Jackson v. Jackson

284 A.2d 654, 13 Md. App. 725, 1971 Md. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 22, 1971
Docket309, September Term, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 284 A.2d 654 (Jackson v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Jackson, 284 A.2d 654, 13 Md. App. 725, 1971 Md. App. LEXIS 332 (Md. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Carter, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by the wife (appellant) from a decree granting a divorce a vinculo to her husband (appellee) on the ground that the parties had lived separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for five years. Md. Code Art. 16 § 24. The decree also awarded the appellant permanent alimony, custody of and support for the two minor daughters of the parties, and counsel fees. The appellant contends that the *727 evidence was legally insufficient to justify a divorce on the grounds alleged.

FACTS

The evidence established the following pertinent facts. The parties were married on March 21, 1961. The husband was a career Army officer with the rank of Captain. The couple had two daughters seven and ten years of age. The family lived at Fort Benning, Georgia, from 1963 until July 1965 when the husband was assigned to Vietnam and the wife and children moved to the home of her mother Mrs. Emma Johnson at 2030 East Lanvale Street in Baltimore, Maryland. In November 1965 while the husband was in Vietnam, he was notified that his wife was in critical condition as a result of an automobile accident. He was immediately granted a thirty-day emergency leave and departed for Baltimore. Upon his arrival, he found his wife in serious condition in the hospital. He then stayed with his children and his mother-in-law in her home. When it became apparent his wife’s condition would require extended hospital care, he was reassigned to Fort Holabird near Baltimore as a “compassionate reassignment.” He remained at Fort Holabird from December 1965 until September 1967. While he was stationed at Fort Holabird, he stayed at his mother-in-law’s home every weekend. In the latter part of 1966, the appellant visited at her mother’s home over Saturday nights and returned to the hospital on Sunday. During her visits the appellee would often transport his wife to and from the hospital. Later as her condition improved, she spent more time at her mother’s home. During this period when both parties were staying part time at the wife’s mother’s home, the appellee slept in the basement and his wife slept upstairs. This arrangement was a matter of choice with the husband. The appellant had requested that he occupy her bedroom with her but the appellee refused. Later she asked him to have intercourse with her but he again refused. Even though immediately after the accident she was a quadriplegic (paralyzed from *728 the neck down) and later a paraplegic (paralyzed from the waist down) she was physically capable of intercourse when she requested her husband to have sexual relations with her. In September 1967 the appellee requested that he be assigned to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in preparation for his return to Vietnam. In January 1968, he left Fort Bragg for Vietnam where he remained for one year. In January 1969, he was assigned to Fort Dix, New Jersey, where he lived on the military reservation until October 1970. During his assignment at Fort Dix he stayed at his mother-in-law’s home over several weekends while his wife was staying there. In October 1970, he was assigned to Korea where he was stationed at the time of his divorce trial in May 1971.

The appellee testified that the reason he had stayed at his mother-in-law’s home during weekends while he was at Fort Holabird and Fort Dix was to be close to his children and because of a sense of duty to his critically-injured wife but without any intent on his part to continue the marriage. He further testified that he and his wife had seriously disagreed immediately prior to his decision to go to Vietnam in July 1965 and that he had informed her at that time that he was not going to live with her when he returned and was going to get a divorce. He stated that he had never changed his intention to separate and live apart from his wife since he made the decision to do so in July 1965. The appellee’s father Isaac Jackson testified that he knew the appellee had separated from his wife; however, he did not say how long they had been separated. The appellee’s brother Robert Jackson testified that he also knew the parties were separated; however, he likewise did not state when the separation had started.

The wife testified that the first time her husband had mentioned divorce or separation to her was in October 1970, immediately prior to his departure for Korea. She further stated that if the accident had not occurred, she *729 would have been living with her husband in Korea. Her mother testified that she had heard the husband mention divorce and separation to his wife in October 1970 which was the first time she had ever heard the subject mentioned by either party.

INTERPRETATION OF THE STATUTE

Md. Code Art. 16 § 24 sets forth the grounds for a divorce a vinculo. This statute was amended by Chapter 656 of the Acts of 1969 so as to provide a seventh ground. The amendment sets forth that a divorce may be granted “on application of either party when the husband and wife have lived separate and apart without any cohabitation and without interruption for five years.” We hold that it is clear from the wording of this seventh ground that it is composed of the following elements: 1) that the parties shall have lived separate and apart for five years preceding the filing of the divorce suit, 2) that there has been no cohabitation between them during the period of separation, and 3) that the separation was without interruption. The bill of complaint alleges that all of these elements existed prior to the filing of the bill on December 31, 1970.

The key element concerned in this appeal is the requirement that the parties “lived separate and apart” for five years prior to the institution of the suit. The interpretation of the legislative intent in the use of the phrase “lived separate and apart” in the seventh ground is a matter of first impression in this State so far as this Court is aware. The fifth ground for divorce under Art. 16 § 24 provides in substance that the parties shall be entitled to a divorce when the husband and wife shall have voluntarily lived separate and apart for eighteen months. The Court of Appeals interpreted the legislative intent in the use of this phrase in the fifth ground in Lillis v. Lillis, 235 Md. 490, 494-496, (1964). In that case the Court held the phrase was intended to include only those situations where the husband and wife had not lived under the same roof for the prescribed period *730 of eighteen months and that mere cessation of sexual relations between the parties was not sufficient to constitute living “separate and apart.” In so holding, the Court said at pages 494-496:

“Our research indicates that virtually all the jurisdictions in this country which have voluntary separation provisions similar to ours, and which have had occasion to interpret them, have denied divorces where the parties have lived in the same house during part or all of the critical period, even though discontinuance of sexual relations was proved. The rule generally followed in those jurisdictions is stated in 17 Am. Jur. Divorce, sec. 185, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
284 A.2d 654, 13 Md. App. 725, 1971 Md. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-jackson-mdctspecapp-1971.