J. G. v. H. G.

33 Md. 401, 1870 Md. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 21, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 33 Md. 401 (J. G. v. H. G.) 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
J. G. v. H. G., 33 Md. 401, 1870 Md. LEXIS 103 (Md. 1870).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed by the appellant, praying for a divorce a vinculo, on the ground of the alleged impotence of the appellee.

It appears from the pleadings and proofs that the parties to this suit were married in Baltimore on the 31st day of March, 1864; the appellant then being 49 years of age and the appellee 28. They started on a tour to the West immediately after the marriage; physical impediments to the consummation'of the marriage having been discovered, the appellee submitted to an examination of her person by Dr. Thomas Wood and Dr. S. O. Almy, eminent physicians and surgeons of Cincinnati, whose testimony is contained in the record. After the return of the parties to Baltimore, on the 25th of May, 1864, another surgical examination -\$as made by Dr. Inloes, the family physician of the appellee, aided by Prof. Nathan R. Smith, the testimony of these physicians is also in the record.

On the 29th day of June, in the same year, a deed of separation was entered into, whereby the sum of ten thousand dollars-was conveyed and secured by the appellant to certain trustees therein named, for the separate use of the appellee for her support, she agreeing to relinquish all further claim or interest in his estate, and the parties mutually agreeing to live separate from each other as if unmarried.

The separation under the deed continued for nearly three years, when on the 8th day of May, 1867, this bill was filed. One of the prayers of the original bill was that the deed of separation might be set aside; but in the progress of the cause, on the 15th day of February, 1869, a paper was filed by the complainant, signed- by his solicitors, waiving all that part of his bill and the prayer therein seeking to set aside the deed of settlement; and leaving all vested rights in the trustees, and in the appellee under the deed unassailed, and unaffected by any decree in the cause. The only question therefore presented by this appeal arises upon the prayer for a divorce.

[405]*405The appellee opposes the application for a divorce upon two distinct grounds. 1st. The alleged impotence is denied. 2d. It is contended that the deed of separation is a bar and estoppel to the right of the complainant to maintain the present suit.

“ The impotence of either party at the time of the marriage,” is one of the causes prescribed in the Code, for which the Court is authorized to decree a divorce a vinculo matrimonii. 1 Code, Art. 16, sec. 25.

Has the alleged impotence of the appellee been proved? A careful examination of the evidence has convinced us that this question must be answered in the affirmative.

Without repeating here at length, or in detail, the evidence on this most delicate and painful question, it may be stated that the testimony of the examining surgeons establishes the following facts:

That the physical condition of the appellee, at the time of the marriage, was that of a very imperfect development of the sexual organs, both externally and internally. These organs were in a rudimentary condition, evincing that their development had ceased and been arrested before the ago of puberty. She had never experienced the monthly sickness to which females of mature age are subject; and was without the natural passion or desire incident to woman.

The rudimentary condition of her sexual organs, and their imperfect development, not only rendered conception impossible, but there was on her part an incapacity for vera copula. That is to say, she was not capable of the act of generation in its natural and ordinary meaning, but only of incipient and imperfect coition. ^

In giving the results of their examination, the surgeons differ somewhat as to the degree or extent of the organic defects; but we have stated the conclusions which appear to us to be established by their testimony. They all concur in saying that the defect is incurable.

Whatever differences of opinion may have arisen as to the legal definition of impotence; it is well settled that if by [406]*406reason of malformation or organic defect existing at the time of the marriage, there cannot be natural and perfect coition, vera copula, between the parties; and it appears that the defect is permanent and incurable; the case comes within the legal definition of impotence, and is cause for nullity of marriage. Deane vs. Aveling, 1 Rob. Ecc. R., 279; Devenbaqh vs. Devenbaqh, 5 Paige, 554 ; 1 Bishop on M. & D., secs. 325 to 340.

The charge made by the appellee in her answer, that the difficulty in consummating the marriage proceeded from physical defect or incapacity on the part of the appellant has not been sustained by proof; and we are of opinion upon all the evidence in the cause that the appellant is entitled to a divorce a vinculo; unless by reason of the deed of separation he is barred and estopped from maintaining this suit. This brings us to the examination of the second ground of defence.

What is the effect of the deed of separation, upon the rights of the appellant.in the present suit?

By the Act of Assembly of 1841, chapter 262, and its supplements, now embodied in the Code, Article 16, section 24, et seq., jurisdiction of all applications for divorce has been given to the Courts of Equity. Under that provision this suit has been instituted.

The Court in such case sits, not in the exercise of its general and ordinary equitable jurisdiction, but as a Divorce Court; and must be governed by the rules and principles established in the Ecclesiastical Courts in England, wherein a similar jurisdiction has been exercised, so far as they are consistent with the provisions of the Code. By the 14th , section of Article 16, the Code expressly provides that all causes for alimony “are to be heard and determined, by Courts of Equity in this State, in as full and ample a manner as they could be heard and determined by the laws of England, in the Ecclesiastical Courts there.”

In respect to the mode in which Courts of Equity shall exercise jurisdiction in divorce cases, and the principles by [407]*407which they are to be governed, the Code is silent. But from the nature of the jurisdiction itself, it has always been considered that the decisions of the English Ecclesiastical Courts, in similar cases, may properly be referred to as precedents; and they have uniformly been cited and relied on as safe and authoritative guides for the Courts of this State in disposing of cases of this kind.

If we refer to those precedents, it appears to have been long settled, that a voluntary deed of separation between husband and wife is not per se a bar to a suit in the Ecclesiastical Court for a restitution of marital rights or to a petition for divorce. Durant vs. Durant, 1 Hagg., 733, (3 English Ecc. R., 310); Beeby vs. Beeby, 1 Hagg., 789, (3 English Ecc. R., 338); Westmeath vs. Westmeath, 2 Hagg. Supp., 1, (4 English Ecc. R., 238); Spering vs. Spering, 3 Swabey & Trist., 211; Hunt vs. Hunt, 32 Law J. Rep., 168.

In 1 Bishop, see. 634, and note 3, other eases are referred to in support of the general proposition above stated.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Md. 401, 1870 Md. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-g-v-h-g-md-1870.