Lukat v. Lukat

319 A.2d 818, 21 Md. App. 354, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 412
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 22, 1974
Docket631, September Term, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 319 A.2d 818 (Lukat v. Lukat) 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
Lukat v. Lukat, 319 A.2d 818, 21 Md. App. 354, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 412 (Md. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Lowe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The marriage of Fred Edward Lukat and Mildred F. Lukat, whom God had joined together on October 17, 1953, was put asunder by Judge Plummer Shearin on July 16, 1973. Mrs. Lukat protests that decision of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, although she originally sought a similar conclusion when she filed a Bill on March 29, 1971 complaining that she had been deserted by Fred “on or about November 10, 1970.” This allegation was denied by Mr. Lukat.

On June 21, 1971, however, she obtained an order awarding her temporary support, maintenance and counsel *356 fees for the period during which litigation was pending. Out of fear that her husband intended “speedily to leave this State and the jurisdiction of this Court with intent to evade the obligation ...,” Mrs. Lukat obtained a Writ Ne Exeat.

During the ensuing four months, Mr. Lukat paid only half of the prescribed obligation to his wife and none to her counsel, who at the time was her brother-in-law. A contempt proceeding was instituted. The husband’s response admitted some lapse of payment, though not to the extent alleged. He explained this deficiency by citing a lack of funds, a set off of a preexisting debt owed him by his wife’s counsel (and brother-in-law) and the fact that Mrs. Lukat resided in his apartment for approximately one month following the signing of the pendente lite order. Simultaneously he moved for a reduction of temporary maintenance and support and a dissolution of the ne exeat bond.

The matter was set for hearing. When the parties were together at the Courthouse prior to the hearing, an agreement for settlement of the controversy was reached. Upon oral motion reciting the agreement of the parties, the contempt and reduction „ of support petitions were withdrawn and the ne exeat bond was dissolved. The consummation of that understanding, reduced to a “Voluntary Separation Agreement”, executed January 28, 1972, heralded the advent of peace — if not tranquility. But lurking within that document signalling peaceful coexistence was an apparently innocuous recitation that the parties had voluntarily separated on the 19th day of November, 1970, and have “not lived or cohabited together since that time____”

The episode which put the lie to those eight crucial words arose from an incongruous circumstance. Mrs. Lukat returned to the marital abode on August 20,1971. She did so against the will of her husband who acquiesced only to keep peace. Since the bedroom was occupied by Mr. Lukat’s ailing mother, and the daybed by appellee (who did not desire her presence), Mrs. Lukat slept on a sofa until her ultimate departure on October 2, 1971. The normal marital relation did not exist and neither allege that sexual intercourse *357 occurred; for that matter, there appeared but limited social intercourse.

On May 3, 1972, Mr. Lukat filed a Cross-Bill of Complaint for Divorce A Vinculo Matrimonii on the grounds of voluntary separation. He “annexed” a copy of the Voluntary Separation Agreement of January 28, 1972. On June 16, 1972 Mrs. Lukat’s counsel (and brother-in-law) filed a motion for leave to strike his appearance. His motion recited the making and execution of the separation agreement (which was notarized by Mrs. Lukat’s sister who was counsel’s wife) and the Cross-Bill filed by Mr. Lukat. He stated that his client disputed the voluntariness of the separation, denied that she understood the agreement “and dispute[d] the several provisions of the agreement contrary to the understanding which movant believed to have been reached at the time the agreement was made.” He then asserted that he could not therefore represent her in the matter. His motion was granted.

After employing new counsel, Mrs. Lukat filed an answer denying the voluntary separation, asserting cohabitation from August 20th to October 2, 1971, and, though admitting signing the January 28th agreement, alleging it was “involuntary” by virtue of a nervous disability for which she had recently been hospitalized.

Mr. Lukat then moved for, and was granted, leave to amend which he did by adding, as Count II, an alternative to the ground of eighteen months voluntary separation. He alleged desertion by Mrs. Lukat on October 2,1971.

The chancellor found as a fact that the execution of the Voluntary Separation Agreement by Mrs. Lukat was her voluntary act, with advice of counsel, and that its contents were understood by her at the time. He found that there had been cohabitation for the period stated, though no marital relations. He found further that Mrs. Lukat despaired of a reconciliation and on October 2nd left the premises. This period of cohabitation interrupted the separation which Art. 16, § 24 of the Md. Code required, i.e., that the parties “ . .. [live] separate and apart, without any cohabitation, for eighteen consecutive months .. . .” That sexual relations did *358 not occur is of no consequence; the determinative factor is the undisputed finding of a period of cohabitation, for the “ [resumption of cohabitation during the statutory period interrupts the running of the statute . .. .” Lillis v. Lillis, 235 Md. 490, 495.

The question that the chancellor felt he must decide was “whether or not that period of living under the same roof worked by operation of law a recision or invalidation ... of the formal separation and property agreement that was entered into several months previously.” He then sought to ascertain the intention of the parties as to recision from their having cohabited together.

The chancellor found that while Mrs. Lukat seemed to desire a reconciliation,

“ ... it is equally clear that Mr. Lukat did not. There was no meeting of the minds by these parties. From October 2nd the parties again acted in reliance upon the agreement. The husband was paying the sums of money required thereby to the wife for her support and the wife in other respects merely receiving the money, apparently in reliance upon the agreement.”

Relying on Frana v. Frana, 12 Md. App. 273, 283-285, the chancellor concluded that the cohabitation did not “annul, void or rescind the separation and property settlement agreement.”

The inferences drawn by the court would have been reasonable had not the abortive attempt at reconciliation while cohabiting together occurred over three months before the parties entered into the Voluntary Separation Agreement. Mrs. Lukat returned to the abode on August 20, 1971 and having “despaired of any meaningful reconciliation” terminated the joint occupancy on October 2, 1971. It was not until January 28, 1972 that the agreement was finally executed. It is difficult to see how a prior attempted reconciliation could affect a contract subsequently entered into. Mrs. Lukat’s execution of the “voluntary” agreement four months after the cohabitation *359 takes on significance as to her allegation that the separation was involuntary in its origin and remained so throughout. A separation may be involuntary when it first occurs and later become voluntary, or it may begin at any time after the physical separation. Misner v. Misner, 211 Md.

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Bluebook (online)
319 A.2d 818, 21 Md. App. 354, 1974 Md. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lukat-v-lukat-mdctspecapp-1974.