds for relief, that the appellee had been guilty of audultery with one Pearl S. Mitchell in January, 1905, and before the filing of the bill, and that the appellant had not cohabited with him since the discovery; and that the appellee abandoned and deserted her without just cause or excuse. After hearing testimony in support of the bill and answer the lower Court passed a decree dismissing the bill, and from that decree this appeal was taken.

It is presumed the allegation charging adultery was inserted for whatever effect it might have upon the question of alimony, the relief sought before the amendment; for that charge, if proved, could not be the basis for a decree of divorce a mensa et thoro but only for a divorce a vinculo matrimonii. Stewart v. Stewart, 105 Md. 297. The testimony taken in support of this allegation, however, will be considered in whatever manner it bears upon the question of desertion.

We do not intend to reproduce a detailed account of the testimony, for no good purpose would be subserved by so doing, but to give, in the main, the conclusions we have arrived at from a careful reading of the same. The parties were married in 1891, and have lived in Baltimore continu *619 ously since, where the appellee has been engaged, in the business of oyster packing. In 1903 he took into his employment as bookkeeper, Pearl S. Mitchell, a young woman whose home was in Harford County. The oyster packing business was carried on in each year, from about the first of August until the first of the following May, when the business would be closed and Pearl Mitchell would return to her home, returning to work the following August. During the first few years of her employment Miss Mitchell visited a great deal at the home of the appellee, and was apparently upon terms of intimacy with the appellant. It was during one of these visits in 1906 that the only adulterous act is attempted to be proved and it is remarkable that the only testimony offered to prove it was that of the only child of the parties, a boy of about fourteen years of age at the time of the alleged occurrence. Notwithstanding the fact that the son testified that the appellant was present and saw just what he did yet not one word of testimony did she give upon the subject. The explanation of the occurrence given by Miss Mitchell, when called as a witness by the appellant, was convincing. The testimony of the only other two witnesses as to this charge was trivial and what they each observed once, occurred years ago. It was admitted by the appellant that she had as late as the year 1910 visited for several days at different times Miss Mitchell at her home in Harford County. If we were considering this testimony with a mew to determining whether the charge was legally established so as to be the basis of a decree a- vinculo we would not have to- dismiss it because it did not measure up to the strict rule of proof required in cases of this character, as determined by a long line of cases in this State ending with Thiess v. Thiess, 124 Md. 292, but would not hesitate to pronounce the charge unfounded, from anything that appears in the record.

The parties continued to live together as man and wife continuously until December, 1913, when the appellant left the home of herself and husband and filed a few days later a bill, making the same charges as in the present one. By *620 agreement the appellee paid her ten dollars a week and a counsel fee to' her solicitor. Before a hearing was had on that bill the parties had become reconciled, wholly through the efforts of the appellee, and he took up his abode in an apartment rented and occupied by her until they could get possession of one leased by him after the reconciliation. The reconciliation only lasted for ten days when he left her apartment and the present bill was thereafter filed.

Therefore, the question to be determined is, whether such a case has been made out as entitles the appellant to relief on the ground of the desertion of her by the appellee.

So often has this question been before this Court, and so consistent have been the decisions defining what is legal abandonment and desertion as to form a basis for a decree of divorce, that that must be regarded as finally settled. Taking one of the very latest, that of Muller v. Muller, 125 Md. 72, this Court, reiterating the many former decisions, said: “It is provided by Article 16, section 38 of the Code, that a divorce a mensa et thoro may be granted for abandonment and desertion. The ground upon which the divorce is asked being declared by the statute, it was necessary for the complainant to- allege and prove statutory cause. Abandonment is the deliberate act of the party complained of, done with intent that the marriage relation should no longer exist. Lynch v. Lynch, 33 Md. 328; Gill v. Gill, 93 Md. 652; Twigg v. Twigg, 107 Md. 676; Matthews v. Matthews, 112 Md. 582. ‘Desertion as a matrimonial offense is the voluntary separation of one of the married parties from the other, or the voluntary refusal to renew the suspended cohabitation, without justification, either in the consent, or the wrongful conduct of the other. Its inherent affirmative elements are two — cohabitation ended, and the other party’s intention to desert.’ Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, Vol. 1, Secs. 662-63. In all cases there must be an intention to abandon.

“Separation and intention to abandon must concur in order *621 to constitute cause of divorce on ground of abandonment; but they need not be identical in their commencement.”

With the separation admitted, let us examine the testimony for the purpose of determining whether the facts show on abandonment “with intent that the marriage relation should no longer exist.” And this intent, it has been said, being an intangible thing is sometimes difficult to solve.

It is admitted by both parties that the domestic difficulty is caused by the continued employment of Pearl Mitchell by the husband. The wife insisting upon her dismissal, the husband refusing. The record shows there has been more or less quarreling though not of such a character as to warrant a divorce upon the ground of cruelty of treatment, if that had been one of the allegations of the bill, the quarrels consistently being about this cause. And although the appellant admits that the reason she left her husband’s home in December, 1913, was because of a quarrel over the girl, she yet gives no facts or circumstances upon which she bases her charge or suspicion.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 860, 127 Md. 617, 1916 Md. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-hubbard-md-1916.