Kurdle v. Brookmeyer

191 A. 416, 172 Md. 246, 1937 Md. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 9, 1937
Docket[No. 32, January Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 191 A. 416 (Kurdle v. Brookmeyer) 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
Kurdle v. Brookmeyer, 191 A. 416, 172 Md. 246, 1937 Md. LEXIS 232 (Md. 1937).

Opinion

Johnson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Laverne Brookmeyer brought suit in the Baltimore City Court against Joseph Kurdle and Nan Kurdle, his wife’s parents, to recover damages allegedly sustained by him as a result of the alienation by defendants of the affections of the plaintiff’s wife, and, from a judgment obtained by him, the wife’s parents prosecute this appeal. During the course of the trial, appellants reserved three exceptions to the rulings of the trial court, the first two of which relate to admissibility of testimony, while the third concerns the prayers.

Much of the testimony is undisputed. Brookmeyer and Mary Kathryn Kurdle, daughter of appellants, became acquainted in 1984. He visited their home frequently, and on May 6th, 1935, they drove to Washington, D. C., obtained a marriage license, and were married by Rev. Allan Poore. At that time" Brookmeyer was twenty-one years old, while his wife was; eighteen,. He testified that the marriage had first been discussed between them a week previously, and that after the ceremony they had lunch with Dr. Felipe Martinez, whose wife was a sister to Mary Kathryn; that it was the plan of himself and his wife to keep their marriage a secret, and they returned to Baltimore and went to their respective homes. However, on the following Wednesday, Brook *248 meyer learned that their marriage was known, and he and his wife waited up at the Kurdle home for the return of Mr. and Mrs.' Kurdle, in order to tell them of their marriage; that Mrs. Kurdle asked why they had done so, and said she would get the marriage annulled. She sent Mary Kathryn to bed, and Brookmeyer was taken to his home by another of the Kurdle daughters and her friend. Since that date, he testified, he had not seen his wife, but had once talked with her over the telephone; that she then informed him that she was going to have the marriage .annulled and refused to talk further with him. He stated that she also told him that a Mr. Clark and Mr. Kurdle (one of the appellants) were going to see him in reference to the annulment; that he later talked with Mr. Kurdle and requested him to leave the marriage as it was, let them live apart, and, if he got a job or was earning a suitable salary to take care of a wife, to let them assume the marital status; that Mr. Kurdle stated that this was a matter which concerned more than one member of the family, and he would have to talk it over with the others; that on Friday evening following he saw Mr. Kurdle and Mr. Clark together, and was then told by Kurdle that Clark would go to Washington with Brookmeyer and they would hire a lawyer to represent him so that he would not have to appear in court.

On the day following the marriage, Mrs. Brookmeyer went to live with her sister in Washington, D. C., and has not since that time lived at the home of her parents. During May, 1935, but after the marriage of the parties, the wife wrote her husband five letters. In the first of these she informed him she had been to see a lawyer in regard to “getting the annulment”; that the lawyer was going to Baltimore to see the husband concerning it, and, if he protested, she would never see him again. In that letter she further stated:

“I bet you think I am a weakling, because I didn’t stick with you when I said I would. However, I finally realized that we couldn’t possibly get along on what you are making, so I decided that it would be best to call it *249 ‘quits’ until you were making at least $25 a week.” In another letter dated May 15th she wrote, “Please don’t call me any more. It might get you in trouble. And I’ve caused you too much trouble already. Try to forget me, and find another girl that can give you real happiness. I can only mean misery for you. All I can do is wait. I don’t suppose you had better write me, as your letters most probably will be intercepted. I’m sorry to hear of your hard luck about the laundry. Now I can see more than ever the hopelessness of two people getting along on your salary.”

In the third letter she criticized the husband severely for attempting to have the lawyer who had previously represented him in the annulment proceedings withdraw therefrom. She was still determined to have her marriage annulled, if possible, for she then wrote, “I still have the ring, and will keep it unless you try to make trouble. And if you do try to I’ll return it to you and never see you again.” The fourth letter is relatively unimportant, while in the fifth she stated she was sorry that things had to turn out in such a way, otherwise she would never have done what she did- While in some of those letters the wife expressed affection for her husband, he testified that he had not seen her since they were written, and the record is devoid of any evidence to show that he made an effort to see her, notwithstanding she was living in Washington, D. C., and far removed from any restraints of her parents’ home in Baltimore.

During the later part of May, Brookmeyer’s wife, by her next friend, Dr. Felipe Martinez, filed a bill of complaint in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against her husband, in which she sought an annulment of their marriage upon the ground of fraud and duress. Shortly thereafter, Brookmeyer filed an answer under oath to the bill of complaint, in which he admitted many of its allegations and failed to deny the others. When this answer was filed, appellee was represented by Harold Ganss, a member of the district bar, who was introduced to Brookmeyer and Mr. Clark, the latter being a friend *250 of appellants, by Mr. Friedlander, counsel for Brookmeyer’s wife in the annulment proceedings. The evidence is also susceptible of a rational inference that Ganss was first employed by Dr. Martinez to represent Brookmeyer. Appellee attempted to testify that Attorney Friedlander, who introduced Ganss to him, was counsel for Mr. and Mrs. Kurdle, but certainly this statement, standing alone and with no facts to support it, can have no probative force. Furthermore, if he did not originally employ Attorney Ganss to represent him, he did by acceptance of his services ratify the act of Dr. Martinez in securing him, and the evidence of Mr. Clark, who seems to have been equally friendly toward appellee and appellants, is that, when the matter of annulment was first mentioned to Brookmeyer, the latter agreed that such a course was., under all circumstances, wise and proper. Again, on May 17th, 1935, shortly before the bill of complaint was filed in the District of Columbia Supreme Court, appellee wrote and mailed the following letter to his wife’s father:

“Dear Mr. Kurdle: I am writing you this letter in an effort to retain whatever favorable opinion you had of me previous to the vicissitudes of the last few weeks which I have caused you. In rehearsing the occurrences of the last week or two I can readily see that your opinion will be, and unavoidably too, that I have had absolutely no consideration of your family’s feelings, and; yours particularly, in the matter which I undertook. But such is not the case.

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Bluebook (online)
191 A. 416, 172 Md. 246, 1937 Md. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurdle-v-brookmeyer-md-1937.